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  2. Secret Recipe (restaurant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_Recipe_(restaurant)

    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.

  3. Lana Cake Shop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lana_Cake_Shop

    Tan Hsueh Yun of The Straits Times ranked the store as having the best chocolate fudge cakes among the top 10 fudge cakes in Singapore in 2016, giving it a score of 16.7 out of 25. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Delfina Utomo of Time Out included the shop in her 2019 list of the 8 best traditional bakeries and cake shops in Singapore. [ 12 ]

  4. Yummy Places: What's the best oyster cake in Singapore? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/yummy-places-whats-the-best...

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  5. Awfully Chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awfully_Chocolate

    Awfully Chocolate was founded by Lyn Lee, who left her job as an attorney to start the business in 1998. Its first store was in Katong in Singapore. Only one type of cake was sold: a round six-inch chocolate fudge cake called the "all-chocolate cake". The store had an unusual minimalist design in dark brown and white, with the cakes not on ...

  6. Bengawan Solo (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengawan_Solo_(company)

    A Bengawan Solo store at The Arcade. Bengawan Solo is a Singaporean bakery chain. It has 45 outlets islandwide with a factory at 23 Woodlands Link. The bakery is known for making and selling Indonesian style kue, buns, cakes, cookies and mooncakes because the owner and founder, Anastasia Liew, is an Indonesian who migrated to Singapore from Palembang in early 1970s.

  7. Singaporean cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singaporean_cuisine

    Hawker center in Bugis village. A large part of Singaporean cuisine revolves around hawker centres, where hawker stalls were first set up around the mid-19th century, and were largely street food stalls selling a large variety of foods [9] These street vendors usually set up stalls by the side of the streets with pushcarts or bicycles and served cheap and fast foods to coolies, office workers ...

  8. Chai tow kway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chai_tow_kway

    In Singapore, however, it is more commonly cut into pieces and stir fried with eggs, garlic, spring onion and occasionally shrimp (both dried and fresh). There are two variants: the "white" version does not use sweet soy sauce, and the radish cake is fried on top of a beaten egg to form a crust; the "black" version uses sweet sauce (molasses ...

  9. Chwee kueh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chwee_kueh

    Chwee kueh in Shantou, a city in Guangdong, the historical homeland of the Teochews. Chwee kueh (Chinese: 水 粿; pinyin: shuǐguǒ; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: chúi-kóe; lit. 'water rice cake'), also spelt chwee kweh, is a type of steamed rice cake originating in Teochew cuisine that is served with preserved radish.