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  2. Singaporean cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singaporean_cuisine

    Curry puff, also known as epok-epok, a flaky pastry usually stuffed with curry chicken, potato cubes, and a slice of hard-boiled egg. Sardines are sometimes used in place of chicken. Dendeng paru, a dish of dried beef lung cooked in spices. Goreng pisang, bananas rolled in flour, fried, and eaten as a snack.

  3. Culture of Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Singapore

    Singapore's indigenous culture originates primarily from the Austronesian people that arrived from the island of Taiwan, settling between 1500 and 1000 BCE.It was then influenced during the Middle Ages primarily by multiple Chinese dynasties such as the Ming and Qing, as well as by other Asian countries such as the Majapahit Empire, Tokugawa shogunate, and the Ryukyu Kingdom.

  4. List of Singaporean dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Singaporean_dishes

    Singaporean soup-based seafood dish, served hot usually with bee hoon. The dish is viewed as a healthy food in Singapore. Hokkien mee. Noodle dish. A stir-fried dish of egg noodles and rice noodles in a fragrant stock. Kwetiau goreng. Noodle dish. Southeast Asia stir fried flat rice noodles. Shredded chicken noodles.

  5. Lahpet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lahpet

    Lahpet, also spelled laphet, laphat, lephet, leppet, or letpet in English (Burmese: လက်ဖက်; MLCTS: lak hpak, pronounced [ləpʰɛʔ]), is Burmese for fermented or pickled tea. Myanmar is one of the few countries where tea is consumed both as a drink and as an eaten delicacy, in the form of pickled tea, which is unique to this region.

  6. Hokkien mee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hokkien_mee

    Singapore Hokkien mee. [edit] A plate of Singapore-style hokkien mee. In Singapore, Hokkien mee (福建面) refers to a dish of egg noodles and rice noodles stir-fried with egg, slices of pork, prawns and squid. The key to the dish is copious quantities of an aromatic broth made from prawns and pork bones, slowly simmered for many hours.

  7. Eurasian cuisine of Singapore and Malaysia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurasian_cuisine_of...

    Baca assam, beef cheeks cooked in tamarind water [ 1] Chap chye, a stir fried vegetable dish consisting of lily buds, wood fungus, shiitake mushrooms, glass vermicelli/cellophane noodles, bean curd sheets, cabbage, carrots and turnips, dried shrimp/prawn, and onions. Devil's curry or curry debal (Portuguese), chicken and potatoes in a sauce of ...

  8. Indian Singaporean cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Singaporean_cuisine

    e. Indian rojak. Indian Singaporean cuisine refers to food and beverages produced and consumed in Singapore that are derived, wholly or in part, from South Asian culinary traditions. The great variety of Singapore food includes Indian food, which tends to be Tamil cuisine and especially local Tamil Muslim cuisine, although North Indian food has ...

  9. Malay cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malay_cuisine

    Malay cuisine (Malay: Masakan Melayu; Jawi: ماسقن ملايو‎‎ ‎) is the traditional food of the ethnic Malays of Southeast Asia, residing in modern-day Malaysia, Indonesia (parts of Sumatra and Kalimantan), Singapore, Brunei, Southern Thailand and the Philippines (mostly southern) as well as Cocos Islands, Christmas Island, Sri Lanka and South Africa.