Singapore

Places we ate in Vietnam and Singapore April 2025   

An Bang Beach 

Blue sea Hoi an – south end, very tasty and well price local food. Best Cao Lau we had in the area 

Xin Chao – south end, near the backpackers. Really tasty curry and cheaper pricing than some of the others. Cao Lau was very salty and not my favourite though  

Serena Restaurant – south end, beautiful food and family owned. Lights are lovely to sit under

Luckys Restaurant – always delicious and well priced! Cute baby. This one is on the main road near main beach 

Thom’s Bakery – south end and main beach location, yummy pastries, nice juices and coffee. Tourist pricing but a nice change from a very average breakfast buffet at the hotel 

Cu Le Bar – south end, we only had juice here but it was tasty and they had tiny lovable puppies they let me cuddle 

Summer Beach Restaurant – south end, really tasty and fresh food cooked by a family. Cute comfy chairs and nice street view, Bahn mi and fried pork rolls tasty and made fresh. 

Hoi An Old Town 

White Rose Restaurant – touristy but also cool to go somewhere that specialises in the dumplings 

Oodles of Noodles (Hoi An) does noodle tasting tours and then there is the Noodle House with their famous “A Flight of Noodles”. We didn’t get to try this one but it’s on the list for next time! 

Ho Chi Minh City 

Ben Nghe Street Food Market – so many stalls! So much good food! Clean toilets and cheap drinks as well.

Street food tour: Co Lieng (betel leaves), Nuac Mio (sugar cane juice and rice flour noodles opposite), Oc Diem (seafood alley), Bahn Xeo 335 (big and small savoury pancakes), Kem Bo (coconut icecream smoothie)

The cafe on level 8 of the cafe restaurant apartments. Juice was amazing, food was awful and do not recommend

Pho Viet Nam – delicious! Meaty broth and clay pots so you can choose what goes in. Two Michelin guide recommendations as well https://maps.app.goo.gl/fQW1jpSdCRkzEWWAA?g_st=com.google.maps.preview.copy

A taste of Saigon – old town. A little pricier than other “hole in the wall” local places but absolutely delicious food and the opportunity to try some Saigon specials including broken rice and BUN THIT NONG SAIGON which is noodles, peanuts, salad, fried spring rolls and pork.

Singapore

Satay street outside Lau Pa Sat Hawker Centre – had heard this was amazing but we thought it was overpriced and average

Feng Ji Chicken Rice – pretty good local place near the Robertson house hotel. limited English.

Mel’s Diner at Universal Studios – awful. Absolutely awful. Don’t even try it, we doing it basically inedible

Ah Heng (Michelin recommended) at Hong Lim Hawker Centre – We went in search of some Hawker Food gems for dinner and wandered 15 mins along the river to Heng Kee Curry Chicken Bee Hoon Mee (shop 02-57/58/59) located in Hong Lim Market & Food Centre. This shop finally received a write up in the Michelin guide in 2023 after numerous awards and mentions over the years. The shop was founded in the 1970s and is currently run by its second-generation owner. The stall’s hallmark single dish is a mild (for most) curry broth, custom-made tofu puffs and fish cakes with delicious poached chicken and yellow noodles. We got the small bowls for $6.50 SGD each and also bought a sugar cane juice for $2.50 SGD each two stalls over.

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Singapore: Day 11 – 13 (Light shows, universal studios and a night out)

Day 11

We landed in Singapore around midday and with the new bar code entry cards it was super easy to come through customs and immigration. We checked in to Robertson House by the Crest Collection around 3pm for a brief rest before our river cruise and twilight tour collection time of 5:30pm. Our original choice was Hotel Fort Canning but they have been taken over and cancelled our booking…so not impressed with that! Nice room view though and a free mini breakfast.

A bus collected a bunch of people from hotels then took us to the river. We started off from Clarke Quay (nice and close to the hotel) with  a 30-minute scenic river cruise. During the first part of the cruise, we got a quick glimpse of the Merlion. It symbolises Singapore’s fishing heritage and spouts water into the river. 

The purpose of this tour (for us) was to see the gardens by the bay light show. The “Garden Rhapsody” light and sound show is where the towering Supertrees come to life in dazzling colours, set to music.  

Just down the road (river?) we then also stopped for the Spectra Light and Water Show at Marina Bay Sands This is an amazing display of lasers, water fountains, and projections. It was cool but not as good as the super trees and that would be my winner.

