Looking
backward
Chinese traders migrated from several
different provinces of southern China, bringing with them distinct languages
and cuisines. This can be observed in the dishes of modern day Singapore.
Hainanese chicken rice, arguably
the king of Singaporean hawker food, evolved from a Hainan dish made of
bony wengcheng chicken. Hokkiens from Amoy and Fukien provinces brought with
them Hokkien mee or
yellow wheat noodles, incorporated into many hawker dishes, a popular one being
Hokkien char mee.
Peranakan, or Nonya, cuisine was born in the
late 1800s. When
Chinese labourers arrived in Southeast Asia without wives, they
began marrying Malay women and their descendants came to be known as Peranakan
or Straits Chinese. Their food combined flavours from China, Malaya and the
countries they travelled to as merchants. In many ways these were the earlier versions of
fusion foods.
Laksa, one of the several dishes both Singapore and Malaysia have
invented.
Katong laksa is a vermicelli noodle soup made with coconut milk, prawns,
cockles, fish cakes, bean sprouts, lemongrass, turmeric, homemade shrimp-chilli
paste and the all-important laksa leaves. The turmeric and chilli suggest
Indian influence, while the sprouts suggest Chinese influence. The rest
incorporates a mix of Malay, South Indian and Eurasian influences.
One Singaporean dish with obvious Indian influence
is the curry puff, created as a British friendly version of the samosa. Curry
puffs are puff pastries filled with potatoes, Indian spices and meat.
(Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singaporean_cuisine)
Source: www.bbc.com/.../20101214-travelwise-singaporean-food-past-and-present)
3. The Five Different Dishes
Our
group has selected the following 5 different types of food which are well loved
by most Singaporeans. This project description
includes:
- brief
account of the origin and history of the dish
- food preparation
methods and variations
- personal food
reviews
Through
this food trail, we have discovered that local dishes such as those we selected
were originally not from Singapore but rather they were brought into Singapore by
early migrants and have since evolved into what they are today. During our
research, we have also discovered that some of these dishes such as Char Kway
Teow has been “exported to” and “modified by” food connoisseur of other
countries who have come to enjoy them.
4. Chinese Heritage Food
The
Chinese constitute about 80% of the population of Singapore according to census
taken in 2010 by the Singapore Department of Statistics. Among them, the
Hokkiens, Teochews, and Cantonese form the largest dialect groups, while the
Hakka, Hainanese, Foochows, Henghwas and Hokchias make up the smaller
sub-groups.
Char kway teow, literally
"stir-fried rice cake strips", is a popular noodle dish in Brunei,
Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. The dish was (and still is in some places
in Malaysia), especially in Singapore, can be best enjoyed at Hawker Centers
and food courts. It is one of the favorite national dishes in Singapore.
A
hint of char kway teow’s origin comes from the final word “teow.” Char kway
teow originates in the South China ethnic group called the Teochew, more
specifically, around Swatow, or modern day Shantou. As migrants moved from
southern China to Southeast Asia, they brought their cuisine with them;
however, the same ingredients were not always immediately available. Char kway
teow grew out of the improvisations these migrants made. The Hokkien also professed that this is one of
their traditional dish from China.
Ingredients & Preparations
It is made from
flat rice
noodles (河粉 hé fěn in Chinese)
of approximately 1 cm or (in the north of Malaysia) about 0.5 cm in
width, stir-fried over very high heat with light and dark soy sauce,
chilli,
a small quantity of belachan, whole prawns, de-shelled cockles, bean sprouts
and chopped Chinese chives. The dish is commonly stir-fried
with egg, slices of Chinese sausage and fishcake,
and less commonly with other ingredients. Char kway teow is
traditionally stir-fried in pork fat, with crisp croutons of pork lard, and commonly served
on a piece of banana leaf on a plate.
Char kway teow has a
reputation of being unhealthy due to its high saturated fat
content. However, when the dish was first invented, it was mainly served to labourers.
