Chicken rice is one of the national dishes of Singapore. Get more details here: https://migrationology.com/singapore-food/
►Subscribe to my channel for more videos: http://bit.ly/MarkWiensSubscribe
The dish of chicken rice, is really just that - chicken that’s cooked in a certain way, served with rice that’s often cooked in chicken broth and some light seasoning, paired together, and served with both a sauce and soup on the side. It’s not typically an overly flavorful dish, but it’s one of the ultimate comfort food combinations.
In this video I met up with Daniel who is a Singaporean who loves chicken rice. We started off at Yuhua Village Market & Food Centre to go to a place called Hup Hong to specifically eat their version of roasted chicken rice. The roasted chicken, I’m not sure if it was deep fried? was sliced up on top of a plate of rice and served with a red chili garlic sauce. Overall, it was quite a tasty plate, the chicken was smooth but not mushy, and it was salted perfectly. I also liked the sauce at Hup Hong, which was heavy on the chilies and garlic, with a faint taste of ginger, and nicely salted.
After Hup Hong we took a drive across Singapore to a legendary boiled chicken rice restaurant, and a place that serves an original pretty old fashioned Hainanese boiled chicken style. The restaurant itself was pretty cool, very authentic and looked like it had remained pretty much the same since it was open the last 60 years. We had a plate of boiled chicken and each had our own bowl of rice. What I really liked about Yet Con was that the chicken really tasted like chicken, it was a natural tasting boiled chicken with a very firm texture. I also enjoyed how they had two different sauces, one just pureed ginger, and the other a chili vinegar sauce.
I thought the roasted chicken was really going to win for me, but after testing both, I was pretty pleased and impressed how good the boiled chicken also was. Overall, I think I’d prefer roasted chicken on a whole, as I’m not a big fan of boiled chicken skin. But that being said, I highly enjoyed the Yet Con atmosphere and shop. Both were good. Which version of Singapore chicken rice would you prefer? Roasted or boiled?
Hup Hong Chicken Rice
Address: Yuhua Village Market & Food Centre, 254 Jurong East Street 24
Open hours: Morning
Prices: $3 SGD per plate of chicken rice with extra gizzard
How to get there: It’s about a 10 minute walk from Chinese Garden MRT station
Yet Con Chicken Rice
Address: 25 Purvis Street, Singapore
Open hours: 11 am – 9:30 pm daily
Prices: $18 SGD for ½ a chicken
How to get there: You can easily walk from either City Hall or Bugis MRT station
Daniel on Instagram: @kiroshiong
My websites:
Migrationology.com: http://migrationology.com/
EatingThaiFood.com: http://eatingthaifood.com/
TravelByYing.com: http://travelbyying.com/
Instagram: https://instagram.com/migrationology
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/migrationology
Snapchat: @migrationology
Make a donation: https://migrationology.com/donate/
Resources I use: http://migrationology.com/travel-resources/
T-shirts available now: https://migrationology.com/store/
Going to Singapore? Check out my travel guide: http://migrationology.com/travel-guides/singapore/
►Subscribe to my channel for more videos: http://bit.ly/MarkWiensSubscribe
The dish of chicken rice, is really just that - chicken that’s cooked in a certain way, served with rice that’s often cooked in chicken broth and some light seasoning, paired together, and served with both a sauce and soup on the side. It’s not typically an overly flavorful dish, but it’s one of the ultimate comfort food combinations.
In this video I met up with Daniel who is a Singaporean who loves chicken rice. We started off at Yuhua Village Market & Food Centre to go to a place called Hup Hong to specifically eat their version of roasted chicken rice. The roasted chicken, I’m not sure if it was deep fried? was sliced up on top of a plate of rice and served with a red chili garlic sauce. Overall, it was quite a tasty plate, the chicken was smooth but not mushy, and it was salted perfectly. I also liked the sauce at Hup Hong, which was heavy on the chilies and garlic, with a faint taste of ginger, and nicely salted.
