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The 38 Essential Restaurants in Singapore

From hawker stalls serving minced pork noodles to Michelin-starred tasting menus, Peranakan fine dining to iconic chilli crabs, the food-loving Little Red Dot is full of surprises

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Singapore possesses one of the most diverse food scenes on the planet, and not just because the mega city is home to Chinese, Malay, Indian, Peranakan, French, Japanese, Korean, and Italian restaurants. The experiences available in the city are also stupefyingly different, from credit card-denting tasting menus in Michelin star-decorated fine dining to world-renowned hawker centers where you can still dine for a (relative) steal. The options are simply mind-boggling.

A clutch of new restaurants serving Asian-inspired contemporary cuisine have opened in the city recently, including Indian, Chinese, and Malay venues helmed by a cadre of noteworthy young chefs. Notwithstanding some closures, the restaurant industry has remained remarkably resilient during the pandemic; locals are out in droves again at their favorite kopitiams (coffee shops), queues snake at popular stalls for roti prata (Indian flatbread) and bak chor mee (minced meat noodles), and reservation books are packed at accolades-decorated restaurants like Odette and Meta.

Note: Global inflationary pressures have created a dent in the affordable side of the dining scene, and hawker food has not been spared from rising prices. But the impact of this surge is felt most at Michelin-starred restaurants, where a tasting menu at dinner can set you back $400 or more before taxes. Still, the food-loving Little Red Dot constantly surprises with bountiful options across the price spectrum.

Born, bred and educated in Singapore, Evelyn Chen is a food and travel writer and editor, as well as one of the regional academy chairs for World’s 50 Best Restaurants. In between dinners and writing assignments, the former Zagat editor actively blogs about food on Instagram.

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Selera Rasa Nasi Lemak

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Stalls serving nasi lemak (coconut milk-infused rice served with condiments) are a dime a dozen in Singapore, but the only one using long-grained basmati rice is this Adam Road Food Centre standby, a rumored favorite of the Sultan of Brunei. Have your fluffy rice with otak-otak (grilled fish cake with spices), fried chicken wings, fried kuning fish, or even better, all of the above. Given its ever-present snaking queue, budget about an hour for waiting.

Trays of nasi lemak with a combination of fried items.
Nasi lemak.
Mohamad Ali Blackhawk/Facebook

Newton Food Centre

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There are a number of great food centers in Singapore, but none as famous as this one. Opened in 1971, Newton Food Centre has been occasionally criticized for being overpriced, yet the sheer variety of street food here still makes it a worthy destination for food-loving tourists. Among the many highly recommended stalls to explore, Hup Kee Fried Oyster Omelette and Soon Wah Fishball Kway Teow Mee are sure to delight.

San Shu Gong

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The crew at San Shu Gong call the place a private diner, but there is nothing secretive about this difficult-to-book restaurant in Geylang. In fact, the restaurant is so renowned for well-executed Teochew fare that guests usually book their next meal before they’re done eating. If you’re lucky enough to snag a reservation, order the deep-fried sea cucumber, Teochew raw crabs with roe, pan-fried oyster omelet, and the first-rate pig’s stomach soup. Good luck with the booking.

Well-browned soya chicken, carved.
Soya chicken.
San Shu Gong

At Kakure, former Waku Ghin head bartender Kazuhiro Chii quietly doles out delicious swizzles with a touch of omotenashi (hospitality). The bijou bar, housed on the second story of a colonial bungalow on Scotts Road, stands out in the city’s buzzy bar scene for many reasons, chief amongst them is Chii-san’s near-perfect cocktails crafted with fresh, in-season Japanese fruits. This is a must for cocktail lovers.

Mr and Mrs Mohgan's Super Crispy Roti Prata

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At the intersection of Joo Chiat and Dunman Road, a kopitiam named Tin Yeang Restaurant buzzes to life at the crack of dawn as the Mohgans start flipping one of the city’s most talked-about roti prata (South Indian flatbread). While you could have the flatbread with egg or cheese, most prefer to savor it plain with a side of fish curry and a splash of spicy sambal.

From above, roti with dipping sauces.
Roti prata.
Mr and Mrs Mohgan’s Super Crispy Roti Prata

Da Dong Prawn Noodle

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While options for steamy bowls of prawn me (prawn noodle soup) are plentiful throughout Singapore, make the trek to Da Dong Prawn Noodle (founded circa 1966) on Joo Chiat Road, run by second-generation hawker Watson Lim. The version here is singular. Just try the pork rib prawn me with thick rice vermicelli, buoyed by a light and punchy shrimp broth, to see what the hype is all about.

From above, a bowl of prawn me on a blue background.
Prawn me at Da Dong Prawn Noodle.
Alex Ang

Swee Choon Tim Sum Restaurant

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For more than 50 years, this pared-down restaurant in Jalan Besar has been keeping the night owls satiated with baskets of handcrafted Hong Kong-style dim sum, like char siu buns and xiao long bao. Relish it in the comfort of the air-conditioned shop-house or, if you prefer, in the alfresco back alley, but only after tackling the queue, which typically lasts about an hour. The line’s a bit shorter at lunch, so come closer to 11 a.m. if your patience is thin.