The high fat content and low cost of the dish made it attractive to these
people as it was a cheap source of energy
and nutrients.
When the dish was first served, it was often sold by fishermen,
farmers
and cockle-gatherers who doubled as char kway teow hawkers in the
evening to supplement their income.
Variations
As the dish
has become increasingly popular, many cooks have come up with their own
interpretations of the same basic main ingredient of rice cake strips/flat rice noodles fried with
anything from eggs (chicken or duck), onions, garlic, prawns, cockles, Chinese
sausage, chives, etc.
Of all the
notable versions, the Penang style of char kway teow is the most famous.
Its popularity leads many char koay teow sellers outside Penang to call
their products "Penang char koay teow" in order to attract
customers.
In the past
it was usual to stir-fry char kway teow in pork fat without eggs (which
were, however, available on request). More recently, ordinary cooking oil is
commonly used for health or religious reasons, and eggs have become a standard
ingredient in the dish.
In other
parts of Malaysia, such as Miri in East Malaysia, additional ingredients may include beef,
onions, sweet soya sauce, etc.
Versions of char
koay teow prepared by Muslims in Malaysia will exclude pork fat and may
include extra soy sauces and spices and the use of broader-width flat rice
noodles. There are also vegetarian varieties that may or may not include
eggs
There are
also "gourmet" versions of char kway teow, commonly found in
Ipoh and Penang, where the dish may be prepared with more seafood, with crab
meat and with duck eggs.
In
Indonesia, the dish is known as Kwetiau Goreng (Indonesian: fried flat rice noodles) and is
served in Chinese restaurants and by travelling street hawkers. The Indonesian
version is less oily, uses no lard, and normally incorporates beef or chicken
to cater to the majority Muslim population. However, some Chinese restaurants
in Indonesia that serve non-Muslim customers do use pork and pork fat.
Char kway
teow
is also popular at takeaways in Australia and New Zealand, where it may appear
on the menu as 'Kwai Due' or some variant spelling thereof.
Many
Southeast Asian restaurants in Hong Kong offer char kway teow as a Malay
specialty although it is of Southeast Asian Chinese origin. The char kway
teow served in Hong Kong is an entirely different dish: stir-fried
Chinese-style flat rice noodles with prawns, char siu,
onions, and bean sprouts, seasoned with curry and bright yellow in colour. In
some places this is known as Fried "Good Dale", a
transliteration of the characters "炒貴刁".
The Char
Kway Teow in Kampar, Perak, Malaysia, is served with cockles but with no prawns
(although prawns may be available on request). According to old Kampar Char
Kway Teow sellers; this is because
Kampar was not near any source of fresh prawns. In Singapore, char kway teow
has evolved into a healthier version with more vegetables and less oil.
Furthermore, the greens and bean sprouts gives off a fresh, crunchy texture
that makes the dish taste even more unique from other dishes of the cuisine.
From how the
dish’s evolution, we can see how it reflects the different lifestyle we have at
different geographical location and periods. In early Singapore, we could tell
that many wanted to save money and were not educated on the importance of
health. However, as Singapore developed and education was made available to
many, Singaporeans are more health conscious and make it an effort to eat
healthily.
Food Review
The store we visited was located in the Zion Road
Food Centre. The stall has been in
business for more than a decade. The stall has also won several awards and the
owner was proud to displace them in front of his stall.
There was a short queue as we arrived after lunch
hours. The store was generally clean and has a 'B’ grade for cleanliness by the
authority.
We tried the version with dark sauce and cockles.
It tasted a little soggy and oily but flavourful. Our char kway teow included a little
vegetable and slices of Chinese sausages. The cockles were partially cocked and
have a slight raw taste to it.
The dish of fried noodles is difficult to perfect,
but the final product is totally worth the effort! High
heat, a well- seasoned wok and lard are stepping stones to perfection. The
more times you cook this, the more attuned your eyes and hands will become to
the short successive frying stages for the different ingredients.
