Satay Club Explained

The Satay Club was the name of three open-air hawker centres in Singapore, all of which are no longer operating as of 2005. The first Satay Club (1940–1970) was located at Hoi How Road, near Beach Road; the second and third were located at the Esplanade (1970–1995) and Clarke Quay (1995–2005) respectively. Food sold at the Satay Club was predominantly satay. According to one source, Satay Club sold the "best satay in the region [of [[Southeast Asia]]]".[1]

History

1940–1970: Hoi How Road

The first incarnation of the Satay Club was located alongside Hoi How Street, near Beach Road. It was flanked by two theatres,[2] one of them being the Alhambra Cinema.[3]

1970–1995: The Esplanade

During its time at the Esplanade, it was described as a "romantic spot for many courting couples",[4] as well as an "iconic waterfront hawker haven".[5] Located opposite was the Raffles Hotel,[6] and nearby were the Singapore River and Queen Elizabeth Walk.[7] Selling mostly chicken and beef satay, the first stall there was Fatman Satay, reviewed as the top stall in general.[8]

1995–2005: Clarke Quay

The Clarke Quay Satay Club operated from 1995 to towards the end of 2005.[9] Situated alongside the River Valley Road in Clarke Quay,[10] it opened its stalls from 7 p.m. onwards, selling mostly chicken and mutton satay.[11]

2013–present: Satay by the Bay

Stylised after the Satay Club, Satay by the Bay was opened on January 15, 2013, at the Gardens by the Bay tourist attraction. It was described as "reminiscent of the old Satay Club".[12]

In Singaporean culture

The Satay Club was so famous that one source goes on to claim that "[e]very taxi driver [in Singapore] knows it".[13] It was featured on complimentary tourist brochures issued by the Singapore Tourism Board. It was common practice at the Satay Club in around 1986 to re-sell leftover sticks of satay. This was deemed to be "unhygienic" by Andrew Chua of the Straits Times.[14]

The name "Satay Club" is also informally applied[15] to the streetside satay stalls south of Lau Pa Sat market.[16]

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Van Esterik, Penny . Food Culture in Southeast Asia . 48– . 2008 . ABC-CLIO . 9780313344190 .
  2. News: Beach Road could be next prime hot spot . https://web.archive.org/web/20080304024206/http://www.asiaone.com/Business/My%2BMoney/Property/Story/A1Story20071213-40899.html . dead . March 4, 2008 . December 9, 2007 . Jessica . Cheam . .
  3. Book: Kip, Lee Lee . Amber Sands: A Boyhood Memoir . 1999 . Federal Publications . 2 . 9789810124410 .
  4. Book: Goh, Robbie B.H. . Theorizing the Southeast Asian City As Text: Urban Landscapes, Cultural Documents and Interpretative Experiences . 44– . 2003 . World Scientific . 9789812791283 .
  5. News: . 10 F&B options at Gardens by the Bay . Suan Chiang . Tay . June 18, 2012 . May 27, 2013 . https://archive.today/20130630083913/http://www.soshiok.com/critic/article/19523 . June 30, 2013 . dead .
  6. Book: Pacific Rim Magazine . Vancouver Community College . 1989 .
  7. Book: Fodor's 90: Singapore . Fodor's . Fodor's Travel . 9780679018247 . 1989 .
  8. Book: Hutton, Wendy . Singapore Food . 4– . Marshall Cavendish . 2007 . 9789812613219 .
  9. Book: Eveland, Jennifer . Frommer's Singapore & Malaysia . registration . 119– . John Wiley & Sons . 2007 . 5 . 9780470100493 .
  10. Book: Gateway to Malay Culture . 147 . Asiapac . Asiapac . 9789812293268 . 2003 .
  11. Book: The Rough Guide to Singapore . 127– . 2003 . Rough Guides . 4 . 9781843530756 .
  12. News: Open air foodcourt Satay by the Bay to open Jan 15 . January 3, 2013 . .
  13. Book: The Singapore Visitor . Creation & Communications . 1982 .
  14. News: Satay Practice . 14 . August 14, 1986 . Andrew . Chua .
  15. Web site: Alhambra King Satay · Boon Tat St, Singapore.
  16. Web site: Lau Pa Sat Satay. 3 August 2012.