Form there we returned to land and were given the choice of a drop off at Hotel or Lau Pa Sat Hawker Market. We went to the market, had some (average) satay on satay street then off to bed.

Day 12

We woke up around 9am, ate our included mini breakfast and then caught a grab to universal studios. It was only a $16 SGD ride for 15 mins and was a lot more pleasant than 45 mins on various underground lines.

We bought the ride express passes and while we didn’t need them initially, by lunchtime standard queues were 70 mins plus so it was well worth it. Rides we went on included:

  • Battlestar galactica roller coaster (I went one way, B went both)
  • Revenge of the mummy
  • Transformers 3D (made me very nauseous)
  • River rapids
  • Shrek 4D

We missed canopy flyer as it doesn’t have express and the line just kept getting longer and longer!

Taxis at universal studios…this is a thing we didn’t know. They can refuse card fares. We tried 5/6 and asked to pay with card and they all wanted cash which we didn’t want to use. We thought they couldn’t do this but apparently they can – they just can’t turn the meter off. Disgusting behaviour though. We ended up walking back to the main entry and getting a grab which was only $11. B is now annoyed at all taxis and considering not getting in one at all 😂

For dinner we walked to a local place near the hotel and I had Hainanese chicken rice (yum). Singapore food is very Chinese based and it’s definitely not my favourite…lots of noodles, rice, oily stuff and sweet heavy sauces. The chicken rice dish is one of the better ones for my lighter taste and angry stomach.

Day 13

It’s Easter Friday here so lots of things are closed. We made sure we had some snacks organised from the day before and spent most of the day just relaxing.

We went in search of some Hawker Food gems for dinner and wandered 15 mins along the river to Heng Kee Curry Chicken Bee Hoon Mee (shop 02-57/58/59) located in Hong Lim Market & Food Centre. This shop finally received a write up in the Michelin guide in 2023 after numerous awards and mentions over the years. The shop was founded in the 1970s and is currently run by its second-generation owner. The stall’s hallmark single dish is a mild (for most) curry broth, custom-made tofu puffs and fish cakes with delicious poached chicken and yellow noodles. We got the small bowls for $6.50 SGD each and also bought a sugar can juice for $2.50 SGD each.

The walk along the river near ClaRke Quay was lively and we even saw some cheeky river otters!

Tomorrow we head home on a 5hr scoot flight. I’m hoping the chairs are a lot better than our short HCMC to Singapore leg as that was awful.

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Phuket – Singapore – Perth: Day 8 at Changi Airport

Leaving Phuket we used an airport transfer with Phuket shuttles which all went fine. We arrived early to Phuket international (because I’m me lol) and I had arranged for us to use the Coral Executive Lounge before our flight. The lounge had good food, drinks and comfortable chairs – definitely much better than sitting in the uncomfortable airport chairs.

We had a 4hr stopover in Changi (3hrs really as you have to be at your gate 1hr early) and opted to explore this time! I had a list based on a blog post I found online https://trevallog.com/jewel-canopy-park/ so I knew I wanted to go to canopy park, the discovery slides, Butterfly garden, crystal garden and eat some Hainenese chicken at the hainan story chapter 2 restaurant in jewel. It is really hard to find info about Jewel and the Changi website just tells you it’s accessible from every terminal. Turns out, while that is true it’s accessible through arrivals. Which means you need a visitor visa and more time – I’m pretty annoyed it took random blogs and 40 mins of aimless walking to tell us this as the Changi info is so unclear.

Once we worked that out, we went to terminal 3 and visited the butterfly garden instead.

We also had lunch in T3 at “Singapore food street” which was delicious and I finally got my hainanese chicken I’ve been waiting for. It was also well priced at $7.50 Singapore dollars.

By that point we only had 1.5hrs to go so we just sat near the gate to wait for departure.

I will comment that every single time I’ve told someone we are flying Singapore air this trip I got the “oooh fancy” reply which I’ve found fascinating as I don’t think I’ve every experienced worse service! On the 5hr flight coming over (1am departure) it took them 2hrs to serve food and another 40 mins to clean it up so cabin lights were dimmed for about 90 mins in total on a very late flight. We thought maybe that was a one off but last night it was the same! 2.5 hrs to serve food and they ran out. Plus they moved our seat last minute and kept trying to give me someone else’s meal the whole flight. I wouldn’t be paying their full price to fly them again.

