I’m sure residents of the North are no strangers to Rasa Sayang Western Food, located in the heart of Ang Mo Kio. Its vibrant menu is sure to draw customers in!

What I tried at Rasa Sayang Western Food
The presence of Western hawker food in our local hawker culture has quite interesting beginnings, all with a sprinkle of colonialism, of course. The Hainanese immigrants are credited for this contribution, on top of Chicken Rice—a bunch of overachievers if I do say so myself.
During the British colonial era, Hainanese immigrants worked as chefs and cooks in British households, restaurants, and clubs. The same Hainanese immigrants then incorporated much of what they had learned during their employment in these British establishments into their own cooking when they opened kopitiams or hawker stalls. It’s a vital part of our Singaporean hawker lexicon as much as fishball noodles or mee rebus.
Having already seen the reports on the snaking lines, I made sure to arrive just before dinner time one Tuesday evening.
The Rasa Sayang team works like a well-oiled machine, calling out orders and handing out buzzers to hungry patrons trickling in. Moreover, the loud bickering of orders over the grill makes for such a typical Singaporean mise-en-scène—it’s heartwarming, to say the least.

Impressed that Rasa Sayang even considered my steak’s doneness, I looked forward to digging into my Ribeye Chilled (S$17.90). I must say, these premium cuts do illicit a mixture of excitement and apprehension but more so the former.
My ribeye was an exceptional medium-rare and blushing like a nervous bride on the inside. Complete with garnish and slathered with Mushroom Sauce, the queues were entirely justified. Tender and full of flavour, this was no sinewy cut with desperate aspirations to be something it was not. This was the real deal, and I would have this over a famous steakhouse chain any day.
While the steak was good, the sides fell short and seemed more like an afterthought. Each plate came with baked beans, coleslaw, garlic bread, and crinkle-cut fries. While I appreciate the nostalgia of baked beans straight from the can and overly creamy coleslaw, I know Rasa Sayang can do so much better, and has the potential to offer more thoughtful sides.

Perhaps, a more acidic and sharper coleslaw, or their own spin on baked beans, or even their fries. The garlic bread, though homemade, could use a little more TLC and a more generous spread of garlic butter. That way, Rasa Sayang can still hold on to its roots and still be relevant to today’s discerning palates.

One can’t run away from the archetypal Chicken Chop (S$8) at Western Food Stall, and Rasa Sayang’s came perfectly charred and smothered with mushroom sauce.
Though more restraint on the ladling of the sauce would have been appreciated. Abundance is all but celebrated until it borders on excessive; let’s just take it as an outpouring of nostalgia. It’s hard to screw up chicken chop, and here it was succulent and undeniably satisfactory.

The real test, I’ve found, was with the Lamb Chop (S$15). Understandably, lamb is not a popular protein because of its reputation for gaminess and inclination towards being leathery when overcooked. Here, the lamb chops came with a good char laboriously sprinkled with aromatic herbs that might put some cafes to shame. They were an economical serving for sure, but given the taste, I might have ordered two just to make up for it.

You might think Fish & Chips (S$8) is another thing that was left over from our colonial masters, and though that is true, they were actually created by Jewish immigrants in Merry Ol’ England. That’s right, “Immigrants, we get the job done”.
Here, we have a fine, thin coating of batter that reveals a buttery, silky fish that doesn’t require a knife at all. There is nothing worse than fish tasting like cardboard, so this certainly has my seal of approval.
Final thoughts
The moniker ‘Western Food’ certainly belies just how Singaporean the cuisine is. While it can’t escape its colonial past, the dishes have morphed into something so quintessentially Singaporean that no one would bat an eye if it were placed beside chilli crab.
The heritage behind Western food is just as fascinating as any other long-standing hawker dish, and Rasa Sayang Western Food is where you can find a piece of that. A word of caution: Be sure to arrive early enough to avoid the queues; they may extend outside the coffee shop.
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