Singapore is a melting pot of cuisines from around the world, and many Singaporeans are obsessive gourmands who love to makan (eat in Malay). You will find quality Chinese, Malay, Indian, Japanese, Italian, French, American and other food in this city-state.

Eating habits run the gamut, but most foods are eaten by fork and spoon: push and cut with the fork in the left hand, and eat with the spoon in the right. Noodle dishes usually come with chopsticks, and Indian food can be eaten by hand, but nobody will blink an eye if you ask for a fork and spoon instead. If eating in a group, serving dishes are always shared, but you’ll get your own bowl of rice and soup.
Local delicacies
|
Coffee and Tea Be aware that the term kopi (Malay word for coffee) and teh (Malay word for tea) are used for sweet coffee and tea that mixed with milk. Kopi-o and teh-o are those without milk but still sweet. And if you want black coffee or tea, you should mention them “without sugar”. If you’re lucky, you might find some kopi in coffee-shops are as rich and tasteful as the Starbucks counterpart, for less than $1 a cup! |
The following dishes have become national icons and should be on every traveller’s agenda:
- Roti Prata is a local favourite fit for almost any time of the day and for almost any event. It can be considered to be Singapore’s version of the pancake. It is usually served plain, with egg and/or with onion fillings along with a side of curry and/or sugar to improve flavour. There is also a ‘paper prata’ which is made extra thin and crispy. Roti prata chain restaurants have a wider range of toppings, such as ice-cream, cheese and durian. Its texture is very similar to the Indian “parata”, which is like where the roti prata obtained its name.
- Laksa, in particular the Katong or lemak style, is probably the best known Singaporean dish: a fragrant soup of noodles in a coconut-based curry broth, topped with cockles or shrimp. Note that Singapore laksa is very different from Penang laksa which is made with a tamarind-infused broth instead of coconut, and has a spicy sourish taste.
- Chilli crab is a whole crab ladled with oodles of sticky, tangy chilli sauce. Notoriously difficult to eat… but irresistibly delicious! Don’t wear a white shirt! The seafood restaurants of the East Coast are famous for this. For a less messy but equally tasty alternative, ask for black pepper crab.
- Char kway teow (炒稞条) is the quintessential Singapore-style fried noodle dish, consisting of several types of noodles in thick brown sauce with strips of fishcake, Chinese sausage, a token veggie or two and either cockles and shrimp. It’s cheap ($2-3/serve), filling and has nothing to do with the dish known as “Singaporean (fried) noodles” elsewhere! (And which actually doesn’t exist in Singapore.)
- Hainanese chicken rice is meltingly smooth steamed chicken served with chicken-flavored rice and 3 dips- hot chilli, thick black sauce and minced ginger.
- Fish head curry is just what’s you’d think (but tastes much better!). Little India is the place to sample this. Oh, the best part of the fish head is the cheeks!
- Durian is not exactly a dish but a local fruit with distinctive odor you can smell a mile away and a sharp thorny husk. Most foreigners cannot tolerate the smell or taste of the fruit, but to the majority of locals this is a delicacy. The rich creamy yellow flesh is often sold in places like Geylang and Bugis and elsewhere conveniently in pre-packaged packs. It can cost S$1 for a small fruit all the way up to S$24 per kilo depending on the season and type of durian. If you are game enough you should try it, but be warned beforehand – you will either love it or hate it. Note: you’re not allowed to carry durians on the MRT and buses and they’re banned from many hotels. Anecdotal evidence also suggests to avoid alcohol after eating durian. This ‘king of fruits’ is also made into ice cream, cakes, sweets and other decadent desserts.
- Ice kachang literally means “ice bean” in Malay, a good clue to the two major ingredients: shaved ice and sweet red beans. However, more often than not you’ll also get gula melaka (palm sugar), grass jelly, sweet corn, attap palm seeds and anything else on hand thrown in, and the whole thing is then drizzled with canned condensed milk or coconut cream and colored syrups. The end result tastes very interesting — and refreshing.
- Satay, the popular brochettes of meat sold at hawker centres and other food courts, sold with a side of spicy peanut sauce for dipping, slices of fresh cucumber and onions — the “Satay Club” at the Lau Pa Sat near Raffles Place is one popular location for this delicacy.
Article licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0. A list of contributors is available at the original article on Wikitravel.
Looks delicious!!
I am really thankful to this topic because it really gives useful information!!