Workers prepare bao on a grill.
Bao at Swee Choon Tim Sum.
Swee Choo/Facebook

Sushi Kimura

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Sushi Kimura offers a delicious take on the Japanese seasons through the lens of a sushi chef. Chef-owner Tomoo Kimura has decades of sushi-crafting experience under his belt, and it shows: From his sushi-pressing choreography to the artisan ingredients he espouses (including made-in-Kyoto Fujisu vinegar and Aritaya-brewed organic Hokkaido soy sauce) to his parade of in-season Japanese small plates and sushi (think: boiled shirako with ponzu and wakame, as well as the winter sushi delicacy of Hokkaido shark skin halibut). Since this place snagged a Michelin star, there’s been plenty of competition for seats.

A closeup on a piece of marbled nigiri.
Nigiri at Sushi Kimura.
Alex Ang

Sungei Road Laksa

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Hardly any laksa stalls still make the effort to fan and coax charcoal flames to properly simmer laksa anymore, making Sungei Road the best bowl in the city almost by default. The broth, thick rice noodles, cockles, and fishcakes are perfumed with a light whiff of smoke. It’s almost a sin to leave any of the prawn- and coconut-enriched soup wallowing in the bowl.

Les Amis

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Despite the onslaught of new restaurants, French fine dining stalwart Les Amis continues to pack in the upwardly mobile crowd. Its allure? The parade of caviar- and truffle-crowned classical French dishes prepared by executive chef Sebastien Lepinoy. From the a la carte and classic tasting menu, the French chef’s most indulgent course yet is the thickly sliced whole-roasted Vendee foie gras served in a moated pool of truffle and celeriac consomme. The group also owns Tarte by Cheryl Koh in the same building, in case you want to fill up on some of the city’s best French tarts for breakfast.

An unseen server pours consomme into a bowl around a mound of foie gras.
Foie gras in celeriac and truffle consomme.
Alex Ang

Candlenut

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There is only one Michelin-starred Peranakan restaurant in the world, and it resides in this airy space with a towering ceiling and gigantic hanging lamps at Como Dempsey. Named for the cream-colored nut used in many curries, Candlenut is best experienced via chef-owner Malcolm Lee’s carte blanche menu, also endearingly referred to the Amahkase menu (“amah” means grandmother in the Hokkien dialect). If you’d rather go a la carte, make your first pick the peerless pork neck satay.

A bowl of maggie goreng, with an herb-dusted fried egg on top.
Maggie goreng at Candlenut.
Candlenut/Facebook

Open Farm Community

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Farm-to-fork is a distant dream for much of land-scarce Singapore, but it’s the main attraction at Open Farm Community in Dempsey Hill, where a 3,000-square-foot plot provides herbs like basil and makrut lime for the restaurant. Head chef Oliver Truesdale-Jutras also works with a community of local growers for dishes like his Pulau Ubin-farmed barramundi, which is delivered within six hours of harvest, served steamed in dashi butter with black rice, furikake, cassava, and butterfly pea flower from the property, as well as pea shoots and peas from local farms.

A noodle dish with roasted vegetables.
A dish at Open Farm Community.
Natasha Hong

Culina at Como Dempsey

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This gourmet emporium in Dempsey (owned by tycoon Christina Ong) retails some of the finest artisanal food products money can buy in Singapore. Think: French caviar, wild-caught sea bass, and marbled Australian wagyu, with a Grandiflora boutique and a fuss-free bistro (don’t miss the spanner crab pasta) thrown in for good measure. It’s a fine destination if you’re grabbing ingredients to do some cooking, but an even finer destination if you’d like to just window-shop.

Canchita

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For Peruvian fare, you really can’t do better than the awe-inspiring spread at this rustic spot set in a former barrack in Dempsey. Helmed by husband-and-wife chef team Daniel and Tamara Chavez, the menu is packed with delightful Peruvian hits — and some tacos — like ceviches (try the ceviche clásico), arroz chaufa (Peruvian Chinese fried rice), and a Peruvian fisherman’s soup. 

A bowl of ceviche with bright sweet potato, vegetables, and corn nuts.
Ceviche.
Canchita

Tanuki Raw

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A favorite among young Singaporeans, Tanuki Raw serves an extravaganza of wallet-friendly chirashi, beef bowls, rice rolls, and oysters chased down with your choice of beer or cocktail. For happy-hour deals, come between 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., and expect to queue after 6 p.m.

A bowl of rice, grilled chicken, and pickled vegetables.
A bowl at Tanuki Raw.
Tanuki Raw/Facebook

Atlas Grand Lobby & Bar

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Welcome to this 9,000-square-foot colonnaded bar of grand Art Deco proportions, with one of the world’s largest gin collections neatly displayed in a tower, doled out by a cadre of gin specialists and head bartender Lidiyanah “Yana” K. Add to that a Champagne room with a collection of 250 varieties of Champagne and a menu of gin–based cocktails (try the Atlas G&T), and you have one of the city’s most impressive cocktail bars.

A tower of shelves full of bottles in the center of an opulent darkened room.
Inside Atlas Bar.
Atlas Grand Lobby & Bar

The Auld Alliance

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The Auld Alliance is a gentlemen's club-like whiskey bar tucked away on the second floor of the Rendezvous Hotel Gallery. It has one of the world's most extensive collections of rare and old bottlings, and an especially deep lineup of much-coveted Japanese whiskies. An armchair at the bar, facing owner Emmanuel Dron's sizable collection of pre-World War II bottles of Scotch, is the best seat in the house.