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Day 9: Leaving Singapore…final thoughts and a final review of Hotel Fort Canning

Positives from this trip:

⁃ The public transport here is cheap, efficient and easy to use. An EZlink card was only $5 and most trips within the city area are 0.77c so we counted it as a must buy.

This is probably the easiest public transport system I have ever used and I would have been totally comfortable on my own….which is not something I have ever said about a PT system in a new place before! Gold star for you singapore.

⁃ The weather has been pretty good for this time of year. We knew it would be wet and humid but that also seems to have kept crowds of tourists away so we were happy! A poncho and good waterproof or water friendly shoes are a must at this time of year. B wore travel hiking shoes most places and I wore quick dry sandals. Be prepared that nothing shuts down in the rain, people only really freak out about lightning

⁃ Most things didn’t have too much of a line up in late Dec/early Jan. A lot of the reviews and online comments I read suggest we got lucky with both timing and weather in regard to this. We had very short lines for the pandas at River Safari, Gardens by the Bay, cloud forest, universal studios and other things. We also got our own carriage on the Singapore Flyer champagne flight! That was seriously an amazing experience for $78 each. The only time we really saw huge lines was bloody Marina Bay Sands.

⁃ I am putting Hotel Fort Canning in both the good and not so good categories! It was a great compromise between my desire for a resort stay and B wanting to be in the city. It also got a big thumbs up from B due to its lovely surroundings, the very quiet pool area, it’s 5 min walking distance to the MRT, the fact we could Uber most places in the city for under $10 and the free drinks from 6-7pm each day for guests. The bath tub was my highlight. I loved those tubs soooo much.

⁃ The hawker centres were amazing and all visitors should try them! We visited two, the Maxwell Food Centre and the Hong Lim Complex. Amazing food for under $5. We were lucky enough to get to Ah Heng at 10:15am when there was no line at all

⁃ Changi Airport has The Haven Lounge which is in arrivals Terminal 3. Although we have qantas club access, we realised we had to clear immigration to get to it….which you can’t do without a boarding pass….which we weren’t going to get until 7:30pm at night! So we discovered this place. Basically you select a time and pay a fee and you can use their guest lounge. They provide free drinks, snacks, lounges, wifi, powerpoints, one shower and one meal. You can also pay a bit more for a nap room. What a good idea!

Not so good things:

⁃ Hotel Fort Canning has (mostly) been a positive experience for us, with two notable negatives. If you are like me and don’t sleep like the dead, be aware the doors are really not 5 Star Hotel level and offer no soundproofing AT ALL. It’s like being in a cheap motel in that regard. We ended up staying in two areas of the hotel (level 1 room 111 and level 2 room 216) and in both rooms we would be startled awake by guests next door closing their doors as normal and it rattling the walls, rattling our door and sounding extremely loud. You could here all hallway conversations as well. The second issue (out of their control) would be the fact the MRT return trip is only doable by going up extremely steep stairs or a very slippery footpath. I slipped and fell on the footpath. Not ideal for many travellers wanting to stay in a 5 Star Hotel! We did wonder why no shuttle but I assume that’s because as quite a pricey hotel, they figure many guests will taxi.

⁃ SGD and AUD are very close to on par, B tells me the aussie dollar is slightly weaker at the moment. Things here are not cheap AT ALL. Think Australian tourist pricing and then some because alcohol here has a significant mark up. A bottle of prosecco here is $40+ and a bottle of jack Daniels is $90+ so imagine how that translates to bar pricing! Most cocktails ranged from $17-$30. I would compare the costs here to visiting somewhere like Hamilton Island in Australia in terms of drinks, attraction pricing and “normal” eating. Hawker food centres are obviously an exception 🙂

⁃ It’s humid as hell at this time of year. Literally. So be prepared with sensible clothes and shoes. You will sweat like nobodies business!

Stuff still on the to-do list (and yes, we both agree we will definitely come back to do these!)

⁃ High tea at The Raffles (closed for renovation until mid 2018)

⁃ The skywalk at gardens by the bay which was closed due to wet weather when we went

⁃ Visiting some of the outlying islands, one is apparently inhabited by lots of friendly cats. They recommend you take tons of cat food when visiting. Seriously. They only have two ferries a day (10am, 2:45pm) so we gave this idea a miss on this trip

⁃ Explore more of Sentosa Island than just Universal Studios. There’s zip lining, beaches and so on.

