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Forgotten Foods & Mealtime Memories

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Food

7 July 2016

Food writer Sylvia Tan remembers the foods and flavours she grew up with and the less than sanitary practices made for stomachs cast in iron.

Roadside satay stalls opposite the Tay Koh Yat bus depot along Beach Road, 1955. Source: The Straits Times © Singapore Press Holdings Limited. Permission required for reproduction.

Roadside satay stalls opposite the Tay Koh Yat bus depot along Beach Road, 1955. Source: The Straits Times © Singapore Press Holdings Limited. Permission required for reproduction.

An Indian ice seller drizzling multi-coloured syrups and swirls of creamy evaporated milk over an ice ball, 1978. Ministry of Information and the Arts Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

An Indian ice seller drizzling multi-coloured syrups and swirls of creamy evaporated milk over an ice ball, 1978. Ministry of Information and the Arts Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

Home Delivery, Singapore Style

Food on the Go – Literally

(Above) A noodle seller along a five-foot-way, 1950. Singapore Chinese Clan Associations Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore. (Above right) An itinerant hawker in Singapore in the 1920s. In the 1960s and 70s, actions were taken to legalise and house these vendors in purpose-built hawker centres. By the late 80s, street hawkers had practically disappeared from the landscape. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

(Above) A noodle seller along a five-foot-way, 1950. Singapore Chinese Clan Associations Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore. (Above right) An itinerant hawker in Singapore in the 1920s. In the 1960s and 70s, actions were taken to legalise and house these vendors in purpose-built hawker centres. By the late 80s, street hawkers had practically disappeared from the landscape. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

Loh kai yik, or braised chicken wings, is a Cantonese dish made of chicken wings, pork belly, pig’s liver and intestines, ju her (cured cuttlefish), kangkong (water convolvulus) and soya bean puffs. All rights reserved, Tan, S. (2011). Modern Nonya. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Cuisine.

Loh kai yik, or braised chicken wings, is a Cantonese dish made of chicken wings, pork belly, pig’s liver and intestines, ju her (cured cuttlefish), kangkong (water convolvulus) and soya bean puffs. All rights reserved, Tan, S. (2011). Modern Nonya. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Cuisine.

Lost Foods

A watercolour painting of itinerant food and vegetable vendors from the 1960s by an unknown painter. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

A watercolour painting of itinerant food and vegetable vendors from the 1960s by an unknown painter. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

Flavours of My Childhood

Breuder cake, of Dutch-Sri Lankan and Eurasian origins, is a bread-like cake that follows the tradition of the Italian panettone and other yeast cakes, except that in the case of Breuder, toddy or fermented coconut water is used as a raising agent. Food writer Christopher Tan’s version uses both coconut water and yeast. All rights reserved, Tan, C. (2015). Nerd Baker: Extraordinary Recipes, Stories & Baking Adventures from a True Oven Geek. Singapore: Epigram Books.

Breuder cake, of Dutch-Sri Lankan and Eurasian origins, is a bread-like cake that follows the tradition of the Italian panettone and other yeast cakes, except that in the case of Breuder, toddy or fermented coconut water is used as a raising agent. Food writer Christopher Tan’s version uses both coconut water and yeast. All rights reserved, Tan, C. (2015). Nerd Baker: Extraordinary Recipes, Stories & Baking Adventures from a True Oven Geek. Singapore: Epigram Books.

The piquant Peranakan cucumber and stuffed chilli pickle cannot be bought off the shelf, and is only occasionally made in home kitchens by energetic aficionados of the cuisine. All rights reserved, Tan, S. (2011). Modern Nonya. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Cuisine.

The piquant Peranakan cucumber and stuffed chilli pickle cannot be bought off the shelf, and is only occasionally made in home kitchens by energetic aficionados of the cuisine. All rights reserved, Tan, S. (2011). Modern Nonya. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Cuisine.

Forgotten Fruits

Belimbing (carambola) is another fruit that is seldom seen today. It is cooked in a sambal with prawns here. All rights reserved, Tan, S. (2011). Modern Nonya. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Cuisine.

Belimbing (carambola) is another fruit that is seldom seen today. It is cooked in a sambal with prawns here. All rights reserved, Tan, S. (2011). Modern Nonya. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Cuisine.

(Left) The writer used to pick pak kia, or guava, from wayside trees on her way home from school. This variety with sweet, pink flesh is rarely found these days. This is one of the paintings that William Farquhar commissioned Chinese artists to do between 1803 and 1818 when he was Resident and Commandant of Malacca. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board. (Right) Durian flowers can be fried with chilli paste or cooked with spices and coconut milk to make a lemak (spicy coconut gravy). Courtesy of Sylvia Tan.

(Left) The writer used to pick pak kia, or guava, from wayside trees on her way home from school. This variety with sweet, pink flesh is rarely found these days. This is one of the paintings that William Farquhar commissioned Chinese artists to do between 1803 and 1818 when he was Resident and Commandant of Malacca. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board. (Right) Durian flowers can be fried with chilli paste or cooked with spices and coconut milk to make a lemak (spicy coconut gravy). Courtesy of Sylvia Tan.

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