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Rediscovering Mee Maidin

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Food

5 June 2024

Khir Johari, food historian and award-winning author of "The Food of Singapore Malays", makes mee maidin—a noodle dish based on a krill ragù —and tells us more about its origins. Why does a 1968 cookbook call it “mee mahdin”? And how was krill, once abundant in Singapore’s waters, caught using traditional fishing methods?

We are familiar with local Malay favourites such as mee rebus and mee siam. But mention mee maidin and you might get puzzled looks. Join author Khir Johari as he recreates this rare dish from Kampong Gelam and takes a deep dive into its history and its star ingredient – krill.

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A plate of salad with sliced boiled eggs, tofu, lettuce, bean sprouts, red and green chili peppers, and a lime wedge.

Mee maidin, served with garnishes like lettuce, bean sprouts, tofu, chillies, eggs and calamansi.

Two people in aprons cooking in a kitchen, with one tasting food from a bowl.

Host Paddy (right) tasting Khir’s freshly cooked krill ragù.

Recipes

Recipe text for Mee Mahdin in Malay, with ingredients and instructions split into two columns.

“Mee mahdin” recipe from Hajah Asfiah bte Haji Abdullah, Hidangan Warisan Kita (Times Books International, 1986).

Hajah Asfiah’s ingredients and instructions
Khir’s recipe

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