– I still really want to stay at Marina Bay Sands just so I can get in that damn pool!

⁃ Singapore night safari and Singapore zoo in the day time because….polar bear!! POLAR BEAR! This is me staring longingly at the polar bears butt from the “sneak a view” window in the other zoo

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Singapore Day 8: Relaxing and then eating Jumbo Seafood at Clarke Quay

Today = pool, naps, reading my first 2018 book club book, more pool, more naps and when it started to rain and we had to vacate our glorious day bed next to the pool….I had my last bath in the wonderful deep soak tub.

A few days ago I went on a google mission to find the best chilli crab in Singapore. Turns out, that’s really hard! However, Jumbo Seafood at Riverwalk kept coming up again and again and again. So I booked us a table and off we went!

We went to the smaller one along the Riverwalk side but there is also one called Riverside further into Clarke Quay. It was about an 8 min walk from the hotel through the lovely Fort Canning Park and across some very pretty bridges.

When we arrived for our booking, they explained the seating was for 1hr 15mins which was no drama to us. I know that timed seating can piss people off sometimes but we love it – it means prompt service!

I’m allergic to shellfish so I ordered the salted fish and chicken fried rice. It was REALLY good and a small serve ($16) was more than enough for two people. B ordered the chilli crab of course! It was the small crab at around 800g. His comments were “it was really good, the sauce had a nice tang but wasn’t too crazy hot – more like sweet chilli”. He definitely recommends people try the chilli crab here.

After dinner, we wandered back through Clarke Quay. We got very lucky with the rain again and it turned from a rainy afternoon into a lovely evening. Clarke Quay is obviously the centre for night clubs etc. It has a loud, colourful, drink filled vibe. We got some cool photos and had some shots at the shots bar.

HFC perk 7: they have given us a late checkout of 2pm tomorrow so we will be able to go out in the late morning, collect our souvenirs for the kids and then come back to the room and shower before heading to the airport

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Singapore Day 7: review of Universal Studios Singapore!!

We left the hotel at 8:30am after a small breakfast and walked 7 mins to Dhoby Ghaut MRT station. This is not the station we have typically been using (Fort Canning) but is handy because it is on the right line! The walk is fine in dry weather although very slippery in wet weather – I went ass over tit the other day trying to go down the there! We then caught the MRT to Harbourside and walked up to the Sentosa Monorail. We used our EZ Link cards to pay the slightly higher than usual fare (see day 2 post – can’t recommend getting these cards enough) and off we went! It only took about 25 mins in total to get from the hotel to Universal Studios. Coming home, the fares would have been $9.54 and given the pouring rain I opted to taxi….which was only $14!

First things first: buy an express pass and buy it online EARLY! We bought ours close to 2 months ago and it meant it was only $50. I believe they were $120 at the gate today. It was a lifesaver and significantly shortened the ride lengths today…not that our lines were that long! The longest we were in was sadly the one that was shut down due to rain – the express queue was 30mins when the normal queue was 1hr 30mins.

Rides we went on:

– battlestar galactica (human line)

– Jurassic rapids

– Canopy Flyer

– transformers

– puss in boots (for kids)

– Revenge of the Mummy

Rides we missed:

– battlestar galactica (cylon line) as it closed just before we got on due to poor weather

– the treasure hunter one (for kids)

– pretty much anything in Far Far Away Land and Madagascar as those are very much pitched at young kids

Other stuff we tried to do!

Waterworld: this actually a show but you get drenched if you sit near the front, even if you’re only in the “mild splashing”

Zone.

A photo with a (dancing) transformer!

The typical globe pic. Of course.

Things we learnt today:

1. See earlier comment on express pass purchasing and being there before 9:30am to avoid being at the back of the queue

2. Bring a damn poncho. We really needed one today. Also it turned out that coming in the wet season (jan) has advantages in smaller crowds but the rain does impact on the enjoyability of the experience and closed a few of the rides

3. Wear shoes and clothes you can cope with getting wet. Not just because of the rain! Multiple rides had the capacity to soak people

HFC perk 6: We ate dinner at the hotel tonight after 7+ hours of trekking around. It was delish! Laksa, dessert, Singapore slings and tiger beer.

