Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
Heng Heng Cooked Food
250ptsMichelin-recognised street food worth the MRT ride.

About Heng Heng Cooked Food
Heng Heng Cooked Food holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025) at heartland hawker prices in Jurong East. It is the right call for anyone pushing beyond the city-centre tourist trail into Singapore's western neighbourhoods. Arrive before 9 AM on weekends to avoid a queue and catch the full menu before sell-out.
Who Should Eat Here and When
If you are a regular at Singapore's hawker circuit and want to push further into Jurong East on a weekend morning, Heng Heng Cooked Food earns the trip. It holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition for 2024 and 2025, which in Singapore's hawker context is the clearest external signal that quality is consistent, not occasional. This is the kind of stall that rewards the reader who has already done the obvious tourist-trail stops and is asking what comes next. Come early on a weekend, before the mid-morning crowd builds, and you will get the full experience without the wait that Bib Gourmand attention inevitably brings.
The Setting and the Stall
Heng Heng Cooked Food operates from Block 254 Jurong East Street 24, unit #01-12, inside a heartland hawker centre in the western reaches of Singapore. This is not a polished food hall in a mall or a heritage coffee shop dressed up for tourists. It is a working-class neighbourhood centre, the kind where plastic stools scrape on concrete floors, the ceiling fans do the job overhead, and the visual drama comes from watching the stall itself: steel trays, ladled sauces, and plates assembled fast under fluorescent light. If the environment matters more to you than the food, this is not your booking. If you find that environment clarifying, it is a strong signal you are in the right place.
The Bib Gourmand, awarded across two consecutive years, marks it within a competitive tier of Singapore street food: good enough to sit alongside recognised stalls but priced at a level that assumes no service charge, no GST add-on beyond what is already baked in, and no cover. For context on how the Michelin guide treats Singapore hawker stalls, Bib Gourmand here carries the same weight it does at Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle, one of the most-discussed Michelin hawker stalls in the country. The difference is geography and queue length: Jurong East draws a local crowd rather than a city-centre tourist one.
The Format and What to Expect
Heng Heng sits in the cuisine category of cooked food, which in Singapore hawker language covers a range of prepared dishes served over rice or with broth, distinct from the noodle-specialist stalls that operate as their own category. For a returning visitor, the approach that works leading at stalls like this is to observe what the table next to you ordered before you queue. The visual cue at the stall itself, watching what is being portioned and plated, tells you more than a menu board.
The price range is single dollar sign, meaning you are looking at individual dish pricing in the low single digits for most plates, consistent with the heartland hawker norm in Singapore. At this price point, the decision is not whether it is worth the money; it is whether it is worth the commute from the city centre. For a first-time visitor staying near Orchard or Marina Bay, it is a half-day excursion. For someone already in Jurong East or the west side of the island, it is the obvious choice over a generic food court.
The Google rating sits at 4.5 from 32 reviews, a small sample that carries less weight than the Bib Gourmand but points in the same direction. Stalls of this type rarely accumulate large review volumes on Google because their regulars do not think of themselves as reviewers. The 32 reviews that exist skew from people who made a specific trip and felt it warranted documentation, which is its own signal.
Timing and the Weekend Case
For the morning or early-afternoon visit that the weekend format rewards, the practical logic is simple. Hawker stalls in Singapore that hold Michelin recognition tend to sell out of their primary dishes by mid-morning on weekends. Arriving before 9 AM gives you the full menu and no queue. Arriving after 11 AM on a Saturday means you may find reduced options and a longer wait. If you are planning a weekend morning in Jurong East, pair the visit with a walk around the neighbourhood before the heat builds rather than after. Singapore's humidity makes the difference between a 9 AM and an 11 AM visit more significant than it sounds.
Weekday visits tend to draw the neighbourhood lunch crowd rather than a destination diner set, which means shorter queues at the cost of a less convenient timing window for most visitors. If you are flexible, a weekday morning before the office lunch rush is the lowest-friction way to eat here.
