Stall name: Min Nan 闽南 Pork Ribs and Prawn Noodles
Address: 30 Seng Poh Rd, stall #02-31, Singapore 168898 (stall inside Tiong Bahru Market & Food Centre)
Nearest MRT: 5 minutes walk from Havelock station
Hours: 8:00am - 2:00pm (Mon off)
Stall name: Min Nan 闽南 Pork Ribs and Prawn Noodles
Address: 30 Seng Poh Rd, stall #02-31, Singapore 168898 (stall inside Tiong Bahru Market & Food Centre)
Nearest MRT: 5 minutes walk from Havelock station
Hours: 8:00am - 2:00pm (Mon off)
Stall name: Soon Heng Rojak
Address: 480 Lor 6 Toa Payoh, B1-23 Gourmet Paradise Foodcourt, HDB Hub, Singapore 310480
Nearest MRT: At Toa Payoh station
Hours: 11:00am - 9:30pm
Stall name: Grandfather Food Empire Bak Chor Mee 爺爺香菇肉碎面
Address: Queen St, #269B, Singapore 182269 (stall inside 8383 Eating Place coffee shop)
Nearest MRT: 5 minutes walk from Bugis station
Tel: 9140 0009
Hours: 7:30am - 3:45pm
Bak kut teh can be found in both Singapore and Malaysia though they differ in form and taste. Generally, the Malaysian variety is savoury herbal in brownish soup while the Singapore version is peppery in lighter colour soup.
The spicy hot relish known as sambal is ubiquitous in Indonesian, Malaysian and Singapore cuisine. Sambal can be a condiment or an ingredient in a dish (e.g. sambal kang kong, sambal squid, etc).
Sambal likely came from the Javanese word sambel. The spicy relish is found throughout Nusantara (Malay archipelago) in many varieties, localised according to local taste and availability of ingredients.
Is this nasi lemak or nasi uduk? |
Malaysia's nasi lemak and Indonesia's nasi uduk are often considered the same dish. Nasi lemak is ubiquitous in Malaysia and Singapore, while nasi uduk is a staple in Jakarta, Indonesia.
Nasi lemak means "fatty rice" in Malay and nasi uduk means "mixed rice" in the Indonesian Batawi dialect. How are nasi lemak and nasi uduk related, and what does that relationship tell us about the history of Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore?
By the way, the photo above is a nasi uduk box set from Jakarta. Clockwise from top left - shredded fried chicken, coconut milk rice, shredded fried tempe, shredded fried egg, cucumber slices.
Stall name: Azme Corner Nasi Lemak
Address: Bedok North Street 2, Block 122, Singapore 460122
Nearest MRT: 10 minutes walk from Bedok station
Tel: 9799 5438
Hours: 9:00am - 2:00pm (Mon & Tues off)
Stall name: Smokin' Joe - Western BBQ Charcoal Grill
Address: Yishun Park Hawker Centre stall #01-37, 51 Yishun Ave 11, S768867
Nearest MRT: 10 minutes walk from Yishun station
Hours: 12:00 noon - 9:00pm
Restaurant name: Warung Babi Guling Pande Egi
Address: Banjar Pande, Beng, Kec. Gianyar, Kabupaten Gianyar, Bali 80513, Indonesia
Tel: +62 878 8332 8808
Hours: 8:00am - 9:00pm
Stall name: Hui Wei Prawn Noodle Lor Mee 回味
Address: Blk 177 Toa Payoh Central, #01-170, Singapore 310177 (stall inside Epic Haus coffee shop)
Nearest MRT: Five minutes walk from Toa Payoh station
Hours: 7:00am - 1:00pm
Stall name: Ponggol Nasi Lemal (Kovan outlet)
Address: 965 Upper Serangoon Rd, Singapore 534721
Nearest MRT: 5 minutes from Kovan station
Tel: 6281 0020
Hours: 5:00pm - 12:00 midnight (Thurs off)
In Iran, there is an ancient cold sweet dessert known as "Faloodeh". In its simplest form, it is rice or wheat vermicelli (noodles), rose water, sugar syrup and ice. "Faloodeh" goes back to 400 BC i.e. it is more than 2600 years ago.
Stall name: LiXin Chao Zhou Fishball Noodle 立兴潮洲魚丸粿條面
Address: 22 Lor 7 Toa Payoh, stall #01-20, Singapore 310019 (inside Kim Keat Palm Market & Food Centre)
Nearest MRT: 10 minutes walk from Braddell station
Hours: 7:00am - 1:00pm (Mon, Tues, Weds off)
Stall name: Chiderful Eating House 吃淂福
Address: Shop #02-73 City Plaza, 810 Geylang Road, Singapore 409286
Nearest MRT: 5 minutes walk from Paya Lebar station
Tel: 9895 9972
Hours: 1:00pm - 9:00pm (Mon off)