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Singapore Day 6: review if Chinois Spa and Spago Bar & Lounge at Marina Bay Sands

We started our day with a spa treatment at Chinois Spa which is based at The Legends, a function centre adjacent to the hotel. We both had the “imperial” which was a body scrub, soak and massage over 2hrs. I always think a massage is a good way to start the year! This was no exception and was well received after a little to much bubbly last night. We also got a 25% discount as hotel guests.

When we returned to Hotel Fort Canning, our room had been changed and they had moved all our luggage. I wrote a negative trip advisor review about the hallway noise (which seemed unusual for a 5 Star resort) and the guest manager approached me to arrange a room swap and to personally apologise for his staff being far too noisy when the door soundproofing – based on their code restrictions from the heritage listing -is…well….a bit shit. As part of the apology, they offered a room upgrade.

After the spa and luggage shift it was nap time (for B) and bath time for me. Do you know what makes a deep soak tub better? Reece’s Pieces!

We had booked evening drinks at Spago Bar and Lounge. This was a suggestion I came across when reading really negative things about the observation deck at Marina Bay Sands. We tried to go up a few days ago but the line was insane. Basically, lots of things I read said we were better off booking in at Spago Bar and Lounge, spending $26 on a cocktail instead of an entry fee to the sky deck and enjoying that view. What a view it is!! It even includes the pool. There’s no fee to book but you are required to purchase something from the menu – they have cocktails (yum), mocktails, soft drinks, wine, hard booze and food.

HFC perk 5: when you get upset about stuff they actually fix it. Hooray for a 5 Star Hotel! Also, after going to MBS and riding in the lifts you don’t have to fight for lift space along with 65 other people here 🙂

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Singapore Day 4: review of Nox – Dine in the Dark restaurant

This is a detailed blog post dedicated to our experience at Nox – Dine in the Dark on Dec 30th 2017. We paid full price to take part in this and it is not a sponsored post.

Our original NYE plan (tomorrow night) was to go to Nox Restaurant and then into Marina Bay for the fireworks but apparently over 350 000 people are expected at and around the fireworks. Roads will close and there will be entry and exit checkpoints set up to control numbers. That’s insane and will not be enjoyable for either of us. Instead, we moved Nox to tonight! As a side note, I rang up this afternoon to request this (super late notice) and they were wonderfully accommodating about it.

Now, Nox is pretty unusual! Their website says: A reservations only restaurant, NOX challenges guests to a multi-sensory journey of heightened taste, touch, smell and sound as they dine in complete darkness. Guests will find themselves expertly guided by specially trained blind and visually impaired servers, resulting in a truly rich human experience where roles are reversed and the blind now become their eyes.

Basically, you rock up and they take all your stuff (phones, watches etc) and then you eat your meal IN TOTAL DARKNESS! Before you go in to the dark dining room, you choose a drinks package to match your meal. This has to be done beforehand as you can’t change your mind once inside since….it’s pitch black.

All the servers are vision impaired (which I thought was awesome) and the aim is you experience your food with your other senses. At the end, after you head back down to the bar, they show you what you have eaten and you get to discuss it.

We arrived about 15 mins early and were warmly welcomed by the bar staff. They gave us a glass of prosecco and some appertifs while we chose the drinks to match our meal.

We went with the 3 wines ($50 each) to match the NYE $118 meal we had each picked and pre-booked. We then had a short briefing on the restaurant including the fact we should pee first, checking allergies, that our waitperson will be legally blind and it is important we introduce ourselves with our names so they can recognise us and how we can get our waitpersons attention in the dining room. They also explained the table layout and how to eat (clockwise starting at 6pm) for each course. This handy diagram from Rubbish Eat, Rubbish Grow shows the layout:

Then…we went up the stairs! We had to hold on to shoulders to enter the dark room. We later found out there were 4 spaces upstairs and they have a ratio of one serving staff member to 6 customers across all spaces. They had 65 people booked for tonight so had around 9-10 staff on. Our server was Hafiz (spelling – sorry) and he was wonderful! Very cheerful and understanding that I kept losing my spoon. The image below (from the Nox website) gives an idea of the process of getting from the bar to your seat.

Quote one for the night (after my second glass of wine):

Me: I’m feeling around behind me and there’s just a wall. I’m going to feel to the side now

B: you can’t feel to the side, there’s people!