A bar room with leather sofas and shelves of spirits.
Inside the Auld Alliance.
The Auld Alliance

The best thing about dining at Jaan is the bird’s-eye view of the city’s skyscrapers. The second and third things in a close competition are the British-inspired tasting menu by Devon-born chef Kirk Westaway and a flute of English sparkling wine from Wiston Estate. Even if the views fail to make an impression, Westaway’s parade of snacks and hand-dived Scottish scallop with burnt butter mayonnaise will.

A cup of soup served with a waffle.
Roasted leek and potato soup.
Jaan

Peach Blossoms

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Chinese restaurants are a dime a dozen in Singapore, but none can match the finesse and grandeur of Peach Blossoms. The restaurant at the Parkroyal Collection Marina Bay hotel is a stage for chef Edward Chong to parlay his training in Cantonese cuisine to dizzying East-meets-West heights. Case in point are his cigar rolls — deep-fried spring rolls filled with a medley of ingredients including shrimp paste, foie gras, and truffle, served with crispy rice “ash.” Chong also excels in classics and his roasted char siu (Cantonese style barbecue pork) is not to be missed.

A bright dining room from a high floor overlooking a row of trees. Tables are set with cream tablecloths, the walls a paneled in gray, and further seating areas are visible through rounded archways.
The dining area at Peach Blossoms.
Peach Blossoms

As soon as you secure your plane tickets, book seats for an audience at Odette, where chef and co-owner Julien Royer leads a stellar ode to his grandmother. Tasting menu dishes feature carefully acquired ingredients in intricately plated still lifes: Beetroots tumble onto the plate in sorbets, meringues, and crumbles; carved rectangles of Challans guinea fowl perch precariously on celeriac risotto next to a lobe of molten foie gras. The setting — formerly side chambers of the Old Supreme Court — is also elegant, with installation artwork by Dawn Ng fluttering like butterflies across the dining room.

An airy restaurant interior decked out in white with mobiles hanging above white tablecloth-lined tables.
Inside Odette.
Odette/Facebook

Restaurant Labyrinth

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If you have time for just one indulgence, make it contemporary Singaporean fine-dining at Labyrinth at the Esplanade. Fun, playful, and just plain delicious, the inspired menu showcases creative riffs on local dishes courtesy of chef-owner Han Li Guang. His reinvention of Singapore’s famed chile crab, rojak, char kway teow (stir-fried rice noodles), and ice kacang (shave ice) deserve a standing ovation.

A dish presented in a kopitiam-style mug, with additional dishes in the background.
Hainan Kopi Tales.
Restaurant Labyrinth

Jumbo Seafood

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Check with your local police station, but a trip to Singapore without trying the national dish of sauce-slathered chilli crabs might be an actual crime. Mud crabs are simmered in a vibrantly sweet, savory, tangy, and slightly spicy sauce that’s made from ketchup, candlenut, chiles, and other spices. Try it at the iconic Jumbo Seafood, a decades-year-old institution that’s listed on the Singapore stock exchange, specializing in mud crabs weighing at least 800 grams (nearly 2 pounds) each. The company has five branches in Singapore, and the one at Riverside Point has the added bonus of a stellar river view. While you’re here, get your claws on another local staple, black pepper crabs made from firm-fleshed Dungeness.

A large chilli crab, presented in a handled pot.
Chilli crab at Jumbo Seafood.
Alex Ang

Wine RVLT

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Minimum-intervention wines are increasing popular in Singapore, and RVLT, which stands for Revolution, is where you want to indulge. The wine bar, staffed by grape-obsessed owners Al Gho and Ian Lim, pours a daily-rotating list of whites and reds by the glass, and 150 bottles of biodynamic and organic wines and Champagnes await those on the prowl for something unique.

28 Hong Kong Street

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It's hard to snag a seat at Asia's best bar, so go party (sensibly) elsewhere till midnight, then take the leap of faith and push open 28 Hong Kong Street's unmarked door for some late-night cocktails and supper. The drinks whipped up by the world-class bar team are bold and potent, and the burger, grilled cheese, and arancini all provide enough second wind for more partying in the intimate converted shop-house.

Keng Eng Kee Seafood

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A tzechar (stir-fry) institution now operated by third-generation owners, Keng Eng Kee serves cooked-to-order wok-fried dishes like coffee pork ribs, moonlight hor fun (wok-fried flat noodles with a raw egg), and Singapore’s best claypot pork liver. The old but airy kopitiam on Bukit Merah Lane 1 is usually packed to the gills, so don’t attempt a visit without a reservation. Insider tip: The owners also maintain a cramped but air-conditioned dining room in the same area; if you plan your meals in advance, you may be able to secure a seat in this cool, coveted space.

A closeup on an egg yolk in a stir fry.
A stir fry at Keng Eng Kee Seafood.
KEK Seafood/Facebook

Hong Lim Food Centre

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The advantage of having breakfast or brunch — rather than lunch — here is that you don’t have to jostle with the office crowd for some of the city’s favorite hawker haunts, among them minced pork noodles at Tai Wah Pork Noodle, char kway teow (stir-fried rice noodles) at Outram Park Fried Kway Teow Mee, and peanut pancake at Granny’s Pancake. It’s best to get here before 8 a.m. if you don’t want to wait.

From above, a bowl of pork noodles.
Tai wah pork noodles at Hong Lim Food Centre.

