Line and Lure and Live Music

When people think of casinos, they think of usually the lights and sounds of the slot machines, the padded green tables and sound of shuffling cards or the roulette wheel. Me, I think of the food. It’s true in Vegas, one of the premier destinations in the US for eating I think – and it’s true at the nearby to Portland Ilani Resort and Casino. Don’t let the Ridgefield Washington location put you off – it’s 30 minutes or less drive from Portland. I want to go there to eat. In particular, I’m a fan of Line and Lure Seafood Restaurant.

Line and Lure may be most known by those in the know with their brunch buffet, available on weekends. It’s where I’d take my parents or other relatives if they were in town. But there’s more reason to come- for instance come enjoy the calmer vibe at happy hour or at dinner. You can enjoy Line and Lure and Live Music every Friday & Saturday from 6-10 PM: see the schedule here. The musicians are local, and in a good sign, it also helps bring in some local regulars along with the casino members. And now that better weather season is here dine out on their patio with firepit to start out a casino date night.

They have multiple lovely libations, but my favorite is both a drink and a snack: their Admiral Bloody Mary in concocted with their housemade bloody mary mix and Tito’s vodka, crab leg, prawn, bacon, pepperoncini, olive, onion, spicy pickled bean, fresh lime 
Line and Lure and Live Music Line and Lure and Live Music

Start with a seafood forward appetizer like Dungeness Crab Claws served your choice of either chilled on ice or steamed. Basic preparation but the best ingredients show off the fresh tastiness of the crab.
Line and Lure appetizers of DUNGENESS CRAB CLAWS with your choice: Chilled on ice or steamed

But, don’t afraid to go with a lot of prepared flavors – like the complex layered starter of the BBQ Shimp and Griddled Corn Cakes with grilled prawns, seared polenta cakes, spicy BBQ sauce.
Line and Lure starter of BBQ SHRIMP & GRIDDLED CORN CAKES, with grilled prawns, seared polenta cakes, spicy BBQ sauce Line and Lure starter of BBQ SHRIMP & GRIDDLED CORN CAKES, with grilled prawns, seared polenta cakes, spicy BBQ sauce

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Guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore

While I was in Singapore during my 4 days, I had a wishlist of all the hawker centers and within those multiple stands I wanted to visit. Of course then reality hits that I get tired from multiple stops a day, and I’m not as hungry as I hoped. I am going to give you the benefit of my wishlist and why each hawker center is unique as well as provide you my tips in my full guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore.
Guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore - Hai Shan Roasted Chicken Rice, Char Siew and Roasted Pork Rice dish from Tiong Bahru Food Centre Guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore - Hai Shan Roasted Chicken Rice, Char Siew and Roasted Pork Rice dish from Tiong Bahru Food Centre

Hawker centers are a possibly dying phenomenon in Singapore. Many of the hawkers are getting on in years. The oldest hawker in age was profiled here– she is 90 years old and still going! Many stalls will close when the current owners pass as their children will not be taking over. Some of this may be intentional as they want a better life for the next generation, and better education doesn’t usually lead to a hawker life. But, it is also a great loss that many recipes will be disappearing.

Many people are rightfully concerned whether there will still be the same thriving hawker centers for the next generation. Even if it endures with government help, it is doubtful that the insanely cheap prices being offered now can continue as food costs and rental costs of spaces rise. If you visit Singapore, don’t miss your chance to visit hawker centers while you can to try some of these original generation of stalls.
Guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore - Tiong Bahru Char Kway Teow (Stall #02-11) to meet Mr. Tay Soo Nam, who started frying noodles at the age of 24 and although isn't doing the cooking now (he leaves it up to his daughter and husband) is still manning the hawker stall at 90 years old. The only dish to get here is the Char Kway Teow with chinese sausage, fishcake, cockles and beansprouts. Guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore - Tiong Bahru steamed buns from Tiong Bahru Pau

Now, let me share my biggest tips for visiting hawker centers based on my experience visiting ones in Singapore recently, as well as previously in Thailand.
Guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore - stand at Tekka Centre Guide to visiting Hawker Centers in Singapore - stand at Tiong Bahru hawker center

Tips for Visiting Hawker Centers

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Castagna Explorative Dinner

Castagna has been serving up fine dining prix fixe modern gastronomy menus for two decades now. Castagna and owner Monique Siu and head chef Justin Woordward have been nominated for James Beard Awards under the categories of Outstanding Restaurateur and Best Chef Northwest multiple years in a row. This past spring, they have decided to offer a new alternative to the tasting menus, one that is even more accessible in cost and time commitment. Now, besides the 13-20 course chef’s tasting menu, two days a week on Wednesday and Thursdays there is a new option of a six course Castagna Explorative Dinner Series menu.
Castagna

For the Explorative Dinner Series, the dinner courses have a theme that changes every two months. During my visit the theme was Surf and Turf (the first themed the series), but the new theme for July 2019 is the Green Menu. Unlike the chef’s tasting menu which sits at $165 with $85 wine pairing extra as an option, a Castagna Explorative Dinner will run $75 per person, with the optional wine pairing featuring west coast wines at $45.

Here’s a look at what a Castagna Explorative Dinner was like for me during my visit to give you an idea of the kind of dishes that might be created for a theme.

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Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore

Today I continue on with my series from my travels in Singapore. This time, I’m going to give you all the background I learned before and during my trip so you can appreciate the Peranakan Style buildings in Singapore, and share what they look like. I find them incredibly intriguing and eye-pleasing and took a lot of photos – this is a long photo post!
Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early

Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia are the home of what is called Peranakan culture. Peranakans are descendants of Chinese traders who immigrated into these countries and married local women starting in the 15th century.

