Showing posts with label street food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label street food. Show all posts

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Singapore, The Food.


 This spring I was lucky enough to be able to spend two weeks in SE Asia, 5 days of that being in Singapore.

I thought it a good destination for a Culinary Vacation being a small, well connected country with a diverse population. And I was right, I found food from India, China, Korea as well as dishes that are distinctly Singaporean. 


The Hawker Centers are an amazing concept, all the deliciousness normally found at street food stalls are brought inside to a building with proper electrics, running water and plenty of seating.  Just be sure to bring your own napkins, they won't be provided to you.

Singapore has many of these Hawker Centers and I found many of their best dishes in them.

Many of Singaporeans are ethnic Chinese and the cuisine reflects this. There is no way I could pass up a stall selling Shark Fin Soup, this dish had noodles in a cornstarch thickened brown broth, with little nubbins of deep fried Fin-y goodness.  The texture of the fin was like a cross between the cartilage of a pigs ear and soft tendon. 


 I believe this to be one of the Singaporean dishes.  Noodles in a slightly sweet (tamarind?) broth with hard cooked egg and chunks of bread.

This particular bowl was a delightfully delicious welcome to Singapore in the airport. Research has shown that the best way to recover for 36 hrs of travel is noodles in flavorful broth. This also happens to be an excellent hangover cure... not that I would know anything about that.


I believe this to be a similar dish to the above, this time with some crispy shallot on top and some sweet spice in the broth.  The fried pie on the bottom right was filled with a savory vegetable mix.

This dish was ordered via the "point and what ever that is method" at a little cafe outside Little India.

These strange little things are pancakes filled with cheese, red beans and peanut butter. I swear the cheese was the exact same recipe as the  Kraft Singles of my youth.


 It is physically impossible for me to walk past a Bubble Tea shop without ordering some. This particular cup was a Almond Soy Milk.  It was quite vile. 

 
My first hotel in Singapore, Wanderlust, was in Little India. This dish was from a shop not too far from there, a spicy vegetable dish with cheese Naan.  Cheese and bread are a combination that is universally delectable.


America has pretty much the most disappointing airport food possible. This is not the case elsewhere, as this flavorful chicken curry with prata shows.  Prata is another iconic dish of Singapore, it is a layered, flaky flat bread, crisped up on a flattop right before service. Great for dunking in curry sauce.

Taro bubble tea is simple pleasure I can never get enough of. This cup was from Gong Cha, a chain famous for serving the fat-straw-slurpable beverage.

Many countries in SE Asia do variations of  crushed ice desserts.  Far removed and far more delicious than the artificially flavored, colors that do no occur in nature, American Snow Cones.

The example on the left was mango and coconut. On the right, red beans, grass jelly and taro. Both were a great way to cool off from the Singaporean humidity and  heat and humidity.

These examples were soursop (left) and creamed corn (right). If you ever thought that creamed corn over crushed ice would taste good, you would be just as horribly wrong and this shop that has this funky and failed dish on the menu.

Soursop is however quite delicious, what ever the hell a soursop is...

American breakfast also pales in comparison to the rest of the world. Why would anyone want a bowl of soggy corn flakes when you could have a hot bowl congee (rice porridge)  with nubbins of pork offal swimming through it?

Silkie black chicken are a breed just not seen in the US. This was a bowl of soup made with the bird. Many shops sell this as a Medicinal soup, and it tasted about as good a medicinal grape Nyquil....

 Soup Dumplings, why can't I find these little pouches of liquid love in the States?  Served at a temperature slightly higher than napalm, they are a lesson in patience delivered in a steamer.

Of all the famous Singaporean dishes, chicken rice is the most famous. By cooking the rice in the chicken broth, the rice is really the star of the plate with the chicken just along for decoration. A dish I don't know if I could ever get enough of.

And as perhaps my favorite food moment of the entire trip, Mangalitsa pork belly, griddled with kimchi and other Korean side dishes. 

But once I got to Mangolitsa I know you stopped reading and started drooling on your keyboard.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Street Food in Vietnam

American's have an undeserved aversion to street food. They think it unclean, unfit, unsafe. The rest of the world understands what delicious food a little old lady can serve out of a street cart. She does it every day, she does it well, and if people got sick they sure wouldn't be coming back day after day for it.

Vietnam is a great place to go and eat by pointing. Its cheap, safe and friendly to westerners. And surprisingly, many of the young Vietnamese spoke better English than the French people I met.

 

In Ha Noi I started a cool morning with a little baggy of still warm donuts; a little bit sweet, a lot bit sticky. Damn good snack for half a buck.



Bahn mi.If you are going to be under imperial rule by a country, you could do a lot worse than the being ruled by the French. Ok, they suck at the government stuff, but they leave behind damn good food.  The Bahn mi sandwich starts with a French baguette, smeared with pate, then loaded up with grilled meats and pickled vegetables. The bahn mi I have found in the States are poor imitations of this bready goodness I came to love in Ha Noi.




Vietnam has a wide variety of soups, Pho being probably the best known in the US, but there is much more to experience than that. 

Bun is the thin rice noodles, and then many words follow that I have no clue what they mean.When the little woman with a ladle points to something that looks good, nod and she will put it in the bowl. As best I can tell this was a chicken broth with shaved pork, chicken meat balls and fried tofu. Then sprinkle on some green stuff and a little hot sauce.  Grab chop sticks and a spoon and dig in.


 Sticky rice, filled with something.....  and wrapped in a banana leaf.  Tastes like rice.
 


Bahn Mi, this one not as exciting as the others, but for $1 US you can't complain.


This Bahn Mi from the Bahn Mi lady in Hoi An. She is apparently quite famous on Travel Adviser, with signs up telling you to go online and rate her.  I believe this sandwich is in the style of 'pile a ton of stuff on bread, cover in hot sauce'.

 Grilled mystery meat. A little old lady with a little old charcoal grill sitting on the streets of Hoi An, selling skewers of meat for $0.25 US.   Tasted.... grilly....




Grilled corn. The one bite missing is all I ate of this, it was absolutely horrible. The corn was not sweet at all, tasting like half dry field corn. It appears the Mexicans have cornered the market on proper grilled corn.


More noodle soup. It is The thing to do for breakfast.  This one I believe was made with a chicken broth, and there was no shortage of other delicious bits to fill the bowl. Starting at 1 o'clock going clockwise; blood cake, shaved raw beef, chicken meat ball, 'innards'.

The innards is in quotes because I was unable to determine what part of the beast it actually was.  I showed the above picture to my tour guide in Hoi An asking him what it was, he pointed to his belly and said 'inside'. It tasted good, whatever it was!

The  careful reader may have notices this post devoid of Pho. That heavenly dish is deserving of its own dedicated post that will be coming shortly.