We all liked it and agreed that it was worth our
visit.
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Char_kway_teow
Source:
www.keropokman.com/2008/08/history-of-char-kuey-teow-national.html
Source: sgfoodhistory.blogspot.com/2012/07/char-kway-teow.html
Source: Chinese Heritage Cooking by Christopher Tan
& Amy Van
5. Malay Heritage
Food
The Malay community in Singapore makes up about 14
per cent of the country’s population today. Malay cuisine In Singapore is a
reflection of the country’s multifaceted heritage and culture. It is strongly
influenced by Indonesian and Malaysia cuisines and has infused elements from
the various ethnic communities in Singapore.
Malay Food - Beef Rendang
Rendang is a popular dish of meat stewed in coconut
milk and spices, commonly found in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia. Rendang is a savoury,
flavourful, Indonesian accompaniment dish made of meat or vegetables, which is
served with a variety of rice dishes. A perfect heritage dish of Indonesia, Malaysia
and Singapore; this traditional spicy food from the Minangkabau cuisine
is prepared for festivals and special occasions. Rendang recipes are of two
basic types- the dry and the wet. The dry form is a much-preferred ceremonial
food mainly prepared to honour guests. Though many Malaysian curries are
broadly classified as Rendang, the dish in the true sense of the word is not a
curry, though it may appear to be so.
Origin
of Rendang
Rendang
seems to have been invented in or before the first half of the sixteenth
century as reference to the dish is observed in 1550 A.D., in the literary
works on Amir Hamzah, one of the greatest heroes of Malayan history. Rendang is believed to originate from West Sumatra where water buffalo
was traditionally used as the meat. The dish signifies the wealth of the person
or community that can afford to put down a water buffalo for consumption. Water
buffalos; however, tend to be tougher than common beef found in most Western
countries. To make it more palatable, the meat of the buffalo is thus cooked on
a low temperature over a long period of time and braised in coconut milk and
spices until it becomes a dry curry. As the whole buffalo was prepared, the
dish was cooked in large quantities, often using a large wok. Rendang was
originally wrapped in plantain or banana leaves for consumption on long
journeys.
The dish today is considered a celebratory meal, served regularly during Hari
Raya, a major feast day amongst Muslim Malays, and at Malay weddings. It is
eaten with rice or a staple like lontong.
Ingredients and Food Preparation Method
The
meat, usually beef but sometimes chicken or mutton, is stewed in coconut milk
with spices such as ginger, chillies, galangal
(blue ginger), lemongrass, garlic, shallots, kaffir lime leaves and
turmeric. A wide rather than a deep pot is preferred to allow the milk to
evaporate during a slow boil of up to three hours. Skill is required to ensure
the liquid does not over boil and cause the milk to curdle. However, if the
fire is too low, the meat could burn. Correctly cooked, the liquid will thicken
into the distinctive rendang gravy. This cooking process has several purposes –
it adds flavour to the meat as it is braised in the spices; it softens and tenderises
the meat as the dish dries up; and it enhances the preservation of the dish,
allowing it to remain edible even two to three days later without refrigeration
or up to two weeks in the refrigerator.
Combine all
rempah ingredients in a blender and blitz into a smooth paste. Pour into a
large mixing bowl together with beef and mix thoroughly. Cover, refrigerate and
leave to marinate overnight or for 2 hours at minimum. To cook, transfer meat
into a large non-stick saucepan. Add remaining ingredients and cook uncovered
on a low to medium heat until half the liquid has evaporated. Stir occasionally
to check the mixture is not catching on the bottom.
Cook until the rendang develops into a dark brown with
most of the liquid evaporated and beef tender. This should take 1 – 1 ½ hours.
The dish is best eaten with rice and
is sometimes consumed with ketupat
(steamed pressed rice). It is more often served in hawker centres
as one of several dishes in nasi padang.
