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Jumbo Seafood [a] is a Singaporean restaurant chain specialising in the seafood aspects of Singaporean cuisine and dishes, such as Chili crab. First opened in 1987 with an outlet at the East Coast Seafood Centre modeling and taking design elements similar to the non affiliated JUMBO Floating Restaurant Hong Kong , Jumbo Kingdom .
Jumbo Kingdom (Chinese: 珍寶王國) consisted of the Jumbo Floating Restaurant (Chinese: 珍寶海鮮舫) and the adjacent Tai Pak Floating Restaurant (Chinese: 太白海鮮舫), which were tourist attractions in the Aberdeen South Typhoon Shelters within Hong Kong's Aberdeen Harbour.
Sin Huat Eating House is located in Geylang, Singapore. The restaurant primarily serves seafood dishes, including crab bee hoon (crab with rice vermicelli), [1] [2] poached gong gong, [3] and frog legs. [4] There is also a braised duck rice stall within the premises. [5]
A&W; Amato's; Andy's Frozen Custard; Arby's; Arctic Circle Restaurants; Arthur Treacher's; Auntie Anne's; Baja Fresh; Barberitos; Blake's Lotaburger; Blimpie; Bojangles
East Coast Park is a beach and a park on the southeastern coast of Singapore.It stretches along the south of Marine Parade, Bedok, and Tampines.It was opened in the 1970s, after the Singapore government had completed reclaiming land off the coast at Katong, from Kallang to Changi.
The restaurant has been in existence since the 1940s with its first outlet at Bedok Resthouse, and has helped shape Singapore's local seafood culinary tastes.Besides the black pepper crabs, it also lays claim to being the first restaurant in Singapore to serve live seafood, and its menu of barbecued tilapia, drunken prawns and crispy duck have become common dishes in other contemporary seafood ...
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Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle, a Michelin starred Singaporean hawker stall. The Michelin Guide for Singapore was first published in 2016. At the time, Singapore was the first country in Southeast Asia to have Michelin-starred restaurants and stalls, and was one of the four states in general in the Asia-Pacific along with Japan and the special administrative regions (SAR) of Hong Kong and Macau.