Showing posts with label fried kway teow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fried kway teow. Show all posts

Snow Mount - Fried Kway Teow @ Clementi 448 Market & Food Centre

snow mount,char kway teow,fried banana,food,fried kway teow,singapore,clementi 448 market,雪山鲜蚶炒粿条,food review,review,clementi 448 market & food centre,blk 448 clementi ave 3,goreng pisang,

This is a continuation from the previous post

To recap, Snow Mount at Clementi 448 Market & Food Centre houses two of my favorite food within one stall.

One half of the stall sells fried banana, or goreng pisang while the other half, sells fried kway teow (flat rice noodle).

You may find my post about their fried banana in the link above. I shall continue with the fried kway teow in this post.

Snow Mount - Goreng Pisang @ Clementi 448 Market & Food Centre

snow mount,char kway teow,fried banana,food,fried kway teow,singapore,clementi 448 market,雪山,food review,review,clementi 448 market & food centre,blk 448 clementi ave 3,goreng pisang,raja pisang

Snow Mount at Clementi 448 Market & Food Centre houses two of my favorite food within one stall.

One half of the stall sells fried banana, or goreng pisang while the other half, sells fried kway teow (flat rice noodle).

Ironically, although both are my favorite, I hardly have them more than once or twice a year because there are non near me that is worth their calories.

Guan Kee Fried Kway Teow @ Ghim Moh Market & Food Centre

char kway teow,源記,炒粿條,food,ghim moh market & food centre,fried kway teow,guan kee,singapore,food review,ghim moh,源記鮮蛤炒粿條,review,guan kee fried kway teow,20 ghim moh road,

Guan Kee Fried Kway Teow is one of those legendary stalls at Ghim Moh Market & Food Centre that commands a long queue of customers who willingly wait in line for a plate of their fried kway teow.

I arrived just a few minutes after they had opened for the day and the queue has already stretched to the stall opposite. I thought I would wait for the queue to clear by taking a walk round the food centre but with each extra round I took, the line only gets longer than before.

I decided to take the plunge and join the queue like everyone else. It was painfully slow but that did not seem to deter the line of people from forming behind me.

After an agonizing thirty minutes later, I finally reached the front of the stall where the uncle could be seen frying behind a glass panel.

Meng Kee Fried Kway Teow @ Havelock Road Cooked Food Centre

char kway teow,singapore,havelock road cooked food centre,food review,meng kee fried kway teow,明記炒粿條,meng kee,havelock road,fried kway teow,blk 22a havelock road,

Update: Meng Kee Fried Kway Teow has relocated. The new address has been updated at the bottom of this post.

Right next to the entrance of the open air car park to Havelock Road Cooked Food Centre is a nondescript HDB coffee shop.

Every time I walked past it to get to the food centre, I see only a handful of customers around. Due to the lack of crowd here, I did not think much of the coffee shop and what it may have to offer.

Well, until one day when I saw someone having a mean-looking plate of char kway teow there. 

That prompted me to take a look inside the premises where Meng Kee Fried Kway Teow is located.

Hill Street Fried Kway Teow @ Chinatown Complex Market & Food Centre

hill street,char kway teow,food review,chinatown complex market & food centre,炒粿條,hill street fried kway teow,335 smith street,禧街炒粿條,fried kway teow,singapore,hawker centre

I have long heard of Hill Street Fried Kway Teow but what I did not know is it's location. After some digging online, I found out that there are apparently two fried kway teow stalls which originated from the now-demolished Hill Street Food Centre.

One has moved to Bedok while the other one is at Chinatown Complex Market & Food Centre. Although sporting similar name on their signboards, both stalls are unrelated and each have their own supporters.

I decided to try the one at Chinatown since Bedok is far too inconvenient for me. Unfortunately, the stall was closed the first two times of my visit. It was only during my third visit did I managed to catch them opened for business.

炒果条 Fried Kway Teow @ Amoy Street Food Centre


Amoy Street Food Centre is a great place to grab lunch if you work nearby in the CBD area. It is a two-storey food centre that has every kind of local food imaginable.

If you do a search on what's recommended here, the Char Kway Teow is bound to turn up in the results. char koay teow

Char Kway Teow, or Fried Kway Teow is a flat rice noodle dish fried with eggs, tau geh (beansprouts),  see-hum (cockles) and lup cheong (Chinese sausage).

This particular Fried Kway Teow stall at Amoy Street Food Centre serves one of the better ones around. Well, not out of this world good but good enough.

Afterall, uncle has been frying kway teow for the last 50 odd years when he first operated from a push cart at Boon Tat Street in the 1960s. If his kway teow is not good, his business could not have lasted till now.