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National Republic of Food

Food_Republic_Suntec_City_2010

There is a new site called Food Republic that’s messing with my mind (so is Eataly's soon-to-open La Birreria, which I always read as birrieria and get excited that NYC's getting a Mexican goat soup restaurant) not because it’s yet one more thing Marcus Samuelsson has been dipping his colorful sneaker-shod toes into, but because Food Republic is the name of Singaporean chain of themed food courts that I love. Really love. A food court with a library motif in a massive mall? I fantasize about making like those Thai girls who brought BonChon to Bangkok and opening a franchise in NYC.

Of course, serious food-lovers and expats, in particular, hate these soulless, overpriced, contemporary adaptations of hawker stalls. This week, CNNgo wound up commenters with a “Singapore’s Top 5 New Hawker Spots” post where three of the five examples were Food Republic branches. I think the title is the biggest problem; it needs a qualifier like modern or indoor.

Me, I like the elaborate, air-conditioned evolution and street carts and worn shophouses. What I find fascinating—and what others might call sad—is that many of these vendors are street stall transplants. For instance, the beef noodles sold at Food Opera, the food court inside the ION Orchard Shopping Mall, aren’t approximations churned out by a no-nothing upstart, they are the fourth iteration of a stall that opened in the 1940s. Then again, the most recent version was relocated to the mall because the owner’s spot was subsumed by a new apartment complex. Progress over preservation, is still the order of the day in much of Asia’s urban centers.

Singapore has always come across as a bit sanitized and un-sentimental, and I don't necessarily mean that pejoratively. I wonder if they have neighborhood booster bloggers like we do in NYC, who mourn the loss of old signage, mom-and-pop businesses and last-century grit?

Photo credit: WiNG via Wikimedia Commons

China’s Salad Days Are Over

Saladtower

When not competing with Dubai or Taiwan over skyscraper records, the Chinese are (or were, rather) gaming the one-trip-only salad bar at Pizza Hut by devising elaborate vertical stacking. The company phased out the self-serve stations in 2009, likely due to customers’ creative plating.

Can a person really eat that quantity of cucumbers? And do you really want to taste peaches, corn and salad dressing in the same bite?

Photo from frites & fries

As Long As the Bloomin Onion Remains the Same

Norules It’s spring cleaning season for chains. It seems like just yesterday  that Olive Garden was talking Tuscan farmhouse revamps. Now, Outback Steakhouse promises a new look for up to 150 stores.

What this look might be is a mystery. Three years ago, OSI announced the very same remodeling plan, only explaining the style as a “bolder, more contemporary look” that in March 2008 had been implemented in two Florida units and one in Butler, NJ. Am I really going to have to drive 35 miles to see what they’re talking about in person?

Oh, thank goodness for search engines—I’ve actually posted shots of the not-so-new Outback Steakhouse design, myself. I still might check out Butler, NJ, though.