Long Ji Zi Char

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When in Singapore, eat crab, especially if you can get the chile crabs, black pepper crabs, and intensely savory crab bee hoon at this plain-Jane tze char (meaning stir-fry in Hokkien) joint on Tiong Bahru Road. There’s a lot to enjoy here amongst the stir-fried pig’s fallopian tubes and blood cockles with chiles, but the piece de resistance is the gigantic mud crab served with a riot of rice vermicelli in a hearty broth brimming with umami. 

Smith Street Taps

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At this craft beer bar set inside a kopitiam, owners Daniel Goh and Kuok Meng Chao pour 10 taps of envelope-pushing IPAs, sour beers, and imperial stouts from the likes of Mikkeller (Denmark), Beavertown (U.K.), Omnipollo (Sweden), and Anderson Valley (U.S.). Guzzle down your choice while teetering on hard plastic tables and stools in the sweltering food court.

A customer stands in front of the Smith Street Taps stall.
In front of Smith Street Taps.
Natasha Hong

Yang Ji 194

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The sprawling second-floor hawker center has plenty of stalls serving dishes at dinner time, but Yang Ji 194 is the real deal, plating hulking Asian bighead carp heads under a mess of steamed garlic, red chiles, and coriander. The bones close to the fish’s face are usually big and easy to spot, so dig in without fear.

A closeup on a whole fish beneath a pile of herbs and chilies.
Fish at Yang Ji 194.
Xing Wei Chua

The Coconut Club

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Under new owners, Singapore’s favorite nasi lemak institution has moved to bigger and better digs on Beach Road. You could swing by alone for a solo nasi lemak set, but it’s worth summoning a group of dining companions to experience the communal version meant for sharing. Cold-pressed coconut milk-scented rice is paired with your choice of mains — pick the signature ayam goreng berempah (deep-fried herbed chicken) and the Peranakan-inspired salad of kerabu (spicy cucumber) — and finished with a kueh sampler for dessert. Wash it down with a delicious coconut shake.

Ayam goreng berempah nasi lemak surrounded by various other dishes and drinks.
Ayam goreng berempah nasi lemak and spread.
The Coconut Club

One of the city’s best small-plates restaurants resides in this shop-house space with communal and counter-style dining on Ann Siang Road. Now helmed by chef Johanne Siy, former sous chef of the now defunct Restaurant André, Lolla has earned reverence for its produce and list of acclaimed wines. While you can’t go wrong with an a la carte order of the ever-popular squid ink custard with sea urchin, Siy’s tasting menu should be considered mandatory.

A large scallop presented in its shell.
Scallop.
Lolla

Ah Tai Hainanese Chicken Rice

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Gordon Ramsay was roundly trumped by Tian Tian's chefs at a cook-off, but watch locals roll their eyes at the selfie-stick tourists queueing for a taste at the Bourdain-approved stall. Make a beeline instead for Ah Tai, just three stalls down. The eponymous owner, who defected from Tian Tian, serves tender chicken with a more fragrant chile sauce that's liberally lashed with lime juice. Plus, you'll get your food in a fraction of the time it takes to get a plate at Tian Tian.

A tray with all the components of Hainanese chicken rice in various dishes.
Hainanese chicken rice.
Natasha Hong

Michelin-starred Restaurant André may have closed, but the restaurant’s former executive chef, Zor Tan, has opened Restaurant Born. Housed in what used to be the Jinrikisha Station, a one-time depot for rickshaws, Born is a showcase for Tan’s high-concept cuisine that distills the momentous experiences and relationships in the Malaysian Chinese chef’s life into a parade of courses executed with pitch-perfect French techniques. Brace yourself for the restaurant’s stunning high-ceilinged dining room overhung with a gigantic origami art installation.

A large airy restaurant space where chefs move behind a counter in the center of the room beneath a large ornate mobile.
Inside Born restaurant.
Born

Park Bench Deli

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At this CBD shop pulsating with hip-hoppy bass, you'll find a good-looking, metropolitan clientele getting a little gross with drippy patty melts, kong bak (Chinese braised pork belly) banh mi, and chicken katsu in cuisine-defying meat-and-bun combos. Wash it all down with pints of American and Japanese craft beers like Yona Yona, Deschutes, and Rogue.

A huge chicken katsu sandwich.
Chicken katsu.
Park Bench Deli/Facebook

Humpback

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Humpback is a breezy Pacific Northwest-style diner where the seafood is bright and zingy, with crisp oysters flown in directly from Washington's Hama Hama oyster farm. After your meal, head next door to Gibson, owned by the same group, a playground of experimental cocktails where bartenders whirl ingredients like earthy-sweet beetroot nectar into a smoky mixture of tequila and mezcal.

A bartender stands in front of a wall of bottles.
Inside Gibson.
Natasha Hong

The contemporary tasting menu by chef-owner Sun Kim is a wondrous ensemble of Korean-inspired courses executed with French techniques, Korean flavors, and premium produce. Headliners are aplenty, from an opening snack of gyeran jjim (steamed egg custard) to the lobster haemultang (spicy seafood stew), all the way through Kim’s take on Korean barbecue, which includes A4 Kagoshima wagyu served with gobo (burdock) rice and white kimchi.

A small clay bowl of gyeran jjim topped with large chunks of uni.
Gyeran jjim.
Meta

Revolver

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Indian grill Revolver is a tasting menu-only eatery that doles out charred flavors with bold accents. The menu is completely changed every two months, but there are fixtures; the ever-popular tandoor-baked Kulchette (a play on roti) appears with a different dip bimonthly, while the courgette flower makes regular appearances with various stuffings (like a recent iteration with delicious prawn balchao). There is no doubt that executive chef Saurabh Udinia, formerly of Mumbai’s Masala Library, is destined for Michelin stardom.

