Can Singapore cuisine become as popular as Chinese, Japanese and Thai food in the West?
- Anthony Bourdain and Crazy Rich Asians have given Singapore’s melting-pot cuisine a boost in the US
- The only barrier to exporting the island’s food to the world is a fearless entrepreneurial spirit, says veteran food critic KF Seetoh
Singaporean cuisine has long been the darling of cosmopolitan, well-travelled foodies – including more celebrity chefs than you can shake a fork at, the late Anthony Bourdain its loudest champion.
Even in places with sizeable Singaporean expatriate populations – San Francisco, New York and London – one finds only a handful of eateries serving this or its close cousin, Malaysian food.
In California’s Bay Area, the pandemic last year seeded two Singaporean food pop-ups, whose owners say they owe some of their success to the 2018 movie Crazy Rich Asians putting the country and its food on the map.
In Las Vegas and New York City, there are two new food halls featuring Singaporean hawker brands – the latter a project dreamt up by Bourdain that will finally open its doors early next year.