Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Kieran assisted us in our booking to Singapore to celebrate our 40th wedding anniversary. He informed the hotel and in turn they decorated our room for us. I would definitely recommend DialAFlight to family and friends.
The VIP lounge at Heathrow was dreadful! Do not send people there. The tour was excellent and our guides superb. All hotels great apart from HK. Thanks Ivor for organising such a fantastic, once in a lifetime trip!
Paige was excellent. She listened to what we wanted, we discussed options and she delivered exactly what we asked for.
My original flight via the Middle East was cancelled, so I booked a direct flight from Heathrow. While I was away Elliot Webb from got my cancelled flight refunded for me
Prompt communication and personal service at all times. Very happy with Jade's help
Brilliant staff - especially Orlando and billy.
Whole experience of booking flights on both sides of the world was faultlessly excellent. Great job team
DialAflight is a good company especially Gavin who helped me a lot.
There were a few glitches but the support was terrific and I thought it was a great service .
Connie was excellent throughout and I would highly recommend her
I was booked into Red Roof Inn in Tokyo. Whilst this hotel was perfectly adequate it was a half hour journey by taxi each way from Haneda Airport and the two taxi fares cost around £50. It might be better if you recommend to other travelers that they stay at the hotel inside Terminal 3 at Haneda, as we did at one point in our tour, then you can go straight from breakfast into the check in area. It maybe more expensive than Red Roof Inn but when you include the taxi fares I doubt if it by much and certainly would be more convienient.
Organised flights that went smoothly agai. You can always rely on DialAFlight to do a good job
James was a star from the get go. A fast efficient and friendly service. Awesome booking experience
One of the hotels arranged was below parr (Andaman Seaview Hotel in Phuket). Apart from this everything else went according to plan and was as expected.
Tristan deserves recognition for his knowledge and for exceeding my expectations. Great service as always.
Have asked for Eric and his team for many years now. Gold star service.
Always friendly and helpful. Used DialAFlight for years.
Greg was great at booking our flights and it was reassuring to know that he or one of his colleagues was at the end of a phone should we have any issues while on holiday.
Jonathan always deals with me - would rate him 100 per cent
Jamie was very helpful and his recommendation to fly with Turkish Airlines worked well for me.
A fantastic service from you guys. Thank you for making our holiday a super experience.
A1 company - highly recommended
Good compromise suggested by Marie to save us money. Thank you
Good personalised service
Great service - will use again in the future
Paige has been amazing. She listened to our wishes and came up with the goods every time. And we were especially grateful that she managed to secure alternative flights to Tokyo when the war in Iran kicked off.
Fabulous trip - all went to plan!
Thank you for everything - a holiday to remember!
Everything went very smoothly - thank you
Amazing service as always, thank you so much
Kuala Lumpur is often over-looked in favour of a stopover in a more high profile Asian metropolis such as Hong Kong, Singapore or Bangkok. But the Malaysian capital is a city on the up, packed with fascinating art and architecture, top shopping - and some of the best street food in Asia.
From the airport the air-conditioned, wi-fi-enabled KLIA Ekspres Train whisks you to the city centre for you to check in to your hotel. If you're not too jetlagged you can try the sensational street-food scene straightaway.
Strung with red lanterns, pedestrian-ised Jalan Alor is noisy and tremendous fun. Start with sweet-spicy, perfectly charred chicken wings from Wong Ah Wah, then work your way down the street, finishing with a red-hot bowl of curry mee at Alor Corner Curry Noodle, on the corner with Changkat Bukit Bintang. Every dish is incredibly cheap.
Next morning fuel up with a back-straightening cup of Malaysian kopi (coffee) and kaya (thickly sliced toast smeared with butter and coconut jam) from a stall at Imbi Market. Download taxi app Grab – Southeast Asia's answer to Uber – and book a cab to the Batu Caves, an incense-cloaked Hindu temple complex on the outskirts of town (free). You'll see its 140ft gold statue of Murugan, Hindu god of war, long before you arrive at the limestone caves, which house murals, shrines and families of macaques. Don't get too close – they'll steal your phone/food/anything shiny.
Authentic Indian cuisine
Indians are the third-largest ethnic group in Malaysia, behind Malays and Chinese, and while you'll find reasonably good Indian restaurants outside Batu, there are more authentic foodie offerings in Brickfields – KL's Little India. So cab back over to canteen-like Vishal Food & Catering, at 22, Jalan Scott, which serves southern Indian cuisine on banana leaves, and order chicken biryani or mutton varuval. Leave room for extra poppadoms.
Escape the afternoon heat at the air-conditioned Islamic Arts Museum Malaysia. It's set on a hillside and its numerous rooms are treasure troves, filled with 1,000-year-old gold-inscribed Korans, rare compendiums of astronomy and astrology, Mogul daggers with jade hilts, and enough diamonds, rubies and sapphires to sink a pirate ship.
Indonesian flavours
Imagine a cuisine that combines piquant Indonesian flavours with Chinese cooking techniques; that would be Peranakan, gastronomic legacy of Chinese migrants who settled in Java and on the Malay peninsula. Precious Old China, in Central Market, serves some of the best and is one of the town's most charming spots – full of crystal chandeliers, carved rosewood furniture and antiques.
Standout dishes include flaky pastry 'top hats' filled with prawns and shredded vegetables, 'devil curry'chicken and sago gula melaka – palm sugar tapioca.
Ten minutes away is Omakase + Appreciate, the first Malaysian entry to make it onto Asia's 50 Best Bars list, and the size of a shoebox. Order a rum, pineapple, orange and coconut cream Painkiller.
Varied cultural history
Next day explore some more - have a city overview from the 12-metre by 15-metre scale model at the City Gallery, snap a selfie in front of the I Love KL sign, then check out Merdeka Square, the old Royal Selangor cricket ground, the Sultan Abdul Samad Building, with its magical-looking Mogul turrets and domes; and gothic St Mary's Cathedral.
Malaysia's national dish is nasi lemak, coconut milk rice served with sambal, salad, peanuts and egg. You'll find fragrant plates of it for sale on every corner, or try the hipster version – nasi lemak pancakes – at Merchant's Lane, on a fern-filled terrace in the heart of Chinatown.
The neighbourhood is one of the oldest in the city, with garish Taoist temples, colonial-era architecture and souvenir stalls touting faux-silk pyjamas.
Nearby Central Market is the place for smart handicrafts such as batik cushion covers and beaded slippers.
You can't leave KL without visiting 88-storey Petronas Twin Towers - beat the queues by buying a ticket online and sunset's the best time to go.
Take a walk through KLCC Park (take a photo of the towers framed between palm trees) for an aperitif in the SkyBar at Traders Hotel. Happy hour here runs from 5pm to 9pm.
For dinner, move onwards and upwards to the 57th floor of Petronas Tower 3 and Marini's on 57, a low-lit Italian restaurant. Book a table by the window.
Where to stay? The whitewashed Hotel Majestic has a calm atmosphere, with a delightful afternoon tea – white jackets, curry puffs and mango jam – an orchid conservatory and a Charles Rennie Mackintosh-inspired spa.
First published in the Sunday Times - June 2019
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