A closeup on deep red scotch eggs on a bed of noodles.
Wagyu scotch eggs caviar.
Revolver

Nylon Coffee Roasters

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Not all cafes are created equal. This one, located deep in the bowels of the Everton housing estate, rises above, selling nothing more than coffee beans and coffee drinks (espressos, lattes, and the works). But every bean served here is roasted on-site and sourced directly from farms and cooperatives that the owners have visited personally. Each cup is to be savored while standing, not seated, at a communal long table, because that’s how they roll.

A patron reaches for a foamy coffee drink on a countertop.
A summer coffee spritz at Nylon Coffee Roasters.
Nylon Coffee Roasters/Facebook

Selera Rasa Nasi Lemak

Stalls serving nasi lemak (coconut milk-infused rice served with condiments) are a dime a dozen in Singapore, but the only one using long-grained basmati rice is this Adam Road Food Centre standby, a rumored favorite of the Sultan of Brunei. Have your fluffy rice with otak-otak (grilled fish cake with spices), fried chicken wings, fried kuning fish, or even better, all of the above. Given its ever-present snaking queue, budget about an hour for waiting.

Trays of nasi lemak with a combination of fried items.
Nasi lemak.
Mohamad Ali Blackhawk/Facebook

Newton Food Centre

There are a number of great food centers in Singapore, but none as famous as this one. Opened in 1971, Newton Food Centre has been occasionally criticized for being overpriced, yet the sheer variety of street food here still makes it a worthy destination for food-loving tourists. Among the many highly recommended stalls to explore, Hup Kee Fried Oyster Omelette and Soon Wah Fishball Kway Teow Mee are sure to delight.

San Shu Gong

The crew at San Shu Gong call the place a private diner, but there is nothing secretive about this difficult-to-book restaurant in Geylang. In fact, the restaurant is so renowned for well-executed Teochew fare that guests usually book their next meal before they’re done eating. If you’re lucky enough to snag a reservation, order the deep-fried sea cucumber, Teochew raw crabs with roe, pan-fried oyster omelet, and the first-rate pig’s stomach soup. Good luck with the booking.

Well-browned soya chicken, carved.
Soya chicken.
San Shu Gong

Kakure

At Kakure, former Waku Ghin head bartender Kazuhiro Chii quietly doles out delicious swizzles with a touch of omotenashi (hospitality). The bijou bar, housed on the second story of a colonial bungalow on Scotts Road, stands out in the city’s buzzy bar scene for many reasons, chief amongst them is Chii-san’s near-perfect cocktails crafted with fresh, in-season Japanese fruits. This is a must for cocktail lovers.

Mr and Mrs Mohgan's Super Crispy Roti Prata

At the intersection of Joo Chiat and Dunman Road, a kopitiam named Tin Yeang Restaurant buzzes to life at the crack of dawn as the Mohgans start flipping one of the city’s most talked-about roti prata (South Indian flatbread). While you could have the flatbread with egg or cheese, most prefer to savor it plain with a side of fish curry and a splash of spicy sambal.

From above, roti with dipping sauces.
Roti prata.
Mr and Mrs Mohgan’s Super Crispy Roti Prata

Da Dong Prawn Noodle

While options for steamy bowls of prawn me (prawn noodle soup) are plentiful throughout Singapore, make the trek to Da Dong Prawn Noodle (founded circa 1966) on Joo Chiat Road, run by second-generation hawker Watson Lim. The version here is singular. Just try the pork rib prawn me with thick rice vermicelli, buoyed by a light and punchy shrimp broth, to see what the hype is all about.

From above, a bowl of prawn me on a blue background.
Prawn me at Da Dong Prawn Noodle.
Alex Ang

Swee Choon Tim Sum Restaurant

For more than 50 years, this pared-down restaurant in Jalan Besar has been keeping the night owls satiated with baskets of handcrafted Hong Kong-style dim sum, like char siu buns and xiao long bao. Relish it in the comfort of the air-conditioned shop-house or, if you prefer, in the alfresco back alley, but only after tackling the queue, which typically lasts about an hour. The line’s a bit shorter at lunch, so come closer to 11 a.m. if your patience is thin.

Workers prepare bao on a grill.
Bao at Swee Choon Tim Sum.
Swee Choo/Facebook

Sushi Kimura

Sushi Kimura offers a delicious take on the Japanese seasons through the lens of a sushi chef. Chef-owner Tomoo Kimura has decades of sushi-crafting experience under his belt, and it shows: From his sushi-pressing choreography to the artisan ingredients he espouses (including made-in-Kyoto Fujisu vinegar and Aritaya-brewed organic Hokkaido soy sauce) to his parade of in-season Japanese small plates and sushi (think: boiled shirako with ponzu and wakame, as well as the winter sushi delicacy of Hokkaido shark skin halibut). Since this place snagged a Michelin star, there’s been plenty of competition for seats.

A closeup on a piece of marbled nigiri.
Nigiri at Sushi Kimura.
Alex Ang

Sungei Road Laksa

Hardly any laksa stalls still make the effort to fan and coax charcoal flames to properly simmer laksa anymore, making Sungei Road the best bowl in the city almost by default. The broth, thick rice noodles, cockles, and fishcakes are perfumed with a light whiff of smoke. It’s almost a sin to leave any of the prawn- and coconut-enriched soup wallowing in the bowl.

