
Singapore is renowned for its hawker centres, the ultimate destination for experiencing the variety of the cuisine. These are collections of small stalls often specialising in one or two signature dishes from Chinese to Indian to Malaysian to Peranakan or Nonya style cooking. This is a distinct cuisine which developed when local Malay women married Chinese merchants and labourers and is the fusion of Chinese-Hokkien ingredients and Malay herbs and spices. The dishes are often hot and spicy and many dishes start with a rempah or spice paste made with a combination of chilli, spring onion, lemongrass, candlenuts, turmeric and belachan.
Singapore has many distinctive dishes which include otak-otak or fish cooked with coconut milk, chilli paste, galangal, and herbs, wrapped in a banana leaf; a fresh crunchy salad called rojak;pohpiaor soft spring rolls; fish head curry, often eaten from a banana leaf; and the renowned Singapore chilli crab stir fried with garlic, sugar, tomato sauce, soy sauce and chilli.
Tropical fruit is a great way to finish a Singaporean banquet, but a food obsessed country has many of its own recipes as well, including bubur cha-cha, a colourful mix of tapioca, sweet potato, beans and coconut milk.
Source: http://www.sbs.com.au