Café restaurants in Singapore City
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A
Casa Verde
Pet-friendly restaurant seeks pooch-loving diners for culinary fun. Smashing wood-fired pizzas attracts hordes of families and pet lovers (pets in tow). Good luck trying to get a seat. Pets optional.
reviewed
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B
Graffiti Café
Teens vent their spleen by doodling on the tabletops at this cosy café. Bowls of handmade wanton noodles and cheap curries clatter across heartfelt 'I love Elaine's ass' and 'Free Sex!' dedications.
reviewed
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C
Marmalade Pantry
Crisp white tablecloths, comfy booths and affluent ladies sizing each other up over the glossy mags set the scene at this substreet café serving tasty morsels. The place to be seen on Sunday mornings, if you're not at a brunch.
reviewed
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D
Hong Hu Express
This part of Chinatown is almost completely comatose at night (except for the gay cruising activity), but if you’re spilling out of a club on the other side of Ann Siang Hill at 4am with a severe case of the munchies, the 24-hour Hong Hu might just be a lifesaver.
reviewed
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E
Projectshop Café
Dessert heaven. Pick a table in the middle of the mall for a view of the well-heeled shoppers, or head inside so that you and your banana cream pie can enjoy a private moment. The main courses here are pretty good too, but the real reason to come is for dessert and coffee.
reviewed
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F
Ah Teng’s Bakery
A great place for breakfast pastries or dim sum and just about the only part of Raffles Hotel you can enter without your wallet trying to make a run for it. With its genteel wooden chairs and marble-top tables, it has the same colonial air, but it’s more reasonably priced.
reviewed
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G
Wasabi Tei
Join the queue snaking out of this 20-seat mom-and-pop sushi bar. The chef is Chinese but he sure can slice raw fish. You’d better make your choices before you sit because seconds and postorder amendments are not allowed. Nazi-like, you say? Nineteen other people will gladly take your place.
reviewed
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H
Kopitiam
One of the top spots in the district for a late-night feed, this branch of the Kopitiam chain is brisk and blindingly bright, so if it’s a late boozy night grab a table outside, where the light is more friendly. The food is uniformly good and you won’t pay much more than $6 for a meal.
reviewed
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I
Book Café
At the river end of Mohamed Sultan Rd, Book Café is a convivial bistro with large, comfy sofas and a good selection of old books, magazines and foreign newspapers to browse through while you lounge around enjoying breakfast or a coffee.
reviewed
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J
Killiney Kopitiam
The original local coffee joint, which spawned a whole host of imitators and an empire of franchisees, is still the place for breakfast. The waiter yells your order at ear-splitting volume and the coffee – shaken by the resulting seismic disturbance – inevitably arrives erupted into the saucer.
reviewed
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