Les Amis

Despite the onslaught of new restaurants, French fine dining stalwart Les Amis continues to pack in the upwardly mobile crowd. Its allure? The parade of caviar- and truffle-crowned classical French dishes prepared by executive chef Sebastien Lepinoy. From the a la carte and classic tasting menu, the French chef’s most indulgent course yet is the thickly sliced whole-roasted Vendee foie gras served in a moated pool of truffle and celeriac consomme. The group also owns Tarte by Cheryl Koh in the same building, in case you want to fill up on some of the city’s best French tarts for breakfast.

An unseen server pours consomme into a bowl around a mound of foie gras.
Foie gras in celeriac and truffle consomme.
Alex Ang

Candlenut

There is only one Michelin-starred Peranakan restaurant in the world, and it resides in this airy space with a towering ceiling and gigantic hanging lamps at Como Dempsey. Named for the cream-colored nut used in many curries, Candlenut is best experienced via chef-owner Malcolm Lee’s carte blanche menu, also endearingly referred to the Amahkase menu (“amah” means grandmother in the Hokkien dialect). If you’d rather go a la carte, make your first pick the peerless pork neck satay.

A bowl of maggie goreng, with an herb-dusted fried egg on top.
Maggie goreng at Candlenut.
Candlenut/Facebook

Open Farm Community

Farm-to-fork is a distant dream for much of land-scarce Singapore, but it’s the main attraction at Open Farm Community in Dempsey Hill, where a 3,000-square-foot plot provides herbs like basil and makrut lime for the restaurant. Head chef Oliver Truesdale-Jutras also works with a community of local growers for dishes like his Pulau Ubin-farmed barramundi, which is delivered within six hours of harvest, served steamed in dashi butter with black rice, furikake, cassava, and butterfly pea flower from the property, as well as pea shoots and peas from local farms.

A noodle dish with roasted vegetables.
A dish at Open Farm Community.
Natasha Hong

Culina at Como Dempsey

This gourmet emporium in Dempsey (owned by tycoon Christina Ong) retails some of the finest artisanal food products money can buy in Singapore. Think: French caviar, wild-caught sea bass, and marbled Australian wagyu, with a Grandiflora boutique and a fuss-free bistro (don’t miss the spanner crab pasta) thrown in for good measure. It’s a fine destination if you’re grabbing ingredients to do some cooking, but an even finer destination if you’d like to just window-shop.

Canchita

For Peruvian fare, you really can’t do better than the awe-inspiring spread at this rustic spot set in a former barrack in Dempsey. Helmed by husband-and-wife chef team Daniel and Tamara Chavez, the menu is packed with delightful Peruvian hits — and some tacos — like ceviches (try the ceviche clásico), arroz chaufa (Peruvian Chinese fried rice), and a Peruvian fisherman’s soup. 

A bowl of ceviche with bright sweet potato, vegetables, and corn nuts.
Ceviche.
Canchita

Tanuki Raw

A favorite among young Singaporeans, Tanuki Raw serves an extravaganza of wallet-friendly chirashi, beef bowls, rice rolls, and oysters chased down with your choice of beer or cocktail. For happy-hour deals, come between 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., and expect to queue after 6 p.m.

A bowl of rice, grilled chicken, and pickled vegetables.
A bowl at Tanuki Raw.
Tanuki Raw/Facebook

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Atlas Grand Lobby & Bar

Welcome to this 9,000-square-foot colonnaded bar of grand Art Deco proportions, with one of the world’s largest gin collections neatly displayed in a tower, doled out by a cadre of gin specialists and head bartender Lidiyanah “Yana” K. Add to that a Champagne room with a collection of 250 varieties of Champagne and a menu of gin–based cocktails (try the Atlas G&T), and you have one of the city’s most impressive cocktail bars.

A tower of shelves full of bottles in the center of an opulent darkened room.
Inside Atlas Bar.
Atlas Grand Lobby & Bar

The Auld Alliance

The Auld Alliance is a gentlemen's club-like whiskey bar tucked away on the second floor of the Rendezvous Hotel Gallery. It has one of the world's most extensive collections of rare and old bottlings, and an especially deep lineup of much-coveted Japanese whiskies. An armchair at the bar, facing owner Emmanuel Dron's sizable collection of pre-World War II bottles of Scotch, is the best seat in the house.

A bar room with leather sofas and shelves of spirits.
Inside the Auld Alliance.
The Auld Alliance

Jaan

The best thing about dining at Jaan is the bird’s-eye view of the city’s skyscrapers. The second and third things in a close competition are the British-inspired tasting menu by Devon-born chef Kirk Westaway and a flute of English sparkling wine from Wiston Estate. Even if the views fail to make an impression, Westaway’s parade of snacks and hand-dived Scottish scallop with burnt butter mayonnaise will.

A cup of soup served with a waffle.
Roasted leek and potato soup.
Jaan

Peach Blossoms

Chinese restaurants are a dime a dozen in Singapore, but none can match the finesse and grandeur of Peach Blossoms. The restaurant at the Parkroyal Collection Marina Bay hotel is a stage for chef Edward Chong to parlay his training in Cantonese cuisine to dizzying East-meets-West heights. Case in point are his cigar rolls — deep-fried spring rolls filled with a medley of ingredients including shrimp paste, foie gras, and truffle, served with crispy rice “ash.” Chong also excels in classics and his roasted char siu (Cantonese style barbecue pork) is not to be missed.

