• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Edible Garden
  • Popular Categories
    • Dal Recipes
    • Chicken Recipes
    • Egg Recipes
    • Indo-Chinese Recipes
    • Mushroom Recipes
  • Kerala Recipes
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  1. Home
  2. Uncategorized
  3. The Singapore Hawker Food Tour – A Tour of Food Courts in Singapore

The Singapore Hawker Food Tour – A Tour of Food Courts in Singapore

November 23, 2015 27 Comments

XFacebookPinterestTelegramWhatsAppYummly
Singapore is the hub of Asian fusion food and Singaporeans love their food! Eating out is an activity on its own and done a lot, usually in big groups and with family and extended family. Local food is cheap and very tasty in what is called “hawker centers” where a huge number of food stalls are seen with a wide variety of food from all over Asia. This cultural extravaganza is often new and unique to visitors from other countries, as it was to me when I had just moved to Singapore.
So on a lovely Saturday morning, me and 17 of my colleagues set out to explore 4 different hawker centers in Singapore and to taste their mostly award-winning culinary offerings. We started the trip with an empty stomach and tons of enthusiasm!
We hired a coach for the bunch of us and the entire trip, food and coach cost us just above USD 250.
Pin

The first stop was the hawker center at Tiong Bahru. It was on the first level of the above building and was relatively less crowded since we reached before noon.
Pin
The first thing we tried was Chwee Kueh – steamed rice cakes topped with fried radish, garlic, chilli, some unknown stuff that makes it awesome and tons of oil! I had never tried Chwee Kueh before but those who had, said that the stall, Jian Bo Shui Kueh, was award-winning for a reason. And I believe them.
Pin
Next on the list from our first halt was Pig Organ Soup. I have seen these stalls in almost all hawker centers in Singapore but since I don’t eat pork and am not really that daring, I gave this one a miss. Those who tried it did like it though. The soup usually contains a mix of pig intestines, stomach, blood cubes, pork slices, strips of salted vegetables and some Chinese lettuce.
Pin
Rice congee was next. It was delightfully peppery and I quite liked it. The garnishing you see there is not beancurd, like I thought, but fried pig intestine. I ate around it but there were tons of takers for it anyway.
Pin
We also sampled pork and chicken char siew or pau. Amazing rice dough dumplings filled with yummy pork or chicken filling. Something I would go back for, definitely!
Pin
We finished the first stop at Tiong Bahru with a local dessert – Cheng Teng. A lot of Asian desserts are made with crushed ice and this was one of them.
Pin
Below the flavoured, sweetened ice mountain, there is a bit of red bean cooked just right, which I loved. Its a refreshing finish to an otherwise daring meal.
Pin
The second stop was at Thesevi Food at Jalan Kayu, again an award-winning roti prata place towards the north of the island.
Pin
The variety of prata available here is quite amazing but since we had two more places left to go, we stuck with the original version, tissue prata and banana prata which was the favourite item on the whole trip for a bunch of us.
Pin
Pratas come with a complementary gravy of onions and masala but there are a few curries you can purchase which I would totally recommend, like chicken curry and mutton masala, to begin with.