Food Review
The store we visited was located
along River Valley Road. This was a Nasi Padang eating house, The various
dishes were already cooked and displayed on the shelves, in the chafing dishes
for customers’ selection.
As we visited the eating house
after lunch, there was no crowd so we need not wait to enjoy the food.
The beef rendang
was spicy. The meat was a bit tough but juicy. The aroma from the spice, herbs
and coconut made it all so appetizing. As we visited the store after lunch
hours, the food had been left on the shelf for awhile, so it was not piping hot.
It would have tasted much yummier if it were hot. The flavors of Beef Rendang unfold in layers. First
there are the zingy flavors of lemongrass and ginger, then comes the savoury
beef along with a torrent of chilli, finally, as you continue to chew you start
tasting the creamy coconut milk towards the back of your tongue.
We would recommend it to our
friends.
en.netlog.com/FewelwclAnnofamae/blog/blogid=5293169
malaysiakitchen.com.au/?type_recipe=pohs-beef-rendang
http://norecipes.com/blog/beef-rendang-recipe/#sthash.7MvcuxkG.9zqd1Dt7.dpbs
6. Indian Heritage Food
Indians in Singapore are mostly the descendants of
migrants who came from the Indian subcontinent and the peninsula of Malaya
during the British rule. The early immigrants came seeking opportunities to
work and trade. Indians
came to Singapore first as indentured servants and later as traders.
Indian cuisine can be broadly divided into North
Indian and South Indian. While the northerners tend to cook with cow’s milk and
ghee with are milder in their use of spices, the southerners generally cook
with coconut milk and oil and have a penchant for curry leaves.
The early Indian immigrants in Singapore
incorporated local ingredients and cooking styles into their traditional
cuisines or spiced up Malay or Chinese dishes with an Indian touch, creating
new dishes unique to Singapore.
Indian Food - Roti Prata
Roti prata (Pratha) is a round pancake, often eaten
with mutton or fish curry. It is sold mostly by Indian Muslims at coffee shops
and hawker centres and often costs anything between 60 to 80 cents. To many, it
serves as a staple food for breakfast, lunch and dinner although it is most
often eaten at breakfast.
Origins
The Roti Prata belongs to a group of breads which are indigenous
to India. Brought to Singapore by Indian immigrants, the Roti Prata is said to
be either of Punjabi origin or introduced by the Muslim conquerors, who also
specialised in making various types of breads.
Perhaps roti prata is the most popular Indian bread
in Singapore, commonly eaten with a Malay-style mutton rib curry cooked with
dhal. Traditionally parotta (the bread’s original name) is eaten with a coconut
milk-based curry called kurma. There are two common varieties of roti prate-
plain and with egg but Indian Muslim stalls across the island also offer
interesting and innovative versions incorporating cheese, mushrooms, bananas,
sugar, jam, chocolate, ice cream and other similarly unexpected ingredients.
Ingredients & Food Preparation
Flour,
sugar and salt are the basic ingredients for Roti Prata. Water is added to the
flour to form a stiff dough. The dough is kneaded next. This is an
important procedure as it makes the dough soft and pliable. By kneading, the
dough is also aired and this makes it light. After this, the dough is divided
into smaller portions and left to rest overnight.
In the morning, the ball of dough is placed on the work table and the
prata-maker gets to work. With sure, quick movements, he whirls and twirls the
dough from left to right, from right to left until it is paper thin
and four or five times larger than the original piece. This is the
most difficult step in prata making and is considered an art in itself. After
folding this thin piece into a rectangle, he tosses the prata on the griddle
greased with peanut oil.
Fry it in an
oiled pan on both sides till brown spots appear and crispy. Crush by pressing
it together with both hands and serve immediately.