Me: it will be fine. I’m being subtle

B: there’s no subtle way to grab a breast or a beard. Stop it!

Side note: gaps between tables are a little bigger than expected to allow for ease of movement and presumably to stop weirdos like me accidentally feeling up strangers.

We ate quite quickly (80mins) but you could definitely go slower if you wanted to. Hafiz kept reminding us we could slow down but we were enjoying ourselves too much! There was no pressure to rush or to leave though. You have to ask for water and it costs extra, you open the bottle yourself. Hafiz taught B how to serve water to us both (using his finger in the glass to measure) which worked really well the first time. The second refill ended in a bit of a mess…c’mon B….you had one job man!

Quote two for the night:

Me: STOP BLOWING ON ME *awkward pause in the whole room*

B: *hysterical giggles*

Me: I mean…literally…stop it.

He was blowing air in my face from across the table and seeing how much it took until it annoyed me. Seriously. Bloody science-minds.

At the end of the eating part, we came back down to the bar and filled out a little worksheet guessing the different courses and then had them explained to us with pics. The person doing this for us happened to be Jose (spelling) the general manager who was also an Aussie. He spent AGES answering all my questions and didn’t seem put out at all by them. He was great! He also told me that the Braille on the wall all around the bar area spelt out “Nox – Dine in the Dark”

We finished with some chocolates and then headed back to the hotel.

Positives about Nox – Dine in the Dark

⁃ It’s an awesome, one-off experience to try. Both B and I felt it was something we would recommend to others

⁃ As most of you know, I work with young people who have experience trauma, so any environment that supports those with additional needs is of interest to me. Nox employ vision impaired people as their waitstaff which is WONDERFUL. Jose told us that the majority of their staff are late in life blind and are often struggling to find a direction again after such a significant life change. Our server (Hafiz) was absolutely fantastic, he apparently use to be an air steward for Singapore Airlines before a detached retina caused his vision impairment. Nox also employ their staff at a “normal” Singaporean wage and pay the equivalent of what we Australians call “superannuation”. That’s a big deal. I was really happy to hear that and also impressed with the honest response to my (rather rude!) question about pay

– The food and paired wines were tasty and well matched, the dessert wine in particular really adapted to each option within the set dishes

Things to think about before going to Nox – Dine in the Dark

⁃ While the food and drink was pretty good. I tend to agree with some other online commentators and reviews that 4 small dishes per meal (12 dishes in total spread over 3 courses) can be a bit much and as they are all quite different it makes it harder to focus on the experience. We also lost track of appetiser versus main. Having said that, ALL THE FOOD WAS GOOD!! Seriously. So full now

– Nervousness about the dark wasn’t mentioned at all in the briefing. I did A LOT of reading about this place before we went so I knew I could leave the room if I needed to, and how to do so. However as a person with anxiety I do think some mention about this, or even the option to ask, would help. I didn’t feel anxious up in the room but I did find I fixated on the one tiny dark space anomaly (infrared camera) quite often which helped me stay calm. I also had wine. A lot of wine

We both recommend it as a 5 out of 5 dining and “fun things to do once in your life” experience and were REALLY impressed with the food and the service. Our final bill was $338 SGD for 12 (filling) degustation courses each, 3 x matched wines each, 2 x glasses of prosecco on arrival, an appertif and chocolates at the end and a bottle of water to share. Excellent value for money!

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Singapore Day 4: Another Chinatown Hawker Centre and Gardens by the Bay

We started with a late breakfast at Maxwell Food Centre in Chinatown where I got to try the authentic Singaporean dish of Haivanese (chicken) Rice. It was so tasty I forgot to take a photo! Our cooking class the other day told us there were three main things we should aim to eat while here that are truly authentic, traditional Singaporean food examples:

⁃ Chicken rice

⁃ Char Kway Teow

⁃ Carrot cake (the name of this is very misleading!)

So, one down two to go. B has also added chilli crab to this list because he doesn’t care if it’s not authentic…he intends to eat it! Apparently it’s the national dish and very popular, but isn’t a traditional dish as Singapore was originally not a wealth country and crab is too pricey.

After breakfast, I bought some dresses and pretty tops in Chinatown (I’m still refining my bargaining skills but they are getting better) and we also searched for presents for the kiddies back home. I’ve started a tradition of stuffed toys for the nephews and niece from each country we visit.

