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Seberang Perai, Malaysia

BM Cathay Pancake

CuisineStreet Food
Executive ChefMathias Martin
LocationSeberang Perai, Malaysia
Michelin

A cart on Jalan Aston in Bukit Mertajam that has been making Apam Balik since 1962, BM Cathay Pancake earned Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025 for a single dish: a chargrilled pancake with sugar peanut filling, crispy at the edges and chewy at the centre. At street-food pricing, it is one of Seberang Perai's most decorated food stops.

BM Cathay Pancake restaurant in Seberang Perai, Malaysia
About

One Cart, One Dish, Sixty-Plus Years

Bukit Mertajam's street-food identity is built on decades of single-focus stalls — operators who narrow their craft to one dish and refine it across generations. That discipline is particularly visible along the stretch of Jalan Aston, where BM Cathay Pancake has occupied a position outside the Cathay Food Court since 1962. The cart does not rotate its menu or introduce seasonal variations. It makes Apam Balik: a chargrilled pancake with a sugar and peanut filling, handed over hot, and nothing else.

Apam Balik belongs to a category of Malaysian street snacks with roots in Chinese turnover pancakes and Indian influence from the subcontinent's flatbread traditions, adapted across generations into a distinctly Peninsular Malaysian form. The version made at Bukit Mertajam tends toward a thicker, chewier profile compared to the thinner, crispier Penang-island style that most visitors encounter first. The textural contrast — a crisped exterior that gives way to a dense, yielding centre , is the point of the thing, and it is achieved through chargrilling rather than pan-frying or griddle-only preparation. The method matters: chargrilling produces a different caramelisation on the batter's surface and a smokier edge to the sweetness of the filling than a flat hotplate alone would deliver.

Why the Bib Gourmand Matters Here

Michelin awarded BM Cathay Pancake a Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025. The Bib Gourmand designation specifically recognises good food at accessible prices , it sits outside the starred tier but is a considered editorial judgment from inspectors who eat anonymously and return. For a cart operating on a single dish at street-food pricing, two consecutive years of recognition confirms that the consistency and technique hold up under repeated scrutiny, not just on a single visit.

That consecutive recognition places this cart in a small peer group across Southeast Asia. For comparison, Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle , Street Food in Singapore and 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles , Street Food in Singapore both demonstrate how street-food formats with long operating histories attract Michelin attention when the cooking is technically consistent and ingredient-led. The same logic applies here: longevity alone does not earn recognition, but longevity combined with repeatable quality does.

Within Seberang Perai, the Bib Gourmand positions BM Cathay Pancake at the more formally recognised end of a street-food scene that includes Taman Bukit Curry Mee, Ming Qin Charcoal Duck Egg Char Koay Teow, and Bee See Heong. None of those are lesser in local esteem, but the Michelin signal adds an external benchmark that draws visitors who might otherwise confine their eating to George Town across the water.

The Ingredient Logic Behind Apam Balik

The editorial angle on any Apam Balik worth discussing is the filling. The standard formulation uses coarse ground peanuts, white sugar, and sometimes creamed corn. What separates a well-made version from a perfunctory one is the ratio and the grind of the peanuts: too fine and the filling becomes paste-like and loses textural counterpoint to the batter; too coarse and the pieces puncture the pancake unevenly during folding. The sugar level calibrates against the nuttiness, and the quantity must be generous enough to form a light caramel under heat without burning before the batter sets.

The chargrilling method used here adds a dimension that purely hotplate-cooked versions lack. Charcoal introduces variable heat that creates irregular browning on the batter, which most serious Apam Balik eaters read as a quality indicator. The technique requires more attention per pancake than a regulated electric griddle, which is one reason many newer operators have moved away from it. A cart maintaining the charcoal method since 1962 is, in ingredient-sourcing and technique terms, preserving a more labour-intensive production approach that has largely disappeared from higher-volume street-food contexts.

This connects to a broader pattern across Penang's mainland food scene: the most decorated operators at the street-food tier tend to be those who have resisted the efficiency substitutions that came with urbanisation. 888 Hokkien Mee (Lebuh Presgrave) in George Town represents the same principle applied to noodles; A Noodle Story and 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee in Singapore apply it differently but from the same underlying logic. Technique fidelity at the ingredient level is what the Michelin inspectors are consistently rewarding in this category.

Seberang Perai's Position in the Penang Eating Circuit

Most visitors to Penang treat George Town as the primary eating destination and the mainland as an afterthought or transit point. That calculus is shifting. Seberang Perai's street-food operators have accumulated enough external recognition , the Michelin list being the most legible example , that food-focused travellers are building dedicated itineraries around it. The price tier across the scene reinforces this: a full eating session on the mainland, covering multiple stops from BM Yam Rice to BM Cathay Pancake to a curry mee lunch, remains at a fraction of what equivalent eating in George Town costs, and the cooking at the leading operators is not at a lower standard.

For those structuring a Penang trip to cover both sides, the Cathay Food Court area in Bukit Mertajam is a practical anchor point. The cart operates outside the food court on Jalan Aston, which means it is accessible without navigating an indoor venue, and the surrounding block has other street-food options to complete a meal around it. The Bib Gourmand designation also means that queues are now longer than they were before Michelin's Malaysia coverage expanded, so arriving outside peak breakfast and mid-morning snack hours is advisable. The dish is made to order and served immediately , there is no take-away holding time involved , which means the quality degrades if you wait too long after receiving it.

For a fuller picture of what Seberang Perai offers beyond street food, the Our full Seberang Perai restaurants guide covers the range from Neighbourwood at the European contemporary end to the hawker-tier staples. You can also find the Our full Seberang Perai bars guide, Our full Seberang Perai hotels guide, Our full Seberang Perai wineries guide, and Our full Seberang Perai experiences guide for broader trip planning. For context on what Michelin-recognised Malaysian cooking looks like at the fine-dining end, Dewakan in Kuala Lumpur and Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery in George Town offer useful reference points on how the same inspectors evaluate entirely different formats. The Planters at The Danna in Langkawi shows the other end of the Malaysian hospitality spectrum if your trip extends further north.

Planning Your Visit

BM Cathay Pancake is located at Jalan Aston, 14000 Bukit Mertajam, outside the Cathay Food Court. Pricing sits at the lowest end of the street-food tier , a single dish at under RM5 in most reporting , making it accessible for any budget. No booking is required or possible; the format is walk-up and order. Given the Bib Gourmand recognition, expect a queue during morning peak hours. The dish is served immediately on preparation, so plan to eat on the spot rather than carrying it elsewhere.

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