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Secret Recipe Cakes and Café Sdn Bhd (doing business as Secret Recipe) is a Malaysian halal-certified café chain company established since 1997. It has international branches in Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, China, Brunei, Cambodia, Myanmar, Maldives and Bangladesh. [2] It serves cakes and fusion food in a service environment.
A mamak stall in Alor Setar, Kedah, Malaysia. Mamak stalls are indoor and open-air food establishments found in Southeast Asia, especially in Malaysia and Singapore, that typically serve food derived from Indian Muslim and Pakistani cuisines, unique to the region.
Chinese Hui Muslims from Yunnan who moved to Thailand are known as Chin Haw and they also own restaurants and stalls serving Chinese Islamic food. Restaurant in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, advertising Dungan cuisine. In Central Asia, Dungan people, descendants of Hui, operate restaurants serving Chinese Islamic cuisine, which is respectively referred ...
OpenRice (Chinese: 開飯喇!) is a food and restaurant guide website headquartered in Hong Kong and operating in Asia. The website encourages reviews from its users, similar to Yelp and Tripadvisor, and ranks them based on the number of reviews posted and how many of them are recommended by the website's editor.
SCR Corporation Sdn Bhd (doing business as SCR) is a Malaysian halal-certified chicken rice fast-food restaurant chain in Sarawak. The chain is operated by SCR Corporation Sdn Bhd which was established in 1987.
The restaurant was opened in 1997 by Xuqun Yang and Feng Wang, a husband and wife [1] who emigrated from Beijing in 1987. [2] At first, they ran the restaurant with their 14-year-old son and one other employee. [1] As of 2015, it was the only Muslim Chinese restaurant in the city, [3] and at
Bak Kut Teh. Bak Kut Teh (Chinese: 肉骨茶) (pork ribs soup)."Bak Kut Teh" in Hokkien dialect means "meat bone tea", [1] and the dish is pork ribs cooked with garlic, dark soy sauce and a specific combination of herbs and spices which have been boiled for many hours.
Until 1985, subscribers' telephone numbers in Singapore were five and six digits. Five digits were introduced in 1960s, whereas 5-digit and 6-digit phone numbers were introduced in 1960s as fixed lines grew, but in that year, these changed to seven digits as the introduction of new towns arose (Tampines, Jurong East, Bukit Batok, Yishun and Hougang) and a large number of new numbers were required.