A bright dining room from a high floor overlooking a row of trees. Tables are set with cream tablecloths, the walls a paneled in gray, and further seating areas are visible through rounded archways.
The dining area at Peach Blossoms.
Peach Blossoms

Odette

As soon as you secure your plane tickets, book seats for an audience at Odette, where chef and co-owner Julien Royer leads a stellar ode to his grandmother. Tasting menu dishes feature carefully acquired ingredients in intricately plated still lifes: Beetroots tumble onto the plate in sorbets, meringues, and crumbles; carved rectangles of Challans guinea fowl perch precariously on celeriac risotto next to a lobe of molten foie gras. The setting — formerly side chambers of the Old Supreme Court — is also elegant, with installation artwork by Dawn Ng fluttering like butterflies across the dining room.

An airy restaurant interior decked out in white with mobiles hanging above white tablecloth-lined tables.
Inside Odette.
Odette/Facebook

Restaurant Labyrinth

If you have time for just one indulgence, make it contemporary Singaporean fine-dining at Labyrinth at the Esplanade. Fun, playful, and just plain delicious, the inspired menu showcases creative riffs on local dishes courtesy of chef-owner Han Li Guang. His reinvention of Singapore’s famed chile crab, rojak, char kway teow (stir-fried rice noodles), and ice kacang (shave ice) deserve a standing ovation.

A dish presented in a kopitiam-style mug, with additional dishes in the background.
Hainan Kopi Tales.
Restaurant Labyrinth

Jumbo Seafood

Check with your local police station, but a trip to Singapore without trying the national dish of sauce-slathered chilli crabs might be an actual crime. Mud crabs are simmered in a vibrantly sweet, savory, tangy, and slightly spicy sauce that’s made from ketchup, candlenut, chiles, and other spices. Try it at the iconic Jumbo Seafood, a decades-year-old institution that’s listed on the Singapore stock exchange, specializing in mud crabs weighing at least 800 grams (nearly 2 pounds) each. The company has five branches in Singapore, and the one at Riverside Point has the added bonus of a stellar river view. While you’re here, get your claws on another local staple, black pepper crabs made from firm-fleshed Dungeness.

A large chilli crab, presented in a handled pot.
Chilli crab at Jumbo Seafood.
Alex Ang

Wine RVLT

Minimum-intervention wines are increasing popular in Singapore, and RVLT, which stands for Revolution, is where you want to indulge. The wine bar, staffed by grape-obsessed owners Al Gho and Ian Lim, pours a daily-rotating list of whites and reds by the glass, and 150 bottles of biodynamic and organic wines and Champagnes await those on the prowl for something unique.

28 Hong Kong Street

It's hard to snag a seat at Asia's best bar, so go party (sensibly) elsewhere till midnight, then take the leap of faith and push open 28 Hong Kong Street's unmarked door for some late-night cocktails and supper. The drinks whipped up by the world-class bar team are bold and potent, and the burger, grilled cheese, and arancini all provide enough second wind for more partying in the intimate converted shop-house.

Keng Eng Kee Seafood

A tzechar (stir-fry) institution now operated by third-generation owners, Keng Eng Kee serves cooked-to-order wok-fried dishes like coffee pork ribs, moonlight hor fun (wok-fried flat noodles with a raw egg), and Singapore’s best claypot pork liver. The old but airy kopitiam on Bukit Merah Lane 1 is usually packed to the gills, so don’t attempt a visit without a reservation. Insider tip: The owners also maintain a cramped but air-conditioned dining room in the same area; if you plan your meals in advance, you may be able to secure a seat in this cool, coveted space.

A closeup on an egg yolk in a stir fry.
A stir fry at Keng Eng Kee Seafood.
KEK Seafood/Facebook

Hong Lim Food Centre

The advantage of having breakfast or brunch — rather than lunch — here is that you don’t have to jostle with the office crowd for some of the city’s favorite hawker haunts, among them minced pork noodles at Tai Wah Pork Noodle, char kway teow (stir-fried rice noodles) at Outram Park Fried Kway Teow Mee, and peanut pancake at Granny’s Pancake. It’s best to get here before 8 a.m. if you don’t want to wait.

From above, a bowl of pork noodles.
Tai wah pork noodles at Hong Lim Food Centre.

Long Ji Zi Char

When in Singapore, eat crab, especially if you can get the chile crabs, black pepper crabs, and intensely savory crab bee hoon at this plain-Jane tze char (meaning stir-fry in Hokkien) joint on Tiong Bahru Road. There’s a lot to enjoy here amongst the stir-fried pig’s fallopian tubes and blood cockles with chiles, but the piece de resistance is the gigantic mud crab served with a riot of rice vermicelli in a hearty broth brimming with umami. 

Smith Street Taps

At this craft beer bar set inside a kopitiam, owners Daniel Goh and Kuok Meng Chao pour 10 taps of envelope-pushing IPAs, sour beers, and imperial stouts from the likes of Mikkeller (Denmark), Beavertown (U.K.), Omnipollo (Sweden), and Anderson Valley (U.S.). Guzzle down your choice while teetering on hard plastic tables and stools in the sweltering food court.

