When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: chongqing szechuan food and wine market place singapore opening hours near me

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chongqing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chongqing

    Chongqing food is part of Sichuan cuisine. Chongqing is known for its spicy food. Its food is normally considered numbing because of the use of Sichuan pepper, also known as Sichuan peppercorn, containing hydroxy alpha sanshool. Chongqing's city center has many restaurants and food stalls where meals often cost less than RMB10.

  3. Sichuan cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sichuan_cuisine

    Sichuan cuisine or Sichuanese cuisine, alternatively romanized as Szechwan cuisine or Szechuan cuisine (Chinese: 四川 ⓘ, Standard Mandarin pronunciation: [sɨ̂.ʈʂʰwán] ⓘ) [1] is a style of Chinese cuisine originating from Sichuan province and the neighboring Chongqing municipality. Chongqing was formerly a part of Sichuan until 1997 ...

  4. Newton Food Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton_food_centre

    Newton Food Centre is a hawker centre in Newton, at the intersection of Newton Circus and Clemenceau Avenue North. The food centre was promoted by the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) as a tourist attraction for sampling Singaporean cuisine. It was first opened in 1971 and it closed down in 2005 as the government wanted to revamp the food centre. [1]

  5. People's Park Complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People's_Park_Complex

    It later became the People's Market or Pearl's Market with outdoor stalls which was destroyed by a fire in 1966. [1] With a height of 103 metres (338 feet), the 31-storey People's Park Complex building was the first shopping centre of its kind in Southeast Asia and set the pattern for later retail developments in Singapore. The shopping centre ...

  6. Gastronomy in Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastronomy_in_Singapore

    Olde Cuban restaurant, Chinatown, Singapore. Notable eateries in Singapore are café, coffee shop, convenience stores, fast food restaurant, food courts, hawker centres, restaurant (casual), speciality food shops, and fine dining restaurants. According to Singstat in 2014 there were 6,668 outlets, where 2,426 are considered as sit down places.

  7. Raffles City Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raffles_City_Singapore

    Raffles City is a large complex located in the Civic District within the Downtown Core of the city-state of Singapore.Occupying an entire city block bounded by Stamford Road, Beach Road, Bras Basah Road and North Bridge Road, it houses two hotels and an office tower over a podium which contains a shopping complex and a convention centre.

  8. Tekka Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tekka_Centre

    The case of Tekka Centre is often used to illustrate the complexities of Chinese language romanisation in Singapore.The market was originally known as "Kandang Kerbau" (or just "K. K."), Malay for "buffalo pens", referring to the slaughterhouses operating in the area until the 1920s, and the name still lives on in the nearby Kandang Kerbau Women's and Children's Hospital, Kandang Kerbau Police ...

  9. Change Alley, Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Change_Alley,_Singapore

    1920s: 5-storey Shell House was built at the start of this decade at the entrance to Change Alley at the Raffles Place, it was later completed in 1960 as a 14-storey office block and renamed Singapore Rubber House. [1] Change Alley was not famous yet but recognized as a meeting place for European buyers and Asian brokers.