Lau Pa Sat Singapore’s First Wet Market Hawker Food Satay Seafood Laksa Chili Crab – Phil in Bangkok
www.SaveMoneyManageMoneyMakeMoney.com http www.PhilinVancouver.com http Lau Pa Sat (or “old market” in the Hokkien dialect) was Singapore’s first wet market that dates back over 150 years ago to the time of Sir Stamford Raffles, the founder of Singapore. It was subsequently converted into a famous gourmet paradise and has been gazetted as a national monument since 1973. Over the years, Singapore’s hawker food culture has evolved tremendously: once rooted in the itinerant hawkers who plied the streets on foot or behind carts, or set up shop in temporary ‘villages’ of stalls, it now boasts an empire of clean, permanent hawker centres, breezily open-air or coolly air-conditioned, and is the focus of innumerable TV shows, print articles, and, of course, arguments over who cooks the best. Time has not changed Singaporeans’ national obsession with street food, our love for the colourful cultures and cuisines that are its foundation: regional variations of Malay, Chinese, Indian and Nonya eats, as well as Western fare like chicken cutlets and chips, and unique flourishes like local coffee and tea — brewed in a muslin filter, foamed up not with an espresso-machine nozzle, but by being poured in sweeping arcs between two mugs. Hawkers are the epitome of the enthusiastic, gung-ho Singaporean approach to life and food. The uncles and aunties who rise before the sun does, who spend hours prepping ingredients, standing behind flaming-hot woks, and patiently taking orders. 10 Uniquely …
Terms:
- bolo satay
- lao ba sa Chilli crab Singapore
- lau pa sat chilli crab













Too bad not a hint of any Nyona food. I guess the Nyona and Baba tribe has almost disappeared.
Oh, don’t you get the feeling you may be in Beijing or Shanghai as 1. S’pore is a Chinese city and 2. Mandarin is the language uncle Harry prescribed.
Golly Phil I’m going nuts just looking at all those food. You need to go back every day to try something different. Oh I envy you right now.