These descendant families were later also influenced by the British and Dutch colonialism and education systems of the 19th century, giving most the reputation of “The King’s Chinese” because they had more loyalty to Britain than China. The end result is a unique mix of Asian with Chinese and Malay, Indian, Arab, and other Southeast Asian influences along with Western European over multiple generations.

Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore
This has manifested itself in language (unfortunately most of it lost because of the dominance of English and Chinese), in the labor-intensive fusion of flavorful spices and ingredients and techniques in food (as you saw as part of with my dinner at Candlenut), and in the architecture. It’s quite a contrast between the clean lined styles of modern high rises of Singapore built over the past few decades with these all pre-WWII heritage buildings’ colors and decorative detail.
Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore

The typical Peranakan style building in Singapore has the same basic structure in which the first floor is the shophouse with living quarters above on the higher floors. The front has a small covered walkway that the 2nd floor living quarters extends over. This originates from an idea of founder of Singapore, Thomas Raffles, to have a “five foot way” for pedestrians to be protected and walk. Below: some examples of Peranakan shophouses from Chinatown

Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: Shophouses in the Peranakan style in Chinatown Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: Shophouses in the Peranakan style in Chinatown Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: Shophouses in the Peranakan style in Chinatown Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: Shophouses in the Peranakan style in Chinatown

Below: some examples of Peranakan shophouses from Teo Hong Road and Bukit Pasoh Road (where a scene from Crazy Rich Asians was filmed) and Cantonment Road /close to Neil Road

Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan shophouses from Teo Hong Road and Bukit Pasoh Road (where a scene from Crazy Rich Asians was filmed) and Cantonment Road /close to Neil Road Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan shophouses from Teo Hong Road and Bukit Pasoh Road (where a scene from Crazy Rich Asians was filmed) and Cantonment Road /close to Neil Road Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan shophouses from Teo Hong Road and Bukit Pasoh Road (where a scene from Crazy Rich Asians was filmed) and Cantonment Road /close to Neil Road Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan shophouses from Teo Hong Road and Bukit Pasoh Road (where a scene from Crazy Rich Asians was filmed) and Cantonment Road /close to Neil Road

Or, the first floor of the home has an initial courtyard before entering the receiving room. The first floor is set back from the main street.  Peranakan style buildings are rectangular, long and narrow but deep. Multiple homes or shophouses tend to be built one right next to the other in a rowhouse. Some say the smaller street frontage is a reaction to how the Dutch taxed and measured land historically, or it may have been a tradition brought in from Chinese longhouses. Below: some examples of Peranakan homes on Neil Street

Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan homes on Neil Street Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan homes on Neil Street Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan homes on Neil Street Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore: some examples of Peranakan homes on Neil Street

The mosiac tiles and ceramic and plaster decorative element that intersperse neo-classical western motifs and Chinese traditional symbolism and Malay eaves combine together with bright colors into Singapore eclectic that is like nothing else and I find completely charming. 
Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore Peranakan Style Buildings in SingaporePeranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Chinatown Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Chinatown Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Chinatown Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Chinatown

The Peranakans Chinese are sometimes called Straits Chinese, or Baba Nyonya, the Malay words for Man and Woman. This explains the name of Baba House, a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small group of a dozen people based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early (slots open 2 months ahead).
Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small group of a dozen people based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early

Photos were not allowed inside the home, but from what you see from the outside, it is a beautifully restored home that has interiors that reflect the 1920s context. During my tour, we learned so much about the significance behind a lot of the decor in terms of symbolism as well as practical functionality for the family. We looked at many examples of how a single piece of furniture here or there showed an intermingling of eastern and western aesthetics.
Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early

I leaned a lot from the stories told that I would have never learned on a self-guided visit, from all the meaning behind the sitting chairs in the reception room, to the open skyways within the interior, hidden compartments for the woman of the house to hide jewelry in her bed, the placement of mirrors and pathways to confuse evil spirits, to secret openings in the floor to look and hear from the second floor what is happening below. Completely and utterly fascinating and worth your time and mere S$10.
Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early Peranakan Style Buildings in Singapore, Baba  House on Neil Street - a unique opportunity to tour a Peranakan home managed by the National University of Singapore. Tours are limited to once a day and small groups based on what the original building floors can hold, so book your reservation for a tour early

If you want to see even more then I did, consider visiting the detailed Peranakan Museum (check if open, it was closed for renovations during my visit until 2021). Another option is to visit and wander the Joo Chiat/Katong area district east of the main downtown/on the way to the airport. This area still has a lot of pre-war buildings including this iconic row of colorful homes:

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Singapore Sights: Old Hill Street Police Station, Singapore Chili Crab in Clarke Quay

I did go to famous destinations in Singapore during my 4 day visit in June such as Marina Bay Sands, Gardens by the Bay, Sentosa, and various hawker centers – I will cover all of these in future posts. But today I wanted to spotlight something I didn’t see in any guidebook but I noticed as a cool sight based on Instagram posts in Singapore: the Old Hill Street Police Station. And, conveniently, it is FREE. And in this same area you can visit JUMBO Seafood for iconic Singapore Chili Crab for lunch or dinner before or after your stop here.
Old Hill Street Police Station, the building with the colorful rainbow windows Old Hill Street Police Station, the building with the colorful rainbow windows Old Hill Street Police Station, the building with the colorful rainbow windows

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