
Of all the remarkable culinary traditions that converge in Singapore, Peranakan cuisine is perhaps the most deeply, distinctively its own. It is not Chinese food, nor Malay food, nor Indonesian food — it is the beautiful, complex, often fiery result of those cultures having merged over centuries into something entirely unique. Built on Chinese techniques and ingredients but animated by the aromatic spice pastes of the Malay peninsula, Peranakan cooking is one of the most labour-intensive and flavour-forward culinary traditions in Southeast Asia. And Singapore — the historic heartland of the Peranakan community — is the finest place in the world to experience it.
The Peranakan people — also known as the Straits Chinese, or Baba-Nyonya — are the descendants of Chinese immigrants who settled along the Malay Peninsula and intermarried with local Malay communities from around the 15th century onward. They established particularly strong communities in the Straits Settlements of Penang, Malacca, and Singapore. Over generations, they developed a hybrid culture of extraordinary richness: a distinct dialect, a unique material culture of beaded slippers and ornate porcelain — and a cuisine that blends Chinese ingredients and techniques with Malay spices and aromatics to produce flavours of extraordinary depth. Male Peranakans are called Babas; females are Nyonyas. The cuisine is referred to interchangeably as Peranakan or Nyonya food.
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The key to understanding Peranakan cuisine is the rempah — a spice paste ground from fresh and dried aromatics including lemongrass, galangal, fresh turmeric, dried chillies, candlenut, and belachan (fermented shrimp paste). The rempah is fried in oil until fragrant, then used as the base for curries, braises, and soups of extraordinary complexity. This labour-intensive process — pounding and frying the rempah properly can take 30–60 minutes alone — is what distinguishes authentic Peranakan cooking from approximations. The cuisine also features pork prominently alongside seafood and chicken, with coconut milk, tamarind, and palm sugar appearing frequently to contribute richness, tang, and gentle sweetness.
Chicken braised in a tangy tamarind and spice gravy alongside buah keluak — large black nuts from the Pangium edule tree. The flesh of the nut is extracted, mixed with minced meat and spices, and packed back into the shell. The flavour is deeply earthy, smoky, and umami-rich — often compared to black truffle in its intensity.
Pork belly and mushrooms slow-braised in fermented soybean paste (taucheo), palm sugar, and garlic until yielding and deeply savoury with a gentle sweetness. One of the most comforting dishes in the Peranakan repertoire.
Delicate, thimble-sized golden pastry shells filled with a stir-fry of jicama, carrot, prawn, and sometimes crab, topped with sambal and lime. A beloved appetiser that showcases the cuisine's attention to texture and detail.
Minced pork and prawn seasoned with five-spice and wrapped in beancurd skin, then deep-fried until crackling golden. One of the most universally popular Peranakan starters.
Multi-layered kueh lapis of steamed rice flour and coconut milk; ondeh ondeh (glutinous rice balls filled with palm sugar, coated in shredded coconut); pulut hitam (black glutinous rice pudding with coconut cream). Artisanal works requiring patience and skill — among the most distinctive sweet treats in Southeast Asia.
Discover the full cultural story behind Peranakan food at the Peranakan Museum on Armenian Street — one of the world's finest collections of Peranakan jewellery, textiles, and ceremonial artefacts. Explore more things to do in Singapore beyond the table. Check the latest Traveloka promos for deals. Arrange an airport transfer from Changi, and plan your complete Singapore experience at Traveloka.














