A close friend who has lived in Asia, mostly Singapore, for the last 15 years recently made me an offer I couldn’t refuse: come visit him there for a week-long eating extravaganza and a free business-class ticket would be made available. I hadn’t visited “The Senator,” as we have affectionately called him for decades since 2001. As he was my cooking mentor in my youth, tooling around Singapore with him now as a geezer sounded like a dream come true. I’d been to Singapore three previous times throughout the years, but always as a quick stopover after Scuba diving trips made in that Hemisphere –food being an afterthought at that point. Having never really dug into Singapore’s amazing culinary culture to any large degree before, I was excited beyond words to learn and taste its legendary and diverse food offerings, most notably within the confines of its numerous hawker markets.
Amongst its never-ending stretches of shopping malls, where most of its dining establishments are located, lie Singapore’s humble hawker markets and food courts – a dense HQ for some of the world’s finest cheap eats. Traditionally hawker markets were open-air markets that fed Singapore’s diverse melting pot of Chinese, Malaysian, and Indian poor (although nowadays, cleaner and newer indoor versions have also entered the scene). Food courts today, however, are routinely frequented by both local and tourist, rich and poor alike. Their historic importance on the Singaporean culinary front cannot be overemphasized. Since gaining its independence in 1965, Singapore has gone from a backwater outpost to having one of the highest standard of livings in the world, due largely to ex-Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.
At a typical hawker market such as Tiong Bahru Food Centre, classic Singaporean dishes originating from elsewhere such as nasi lemak (Malay), or Hokkien mee (Chinese), bak kut teh (Chinese) can readily be found at its numerous food stalls. Additionally, some of the most pristine and unique kinds of fresh fish I’ve seen everywhere can also be procured there.
Here are four classic Singaporean offerings rarely, if ever, found in Chicago that I think are quite delicious:
Hainanese Chicken Rice
Although commonly known as the national dish of Singapore, its roots are firmly planted in the southern Chinese island region of Hainan where it’s called Wenchang chicken (文昌雞). Over the years, Chinese migrants to Malayasia and Singapore adapted it (as they also did in other places they settled such as Taiwan and Thailand) to their own liking. To the untrained Western eye, Hainanese chicken is nothing more than chicken over rice. But to those who consider it almost a sacred experience, however, the beauty of this dish lies in the details.
A mandatory requirement for creating first-rate Hainanese chicken or “Chicken rice” starts with premium chickens. Many lovers of this dish believe that if a high-quality chicken isn’t used, this simple dish stands no chance of being memorable.
Making Hainanese starts with boiling a chicken in pork or chicken stock along with ginger and garlic. When the chicken has been cooked to its ideal, it is then cooled in an ice bath so as to prevent overcooking. The oils/fats from this chicken stock are then used to make simple fried rice (garlic, ginger, and pandan/screwpine leaves) and the perfectly poached sliced chicken (usually white meat only) is placed on top. To many, the accompanying chili and/or ginger dipping sauces (sambals) are the most critical element to any serious chicken rice. At the better Hainanese chicken rice hawker stalls, a side of the chicken soup is served, almost as though they want to provide evidence to its customers of the quality and freshness of chickens they are using.
The dish is culinary simplicity at its best. As a chicken & rice fanatic of numerous global iterations, Hainanese chicken rice resonates within my primordial poultry soul like almost no other dish. I have to thank TonyC in LA for introducing this dish to me while out there. If you’re looking for a great rendition, head over to the highly praised Savoy Kitchen in Alhambra (138 East Valley Boulevard). Their chicken put me on a fanatical mission to find some great examples of this dish while exploring Singapore’s numerous hawker markets.
Fried Carrot Cake (
Chai Tau Kway 菜头粿 )

My favorite dim sum item is unquestionably
lo bak go (fried turnip or radish cake) and I love nothing more than eggs. Essentially, if you break up some
lo bak go, mix it with some scrambled eggs, add a little rice flour, fish sauce, garlic, and top it with chopped scallion, the end result is fried carrot cake.
This dish can be found throughout Malaysia, Thailand, and Singapore where sizable Teochew populations (originating from the southeast Chinese province of Guangdong) reside. A black version is sometime found which uses a dark or sweet soy sauce. The black version is more commonly found in Malaysia but can also be found in Singapore’s hawker markets as well.
While there, I found Fried carrot cake to be the utopian mid-afternoon nosh…followed up with a quality cigar to be enjoyed in Singapore’s ideal tobacco climate of serious humidity (usually over 80%).
Curry Laksa
The side item next to the bowl of curry laksa is called otah (Malay: “otak-otak”), a spicy fish or shrimp paste wrapped inside a charcoal roasted banana leaf.
This highly popular spicy noodle soup in Singapore (as well as elsewhere in Asia) typically comes in two forms there: Curry Laksa and Assam Laksa. Both versions originate from descendents of Chinese trader immigrants (known as Peranakan Chinese) to the Indonesian archipelago 500 or so years ago, then later migrating to the active ports of Singapore and Penang (Malaysia) sometime in the 19th century.
Curry Laksa is commonly made with
rempah (curry spice paste), coconut milk, shrimp, tofu, and noodles. Assam (tamarind) or Penang Laksa is a sour fish noodle soup essentially made with a fresh fish such as herring, mackerel, or sardines along with tamarind (the sour element to this soup) & chili paste, dried shrimp paste (belacan), galangal, aromatic vegetables such as onion, shallots, ginger flower, and lemon grass. Thick rice noodles also known as laksa noodles are most commonly used, although thin rice vermicelli (
bee hoon or
mee hoon) are also common.
The three main taste profiles of this soup (bold shrimp essence, sourness, and spice) make laksa one of the world’s truly great culinary delights. Before this trip, I’d never before had any form of laksa and am not aware of a single place in Chicago that serves any traditional form of this great noodle soup.
Black Pepper Crab
This beloved local classic and descendent of the much-beloved Singaporean recipe Chilli Crab, is a fairly recent development to this food-centric nation’s culinary scene, having been around no earlier than the 1960s. The original recipe for chilli crab is widely claimed to have been invented in Singapore sometime in the 1950s (originally being served from a pushcart by a Singaporean Teochew that had modified and spiced up the dish from the more straightforward steamed crab preparations typically found). There has been some dispute recently about the origins of Chilli Crab - whether from Singapore or Malaysia. A Malaysian tourist minister a few years back (2009) made claims that the dish had Malaysian roots. However, most seem to find this claim lacking any credibility.
The list of ingredients used in most black pepper crab recipes include live or very fresh crab, loads of ultra-fresh/coarse black pepper, butter and/or oil, garlic, ginger, chilies, oyster sauce, sugar, and soy sauce.
I enjoy this dish because of the deliciousness of the Singapore crab and how it is showcased by the amazing vibrancy of the fresh black pepper one commonly finds in these parts. The entire crab is slathered in the butter/oil and saturated with loads of black pepper. It’s a sloppy mess to eat, yes, but an absolutely delicious mess that’s well worth the mandatory hose down afterwards.
Thanks, Senator.
Savoy Kitchen138 East Valley Boulevard
Alhambra, CA
(626) 308-9535