A customer stands in front of the Smith Street Taps stall.
In front of Smith Street Taps.
Natasha Hong

Yang Ji 194

The sprawling second-floor hawker center has plenty of stalls serving dishes at dinner time, but Yang Ji 194 is the real deal, plating hulking Asian bighead carp heads under a mess of steamed garlic, red chiles, and coriander. The bones close to the fish’s face are usually big and easy to spot, so dig in without fear.

A closeup on a whole fish beneath a pile of herbs and chilies.
Fish at Yang Ji 194.
Xing Wei Chua

The Coconut Club

Under new owners, Singapore’s favorite nasi lemak institution has moved to bigger and better digs on Beach Road. You could swing by alone for a solo nasi lemak set, but it’s worth summoning a group of dining companions to experience the communal version meant for sharing. Cold-pressed coconut milk-scented rice is paired with your choice of mains — pick the signature ayam goreng berempah (deep-fried herbed chicken) and the Peranakan-inspired salad of kerabu (spicy cucumber) — and finished with a kueh sampler for dessert. Wash it down with a delicious coconut shake.

Ayam goreng berempah nasi lemak surrounded by various other dishes and drinks.
Ayam goreng berempah nasi lemak and spread.
The Coconut Club

Lolla

One of the city’s best small-plates restaurants resides in this shop-house space with communal and counter-style dining on Ann Siang Road. Now helmed by chef Johanne Siy, former sous chef of the now defunct Restaurant André, Lolla has earned reverence for its produce and list of acclaimed wines. While you can’t go wrong with an a la carte order of the ever-popular squid ink custard with sea urchin, Siy’s tasting menu should be considered mandatory.

A large scallop presented in its shell.
Scallop.
Lolla

Ah Tai Hainanese Chicken Rice

Gordon Ramsay was roundly trumped by Tian Tian's chefs at a cook-off, but watch locals roll their eyes at the selfie-stick tourists queueing for a taste at the Bourdain-approved stall. Make a beeline instead for Ah Tai, just three stalls down. The eponymous owner, who defected from Tian Tian, serves tender chicken with a more fragrant chile sauce that's liberally lashed with lime juice. Plus, you'll get your food in a fraction of the time it takes to get a plate at Tian Tian.

A tray with all the components of Hainanese chicken rice in various dishes.
Hainanese chicken rice.
Natasha Hong

Born

Michelin-starred Restaurant André may have closed, but the restaurant’s former executive chef, Zor Tan, has opened Restaurant Born. Housed in what used to be the Jinrikisha Station, a one-time depot for rickshaws, Born is a showcase for Tan’s high-concept cuisine that distills the momentous experiences and relationships in the Malaysian Chinese chef’s life into a parade of courses executed with pitch-perfect French techniques. Brace yourself for the restaurant’s stunning high-ceilinged dining room overhung with a gigantic origami art installation.

A large airy restaurant space where chefs move behind a counter in the center of the room beneath a large ornate mobile.
Inside Born restaurant.
Born

Park Bench Deli

At this CBD shop pulsating with hip-hoppy bass, you'll find a good-looking, metropolitan clientele getting a little gross with drippy patty melts, kong bak (Chinese braised pork belly) banh mi, and chicken katsu in cuisine-defying meat-and-bun combos. Wash it all down with pints of American and Japanese craft beers like Yona Yona, Deschutes, and Rogue.

A huge chicken katsu sandwich.
Chicken katsu.
Park Bench Deli/Facebook

Humpback

Humpback is a breezy Pacific Northwest-style diner where the seafood is bright and zingy, with crisp oysters flown in directly from Washington's Hama Hama oyster farm. After your meal, head next door to Gibson, owned by the same group, a playground of experimental cocktails where bartenders whirl ingredients like earthy-sweet beetroot nectar into a smoky mixture of tequila and mezcal.

A bartender stands in front of a wall of bottles.
Inside Gibson.
Natasha Hong

Meta

The contemporary tasting menu by chef-owner Sun Kim is a wondrous ensemble of Korean-inspired courses executed with French techniques, Korean flavors, and premium produce. Headliners are aplenty, from an opening snack of gyeran jjim (steamed egg custard) to the lobster haemultang (spicy seafood stew), all the way through Kim’s take on Korean barbecue, which includes A4 Kagoshima wagyu served with gobo (burdock) rice and white kimchi.

A small clay bowl of gyeran jjim topped with large chunks of uni.
Gyeran jjim.
Meta

Revolver

Indian grill Revolver is a tasting menu-only eatery that doles out charred flavors with bold accents. The menu is completely changed every two months, but there are fixtures; the ever-popular tandoor-baked Kulchette (a play on roti) appears with a different dip bimonthly, while the courgette flower makes regular appearances with various stuffings (like a recent iteration with delicious prawn balchao). There is no doubt that executive chef Saurabh Udinia, formerly of Mumbai’s Masala Library, is destined for Michelin stardom.

A closeup on deep red scotch eggs on a bed of noodles.
Wagyu scotch eggs caviar.
Revolver

Nylon Coffee Roasters

Not all cafes are created equal. This one, located deep in the bowels of the Everton housing estate, rises above, selling nothing more than coffee beans and coffee drinks (espressos, lattes, and the works). But every bean served here is roasted on-site and sourced directly from farms and cooperatives that the owners have visited personally. Each cup is to be savored while standing, not seated, at a communal long table, because that’s how they roll.

A patron reaches for a foamy coffee drink on a countertop.
A summer coffee spritz at Nylon Coffee Roasters.
Nylon Coffee Roasters/Facebook

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