Pin
We also got this fudge cake from Jane’s cake store nearby.
Pin
It was delightfully Asianized, meaning, made light, not so sweet and spongy, yet retaining the chocolate richness. Reactions were mixed but some of us loved it!
Pin
Third stop – Serangoon Gardens Hawker Center.
Pin
Since we were all more than half full and still had half the number of planned places to go, the best thing to do seemed to get huge mugs of sugarcane juice.
Pin
This stall sells just that and the cleanliness amazed me.
Pin
The stall was spotless and the sugarcane juice machine looked squeky clean.
Pin
It was run by an elderly couple who juiced up 17 glasses in less than 10 mins.
Pin
We also got braised duck (no rice, because we had to give our stomach some love in addition to the wonderful torture!) which was super tender, super yummy and just rightly seasoned.
Pin
The stall seems to be a popular one.
Pin
Satay was next and this is something I could have given a miss. They were too sweet and too peanutty to my liking. However, the super huge kutupat (rice cake served with satays) deserves a thumbs up.
Pin
Carrot cake is another local specialty in Singapore and the stall in this hakwer center takes the cake for making it look relatively healthier and milder than its counterparts in other stalls I have eaten at.
Pin
I personally prefer the darker version of carrot cake but after all the food we’d had by then, the lighter version seemed like a better choice. Though we were too full to relish it completely, the plates were wiped out before we left!
Pin
The last and final stop – Old Airport Road Hakwer Center. We had to get the Char Kway Teow.
Pin
This is one of the most popular Singaporean dishes and though we were really really full beyond imagination at this time, we all tried this. This is one of the very few dishes still prepared in a super hot wok in pork lard. I did manage to get some made in oil and with no pork in Penang, but that’s a whole different story that can come later in another post.
Pin
Rojak was next. This definitely is an acquired taste and something I wouldn’t really want to eat if I had so much choice as I would in a hakwer center. Its usually a mix of different fruits and vegetables to give it sweet, sour and spicy flavours. The sauce had peanuts in it and somehow reminded me of the chaat sauce we have in India. But only a little bit. That’s all I had of it anyway. Definitely the least popular among the crowd, either because of the taste or due to the “fullness factor”.
Pin
Before our stomachs could cry out loud, we quickly got ice kachangs, another crushed ice dessert that comes flavoured, sweetened and topped with some corn.
Pin
I found the combination weird as did some others but it was definitely a welcome finish to all that chilli, oil, pork lard and what not in our stomachs by then.
We dragged ourselves back to the bus and vowed to skip dinner, which most of us did, apparently.
It was a lovely, gluttonous day and thanks to everyone who joined us. Read more at Joann’s place. She has more pictures from the Prata place which I clearly don’t because I was too “busy” then.
XFacebookPinterestTelegramWhatsAppYummly

By nags Filed Under: Restaurant Reviews, Uncategorized

Previous Post: « Garlic Rasam / Poondu Rasam Recipe
Next Post: Easy Apple Crumble with Vanilla Custard Sauce »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. taste traveller

    April 1, 2010 at 1:21 pm

    This looks like so much fun, I'm very jealous! Wonderful pictures too – makes me want to go to Singapore, or anywhere where I can find some good Hawker stalls.

    Reply
  2. The Duo Dishes

    April 1, 2010 at 1:21 pm

    Mmm, lots of good food there. Wish we could do a food tour and sample some things like that. So fun! Really nice 24 post.

    Reply
  3. Soma

    April 1, 2010 at 1:21 pm

    Girl that was a LOT!:-)

    Reply
  4. aquadaze

    April 1, 2010 at 1:21 pm

    seriously…so much food in one afternoon? how?!!

    Reply
  5. aquadaze

    July 3, 2009 at 4:41 pm

    seriously…so much food in one afternoon? how?!!

    Reply
  6. The Duo Dishes

    June 30, 2009 at 6:15 pm

    Mmm, lots of good food there. Wish we could do a food tour and sample some things like that. So fun! Really nice 24 post.

    Reply
  7. Varsha Vipins

    June 29, 2009 at 10:17 pm

    Gosh..did'nt your tummy kick you after all this..:D

    Reply
« Older Comments

Leave a Reply to The Duo Dishes Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating





Primary Sidebar

Hello!

I am Nags, the face behind Edible Garden, a food and recipes website for the busy (and sometimes lazy!) cook since 2007. My recipes are meant to be quick yet healthy and delicious - Nothing fancy, nothing too difficult. Follow Me On Instagram for real-time food and life updates.

Trending Recipes

Kerala plum cake recipe
Butter-Chicken-Recipe-murgh makhani
paneer butter masala recipe restaurant style
Eggless No-Bake Mango Cheesecake Recipe Step by Step
Instant Oats Idli Recipe with Rava, Step by Step
1 min chocolate chip cookie in a cup
dosa recipe-how to make dosa
pressure cooker eggless sponge cake recipe (no oven cake)
vegetable pulao recipe
garlic pull-apart rolls recipe, eggless
bread paneer rolls recipe
easy pav bhaji recipe

Browse Older Recipes

Copyright © 2025