Olive Magazine

Cook like a local: Singapore

Experience the heady mix of food cultures that exists in this Southeast Asian city-state

- Words and recipes ELIZABETH HAIGH

Experience the heady mix of food cultures that exist in this Southeast Asian city state

Singapore – known as the ‘little red dot’ for how it looks on maps – seems small but what it lacks in size it makes up for in diversity, technology and culture.

It’s impossible to pinpoint an exact descriptio­n for the cuisine as it’s in uenced by neighbouri­ng countries (China, Malaysia and Indonesia) and its colonial British past. National dishes include Hainanese chicken rice, nasi lemak, nonya laksa, satay, sambal, curry and much more. The food is rich in spice and heat thanks to bird’s-eye chillies (chilli padi) and fresh spices and herbs from the wet markets, and gets fragrance from galangal and lemongrass, and salinity from fermented shrimps and tofu made in Malaysian shing villages.

The street food scene is in hawker centres. The vendors are specialist­s who have cooked one or two dishes for generation­s. Most street food is sold for under $10, which encourages everyone to eat out two or three times a day.

Street food tea shops, or kopitiams, are good for a quick bite. Singapore has a sweet tooth – we enjoy rich coconut jam (kaya) on bread, and kopi (co ee) specialist­s grind and roast their beans with sugar to serve with condensed milk.

Singapore has also embraced its modern side, with cocktail bars, Michelin-starred restaurant­s and secret hideaway spots popping up – it truly caters to everyone’s tastes.

“it’s impossible to pinpoint an exact descriptio­n for the cuisine as it’s influenced by neighborin­g countries and its colonial past”

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August 2021
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