Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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May 19, 2011 By cheryl

Rolina Curry Puffs (Singapore): A Bite of History

There’s been some chatter on Twitter about curry puffs recently — talk, even, of taking a stab at home-made versions of these deep-fried pastries filled with curried potatoes and hard-boiled egg.

Making these puffs — which are divine, especially if eaten piping hot and freshly fried — has never once crossed my mind. This is due in large part to the fact that they’re ubiquitous in Singapore, where I grew up. At 50 cents Singapore (roughly U.S.$0.40) — about what they cost when I was growing up in the 1980s — these puffs were so inexpensive and easy to buy that not many people thought of creating their own. (I salute @WokStar‘s attempt for our Let’s Lunch date next month.)

Among all the hawker stalls that sell curry puffs in Singapore, however, a few stand out. During a visit to Singapore earlier this year, I had the great fortune of stumbling upon one of them while cruising a hawker center, searching for lunch …

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Filed Under: Appetizers, Asian, Cheap Eats, Hainanese, Hawkers, Singapore, Singaporean, Snacks, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Curry, Egg, Hainanese, Hawker, Potato, Rolina Curry Puffs, Singapore, Snack, Tanjong Pagar

February 21, 2010 By cheryl

Nam Seng Noodle House: Old School Wonton Mee


Namseng 
It may sound shallow, but the name of a hawker in Singapore can sometimes be an easy way to tell how good its food is.

If the place is known by or bears the name of a locale that’s nowhere near its actual location, that’s often a sign that you should just drop everything, get in line and order something. Once a hawker stall has made its name somewhere, after all, its faithful will want to follow, wherever it ends up.

The much-beloved Hill Street Char Kway Teow, for example, is currently parked in Singapore’s Bedok area, nowhere near Hill Street. And one of the best places in my parents’ neighborhood for ta meepok, a dish of spicy tagliatelle-like noodles tossed with fishballs and pork, is named Jalan Tua Kong even though, frankly, I have absolutely no idea where Jalan Tua Kong is.

So when I started hearing about the “Old National Library” wonton mee shop — now situated near Singapore’s financial district, far from the former central library — I knew it was a must.

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Filed Under: Cantonese, Chinese, Hawkers, Singapore, Singaporean, Southeast Asian, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Al dente, Black vinegar, Chia Boon Pin, Chili, Far East Organization, Far East Square, Fried rice, Goh Chok Tong, Hawker, Hill Street Char Kway Teow, Jalan Tua Kong, Ketchup, Madam Leong, Nam Seng Noodle House, National Library, Pork lard, Roast pork, Sesame oil, Ta Meepok, Venison, Wantan mee, Wanton mee

July 14, 2009 By cheryl

Big D's Grill: Democratizing Food, One Wagyu Steak At A Time


CIMG3345

It’s peak dinnertime on a weeknight in Singapore and I’m perched on a rickety plastic stool at Big D’s Grill in Holland Village.

The tables are only somewhat clean. It’s so unbearably hot and humid in the food court-style coffee shop that an almost endless trickle of sweat is rolling down my face. And the rumbling din all around only crescendos as the tank-top and shorts-wearing crowd grows and flip-flopped hawkers race from table to table, barking out greetings and taking orders.

It’s hardly the setting where you’d expect to find some of the most satisfying (and, in some instances, inventive) Western dishes currently being served in Singapore. And yet, that’s exactly what you’ll get at Big D’s, a place that serves USD $33 wagyu rib-eye steaks and USD $8.20 snapper livornese from a tiny kitchen wedged between hawker stands that sell noodle dishes and fish soups for around USD $1.

Damian D’Silva, the owner/chef of Big D’s, is something of a man on a mission — and his quest is to bring high-end fare to
a swath of people who love good food but might be intimidated
by or don’t want to be bothered with going to a fancy French or Italian
restaurant. His hole-in-the-wall stall has been part of a growing number of places in hawker centers and other outdoor foodcourts that have been gradually democratizing the eating culture in Singapore simply by selling French, German or Eurasian dishes that one would typically find at higher prices in high-end restaurants in low-key, neighborhood settings.

Big D’s in particular, has been attracting big crowds and attention on the shoulders of Damian’s dishes — the New York Times, apparently, is about to run a feature on the place. (The restaurant’s Facebook page, Fans of Big D’s Grill, sent out an email blast last week urging customers to swing by and pad up the crowds last Friday for a planned photo shoot with a Times photographer.)

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Filed Under: Italian, Peranakan, Restaurants, Singapore, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Anchovy, Australian, Babi Assam, Big D's Grill, Bonet, Coffee Shop, Crawfish, Damian D'Silva, Eurasian, Food Court, Galangal, Grass-fed, Hawker, Holland Village, Kopitiam, Kurobuta, Lemongrass, Linguine, Pasta, Peranakan, Singapore, Spaghetti Aglio Olio, Steak, Turmeric, Western

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