The first time I heard about Sunshine Chicken was through Babe In the City-KL. It was she who introduced and then invited me and some other food bloggers, on behalf of Sunshine Chicken to a sumptuous lunch at Kedai Makanan Chef Tam in Selayang. That occasion was to showcase Sunshine Chicken’s chickens, of course, as well as some other dishes courtesy of Jin Chwan Seafood prepared by Chef Tam. Sunshine Chicken has a farm in Kuala Lipis where their chickens thrive on natural food and fresh air & water and generally have free run on the hilly grounds of the farm. Therefore, is it at all surprising that these chickens taste totally different from the usual market chickens, with their superb flavour and distinctly succulent meat texture!
I remember when I was a kid growing up in Ipoh, my mom used to rear chickens in the backyard. I remember that one of my tasks then was to feed them – mixing their feed with water before dumping it into their feeding troughs. We bred them for their eggs (it was fun picking up the eggs among the dirt & chicken poo – yeahhh!) and meat, of course! And a few months before “Koh Toong” (Winter Solstice, which is 1 month before Chinese New Year), this skinny old guy would come pedalling on his trusty-rusty bicycle to “yim” the cockerels in our brood. “Yim” means to castrate – and that fella did it with some thread and a small sharp knife, I remember. And the funny thing was – these cockerels would be just fine & dandy after the “surgery” – like nothing happened, no downtime at all! Yeah, cocks are hardy creatures eh! (LOL!). Anyway, these castrated chickens – “yim kai” (are they even cockerels now?) will then grow and grow and by Koh Toong and CNY, we would be feasting on these giant fowls – I remember we always had slabs of these poached yim kai in the fridge which would last us at least a week after! Mind you, those yim kais could grow into huge birds – at least 5kg in size!
But then sad to say, yim kais seem to be a thing of the past or maybe only available in the smaller towns because once I migrated to KL, I have never had the chance to come across them. Until Sunshine Chicken came along – yes, they do have them on their farm! And when I heard from Babe that this will be featured in the lunch – boy, was I excited! I mean, come on… the last time I ate yim kai was like, decades ago!
Do go and read about how yim kais come about in Sunshine Chicken’s website – the caponisation (castration) and the time taken for them to mature so that their meat will be at the best flavour and texture. Do contact Gerald at 016-662-0105 for orders/queries!
OK, I digress too much – let’s get back to the review. Before the lunch started, we took a short walk over to Jun Chwan Seafood Garden a few doors away from Kedai Makanan Chef Tam. The moment you step into the shop, you will be greeted by tanks and tanks of live seafood… the exotic ones ranging from geoducks, japanese snails, moray eels, deep sea garoupas and all kinds of fishes – can’t remember all their names!

After the “familiarisation tour” at Jin Chwan, we made our way back to the restaurant, our tummies already growling, hehe!
Kedai Makanan Chef Tam
No.6A Jalan Bidara 2/4, Taman Bidara
68100 Selayang
Tel: 03-6138-8751
First dish to arrive was this plate of humongous Canadian Oysters!
Now you see it…














The meal ended on a sweet note with this super shiny and very black Qwailin Ko (tortoise shell jelly) on its bed of colorful canned fruit cubes…

And thanks to Gerald for having us… π >>> have cooked the ma choe chicken at home, hainanese-style – it was gorgeous! Will feature it in my next blogpost!





It seems that Kuala Lipis has another famous thing to add on after the river fish… which is your so called castrated chicken (yim kai)…
read about it from fellow bloggers.. but I have no idea where the farm is… but of course nothing is too hard for someone who lives here (me~)
goshhh looking at the yim kai pic now is making me very hungry. *crunch crunch* on the skin… oh so Heavenly! hahaha and i usually dun eat skin one leh :p
Leo: I'm sure u hv no problem locating this farm π
Babe: I know what u mean – i also avoid chicken skins most times but this case is an exception hoh!
yummie.. wish i was there again!
Hope you are feeling better now π Looks like I missed a good makan outing again!
I want to visit this place too…the chicken looks good, the kampung type of yellowish chicken.