After Hup Hong we took a drive across Singapore to a legendary boiled chicken rice restaurant, and a place that serves an original pretty old fashioned Hainanese boiled chicken style. The restaurant itself was pretty cool, very authentic and looked like it had remained pretty much the same since it was open the last 60 years. We had a plate of boiled chicken and each had our own bowl of rice. What I really liked about Yet Con was that the chicken really tasted like chicken, it was a natural tasting boiled chicken with a very firm texture. I also enjoyed how they had two different sauces, one just pureed ginger, and the other a chili vinegar sauce.
I thought the roasted chicken was really going to win for me, but after testing both, I was pretty pleased and impressed how good the boiled chicken also was. Overall, I think I’d prefer roasted chicken on a whole, as I’m not a big fan of boiled chicken skin. But that being said, I highly enjoyed the Yet Con atmosphere and shop. Both were good. Which version of Singapore chicken rice would you prefer? Roasted or boiled?
Hup Hong Chicken Rice
Address: Yuhua Village Market & Food Centre, 254 Jurong East Street 24
Open hours: Morning
Prices: $3 SGD per plate of chicken rice with extra gizzard
How to get there: It’s about a 10 minute walk from Chinese Garden MRT station
Yet Con Chicken Rice
Address: 25 Purvis Street, Singapore
Open hours: 11 am – 9:30 pm daily
Prices: $18 SGD for ½ a chicken
How to get there: You can easily walk from either City Hall or Bugis MRT station
Daniel on Instagram: @kiroshiong
My websites:
Migrationology.com: http://migrationology.com/
EatingThaiFood.com: http://eatingthaifood.com/
TravelByYing.com: http://travelbyying.com/
Instagram: https://instagram.com/migrationology
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/migrationology
Snapchat: @migrationology
Make a donation: https://migrationology.com/donate/
Resources I use: http://migrationology.com/travel-resources/
T-shirts available now: https://migrationology.com/store/
Going to Singapore? Check out my travel guide: http://migrationology.com/travel-guides/singapore/
Food looks terrible
Thank you Mark Weins , Ying , Daniel and hia dad for making this amazing video‼️❤️
Ohhh mark you mfer making everything taste good
why is all food lovers so thin 😀
Yummy yummy! Thanks Mark and Daniel 🍗🍗🍗🍚🍚🍚🇸🇬🇸🇬🇸🇬
Job please from panjb Sukhdev Singh
Diliguis lekker kruiden klopt You Are Right 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟✓
SINGAPOORS USE STEROID CHICKEN BROILER. SO U CAN ONLY COOK THIS CHICKEN HALF MID RARE TO HALF WELL-DONE COOK. IF OVERCOOKED, THE MEAT WILL NOT ABSORB THE OIL AND SOY SAUCE FLAVOR. SPEAKING ABOUT OIL AND SOY SAUCE, SINGAPOOR IS POOR WITH NATURAL RESOURCES ESPECIALLY SPICES LIKE FLYING DUTCHMEN STINKY CHEEZY… SO MAIN INGREDIENTS FOR THIS NATIONAL DISH FOOD IS ONLY SIMPLE GARLIC, SALT, SOY SAUCE, AND GINGER. ANYWAY, ONLY CHINPOORS EAT THIS DISH NOT THE MALAYS AND INDIEPOORS. SO HOW YEW CAN SAY NATIONAL DISH WHEN THE MINORITIES DON'T LIKE IT????? WAHAHHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA IN FACT I'LL SAY MALAYS ' PADANG FOOD (ORIGINATED FROM INDODO SUMATRA ISLAND) AND INDIEPOOR'S NAZI BRANI (BRANI RICE) MUCH MORE TASTY 😋 WAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHAH
Chicken rice in Singapore is the same Phnom Penh's chicken rice. I like
Roasted and Hainanese Chicken are different but both equally delicious. The chicken meat doesn't even need any chili or dip at all. Just pair with a bowl of steaming white rice and that's already a winner.
Yes I love chicken rice. Roast & Steam
Yes I totally agree 👍 jurong east n there