The
prata is said to be cooked when dark brown "blisters" burst on the
surface. A well-made prata should be crisp outside and soft inside. Pratas can
be eaten with sugar, curries or just plain. The most enjoyable way of eating
the prata is with the fingers; the bread is torn into bite size pieces and
dipped into the curry before being popped into the mouth.
Variations
There are many variations of the ordinary prata. When egg is
added, it is an egg prata. This usually costs double the price of a plain
prata. When minced meat such as mutton or chicken, eggs and onions are added,
it is called muruthapa.
Vegetarian Indian restaurants also sell muruthapas with a vegetable filling.
The dish has evolved somewhat differently in
Singapore and in Malaysia. In Singapore, economic affluence and cultural
influences have created variations reflective of the cosmopolitan character of
the city. For instance, it is common to find outlets serving roti prata with
flavourings as varied as garlic, banana, chocolate, durian and cheese. This is less common in Malaysia. Also roti prata variations
are more likely to be known by names such as cheese prata or onion prata rather
than with a roti prefix, and mostly in the English
language. More recently, the dish has also evolved to other sweeter and
crispier variants such as "tissue" and "paper" which are
pan-fried with butter, rolled into a cone shape and sprinkled with sugar.
Food Review
The store we visited was located inside the
food court at Great World City. The name of the store is Mr. Prata. This is a
branch of an existing eatery elsewhere.
The store holder was friendly and the
service was great. He even volunteered to demonstrate the making of the prata
for our recording. The prate was crispy on the outside and chewy and soft on
the inside. The curry sauce for dipping was not too spicy and delicious.
We had a great time and definitely a good
idea to visit it again.
Source: recipes.wikia.com/wiki/Roti_Prata
Source : Indian Heritage Cooking by devagi Sanmugam
& Shanmugam Kasinathan
7. Fusion Food - Satay Beehoon
Satay beehoon is a dish of the
cultural fusion between Malay and Chinese.
Satay bee hoon sauce is a chilli-based peanut
sauce very similar to the one served with satay. The satay sauce
is spread on top of rice vermicelli.
Ingredients
Origin
Arabs
were known to skewer their meat on swords before roasting and Middle Eastern
nomads would barbecue their meat on metal skewers in a dish known as kebab or
sharwarma. The spice trade brought Arab traders to Southeast Asia and led to the
spread of Arab culinary culture to the Indonesians and eventually to Malaya.
The satay sauce, made from ground peanuts and other spices, was first
introduced in the Philippines by the Spanish from South America. It is used to
marinate the pieces of satay meat, with the remaining sauce served as a dip
with the grilled meat.
Satay & Satay sauce in Singapore
The
travelling satay man, a street hawker who prepared his delicacy with a portable
charcoal grill, was a familiar sight to Singaporeans up to the late 1970s. The Satay Club,
a collection of stalls hawking solely satay in the evenings at the edge of the
park at the Esplanade,
was a popular dining destination until it was demolished in 1995 to make way
for new developments. Today, satay is sold in many hawker centres and whole
industries have grown around it. There are now wholesalers that prepare
uncooked satay for hawkers, taking over a tedious task that used to be the sole
duty of the satay hawker.
A local variant of the traditional satay sauce has the peanut mix topped with
pineapple puree. New dishes have also been introduced, such as satay beehoon,
which has adopted the unmistakable satay ingredients. To make a good
Satay sauce, you need to roast the peanuts with the skin on, then remove the
skin and grind it into sandy powder and then slow cook it with 15 different
ingredients in order to achieve that smooth, nutty, spicy, sweetly goodness.
Ingredients
& Food Preparation
Grind all although the ingredients for peanut sauce
and stir-fry with some oil till fragrant. Combine with other ingredients for
the gravy, mainly tamarind juice, water, sugar and roasted peanuts and bring to
boil till thickened and. Stir in curry powder. Blanch beehoon, cuttlefish, bean
curd puffs and kang kong in boiling water. Drain and transfer to dish and pour
hot peanut sauce over the beehoon. You may add de-shelled cockles. Ever wonder how the
cuttlefish is made? Well, you start with dried cuttlefish, soak it in a
lye water (kee zhui) solution and keep circulating the water overnight in order
to rehydrate it into that translucent, crunchy consistency. It is little
wonder that there are not many people want to sell the stuff!