We then caught the MRT to Gardens by the Bay. We used the shuttle service to get from the entrance to the Flower Dome ($3 well spent as my back is playing up) and started there. All up, for both domes and the shuttle x 2 it was $62. The flower dome was very impressive!

B was particularly taken with the dragon sculpture.

We then went through the cloud forest (second dome) which was also amazing! The lines were quite short but I can imagine how crazy it must get when busy. The cloud forest was my favourite of the two domes.

Before starting the Skywalk, we had lunch at Majestic Bay under the flower dome. The food was quite tasty but pricey and there were screaming children everywhere…to the point where B had to repeat himself so I could hear him say “this reminds me, I need to book that vasectomy”. We had Shanghai dumplings, Peking duck pancakes and 2 cokes and it ended up being over $65 so not a cheap option, but very convenient. The food was good too, shame about the noise level.

After lunch (and with my back feeling a lot better) we headed up to the skywalk. This is an additional cost of $8 and unfortunately it was closed due to the rain, and had apparently been closed most of the day so far. We asked if it would re-open as the rain had stopped at that point but couldn’t get a straight answer. Some googling indicated that it often closes for the whole day after rain so we opted to head back to the hotel for a bath and a rest and try again another day.

HFC Perk 4: the bath tub in the room is amazing. I’ve had three baths since we got here!! It’s a great deep soak tub

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Singapore Day 3 cont’d: Chinatown and Marina Bay

Today we did our first ever cooking class at Food Playground in Singapore! I wrote more about it in a separate blog post, including lots of photos, which you can find here: https://travelseeshare.wordpress.com/2017/12/29/singapore-day-3-food-playground-cooking-class/

After finishing the class at 12:30pm, we decided we were full of good food (naturally – since we cooked it all) and energy, so headed off to explore Chinatown for a little while. I think we will go back again as some of the food looked amazing. It was very humid today, and the markets were very crowded, so after about 40 mins of wandering we opted to head back to the hotel. Let me tell you, the walk up the stairs from the MRT station was KILLER.

The afternoon was spent relaxing in the pool – which we pretty much had to ourselves – and napping.

Our evening adventure was a trip on the Singapore Flyer with champagne. I read quite a lot about the history of the Singapore Flyer before booking this as it seems that the Marina Bay Sands viewing deck has basically put it out of business given that they are notably cheaper. I figured as first time visitors, we would give both a go at night to see which one we preferred.

Singapore Flyer

After doing some research, I opted to buy us two “champagne flight” tickets at $79 each rather than standard entry for $36 each. In theory, this meant we chose a date and time, got priority boarding and also had a glass of champagne.

I did consider the dining option but it was very pricey and you share the capsule with others which felt a bit weird. All went well until it got closer and closer to our boarding time of 7pm. Something was obviously going wrong and I was getting grumpy….at about 7:15pm they took us through a different way to other VIPs and in front of a whole queue of people we boarded A COMPLETELY EMPTY CAPSULE! Maybe we were the only champagne people? Maybe they were planning to put us with a later group and my grumpiness scared them? Who knows, who cares….it was amazing!

After alighting from our marvellous, child and people free flyer experience (40min round trip) we walked across the river on the Helix Bridge – visible to the left of the below pic – to Marina Bay shops.

We then had dinner at the DC superhero cafe. This was full of memorabilia and totally themed to DC heroes!

I had a Batman burger box and an atlantean hero cocktail. B had a Green Lantern quesadilla and a Mr Freeze cocktail. While it’s not an experience I’ll ever repeat (the bill for that was a whopping $137!!) it was worth doing it once it for the novelty value. My wagyu burger was also pretty damn tasty.

We also had a beautiful view of the colourful fountain and light show while eating.

After resting and rejuvenating, we headed for the sky park to complete the Marina Bay Observation Deck (SkyPark) comparison. What a failure that was! We got down there at 9:20pm and the lines were obscene. The queue for tickets was winding into the queue to actually go up.

Nope. Nope. Nope. I literally went down the escalators and straight back up. Maybe we will try again next week but for now….Singapore Flyer is a winner!

HFC Perk 3: we have seen very few kids staying here and the ones we do see are very, very little. This means the pool is actually RELAXING and there is minimal screaming. Sorry friends with kids but I think it’s awesome and wish more hotels we stayed in were like this!

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