Food Review
The store we visited was located at Redhill Food
Centre. The name of the store is Bak Kee Satay Beehoon.
The satay sauce was thick and creamy. It was full
of peanut flavour with a strong dose of chilli. The kang kong was crunchy and
the vermicelli was cooked to perfection - al dente. The store holder was
generous with the other ingredients like cockles and cuttlefish.
It was definitely worth our visit. Those who do sell
Satay Bee Hoon, do it because they really love the dish. Without passion,
it won't be easy to continue stirring that pot of Satay sauce otherwise.
The satay sauce is so precious that you can't actually ask for more of
it. The sauce is after all the star of the
show while the other ingredients are just there to give you a reason for eating
it.
Source: Simply Singaporean by Eric Teo (Seashore
Publication)
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satay_bee_hoon
Source: ieatishootipost.sg/2009/04/bak-kee-teochew-satay-bee-hoon-why-is.html
Source: Simply Singaporean by Eric
Teo (Seashore Publication)
Fusion Food – Hainanese Pork Chop
Origin & History
Hainanese refers
to the Chinese who originate from Hainan Island, the southernmost and smallest
Chinese province. Most Hainanese Han people were originally fishermen
from the Fujian
and Guangdong
provinces who later settled in Hainan.
They make up 7 per cent of the Chinese in Singapore today. They arrived in
Singapore only around 1850s because of the late opening of Hainan Island to
foreign trade. As they came later than the rest of the Chinese, they stayed
further from the main godowns along the Singapore River and resided in the
areas around Middle Road, Purvis Street and Beach Road, which is still very
much regarded as the main enclave for the Hainanese.
As their dialect was unintelligible to the other
Chinese groups, the Hainanese found it difficult to communicate with the
others. They also did not have the connections to help them get into established
trades.
Thus worked as cooks and domestic servants for
European families and wealthy Peranakan households in the Bukit Timah, Tanglin
and Changi areas, as well as waiters and cook boys in coffee shops, bakeries
and restaurants/hotels.
In Singapore
& Malaysia (known as Malaya then),
most Hainanese worked as cooks in British military camps and in the homes of British
expatriates during the colonial days. Many of them transported their culinary
prowess to their own coffee shops.
Ingredients and Food Preparation Method
The Hainanese Pork Chop is of western origin but uses a combination of western and Chinese
ingredients
and is unique to Singapore and Malaysia.
The Anglicised restaurant and hawker dishes we now
call “Western food” largely evolved from these roots. The original version of
this dish was likely seasoned with British condiments such as HP sauce and Worcestershire
sauce. Versions that added tomato ketchup to the sauce mix are more common
nowadays. The Hainanese also added cream crackers as coating to give it the
crispy and crunchy texture which is unlike the origin version.
The boneless pork chops are dusted with corn flour
and set aside for a minute. Dip them in beaten
egg and coat with cream cracker before deep-frying until golden brown. HP, Worcestershire
sauce, or ketchup and other sauces and seasoning are used to cook the gravy. Other
ingredients such as potatoes, onions and peas are then stir fried before
pouring over the thicken gravy onto the crispy pork chops.
Food Review
The shop that we visited is
located at Pervis Street. It is a well known eatery called Killiney Coffee
Shop. The shop is famous for its kaya toast and local coffee. It also serves very delicious Hainanese pork
chop. The manager was very kind and hospitable towards us. She accepted our interview willingly.
The pork chop was very tender
and juicy. It is coated with sweet and spicy tomato sauce. It goes very well
with plain white rice. We enjoyed our visit to this eatery and would definitely
recommend others to try it out.