How It Fits the Broader Singapore Street Food Picture
Singapore's hawker scene extends well beyond the city-centre stalls that capture most of the attention. Stalls like 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles, 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee, and A Noodle Story each occupy a specific niche in the noodle-specialist category, and Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle draws its own dedicated crowd. Heng Heng operates in a different register, the cooked food category in a heartland centre, which makes direct comparison less useful than thinking about it as a complement to those stalls rather than a substitute.
For anyone building a broader picture of Singapore's street food geography, the relevant reference points extend across the region: 888 Hokkien Mee in George Town, A Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket, and Banana Boy in Hong Kong each represent their own city's approach to the same value-driven, stall-format cooking. Heng Heng's two-year Bib Gourmand run places it in confident company within that regional set.
You can explore more options across the city through our full Singapore restaurants guide, and if you are planning a longer stay, our Singapore hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city. For regional street food comparisons, Ah Boy Koay Teow Th'ng, Air Itam Duck Rice, Air Itam Sister Curry Mee, Ali Nasi Lemak Daun Pisang, and Anuwat in Phang Nga give useful context for how the same price tier performs across Southeast Asia.
Practical Details
Reservations: No booking required or possible — hawker stall, queue on arrival. Dress: No code; casual clothes are the norm and anything smarter will feel out of place in this hawker centre. Budget: Single dollar sign, consistent with standard heartland hawker pricing in Singapore. Getting there: Jurong East MRT is the nearest station; the block is within walking distance. Booking difficulty: Easy — walk in, queue, order. Leading timing: Weekday morning or weekend before 9 AM to avoid a queue and ensure full menu availability.
Compare Heng Heng Cooked Food
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heng Heng Cooked Food | Street Food | $ | Easy |
| Zén | European Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Jaan by Kirk Westaway | British Contemporary | $$$ | Unknown |
| Iggy's | Modern European, European Contemporary | $$$ | Unknown |
| Summer Pavilion | Cantonese | $$ | Unknown |
| Waku Ghin | Creative Japanese, Japanese Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Singapore for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Heng Heng Cooked Food?
Come in whatever you wore on the MRT. This is a heartland hawker centre at Block 254 Jurong East Street 24 — casual clothes are the norm. Anything smarter than a clean t-shirt and shorts will attract more attention than the food.
Can Heng Heng Cooked Food accommodate groups?
Groups are fine in practice. Hawker centres use communal seating, so larger parties can pull tables together, but there is no reservation process and no private space. For groups of six or more, arriving early gives you the best chance of securing adjacent seats before the lunch crowd builds.
How far ahead should I book Heng Heng Cooked Food?
No booking is possible or needed — this is a hawker stall, so you queue on arrival. The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025 means the stall draws a crowd, so arriving early in the service period is the practical move rather than planning around a reservation.
What should a first-timer know about Heng Heng Cooked Food?
The key context is that this is a Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised cooked food stall in a western Singapore heartland hawker centre, not a city-centre tourist stop. Expect a queue, communal tables, and street food prices in the $ range. The trip from central Singapore requires intent, but the Bib Gourmand credential across two consecutive years is a concrete signal that the journey pays off.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Singapore
- Burnt EndsTatler's 2025 Restaurant of the Year and a World's 50 Best fixture, Burnt Ends is Singapore's most compelling case for fire-forward cooking. Bookings are near-impossible — plan three to four weeks ahead minimum. At $$$, the combination of Dave Pynt's dry-aged steaks, a four-tonne wood-fired oven, and a sharp, relaxed floor earns the price. Counter seats are the move for returning guests.
- OdetteOdette holds three Michelin stars, a Pearl 3 Diamond rating, and ranked #7 in Asia on the World's 50 Best list in 2025. Julien Royer's French contemporary tasting menu at the National Gallery Singapore draws on Southeast Asian and Japanese produce within a classically French framework. At $$$$ per head with near-impossible booking difficulty, this is Singapore's most decorated table and should be prioritised before you book your flights.
- Les AmisLes Amis holds three Michelin stars, Asia's 50 Best #28, and one of the largest wine cellars in Asia — making it Singapore's most credentialled French fine dining address. The seven-course degustation with wine pairing is the move. Book as far ahead as possible; this is near impossible to secure at short notice.
- Jaan by Kirk WestawayJaan by Kirk Westaway holds two Michelin stars, an Asia's 50 Best #77 ranking, and a Les Grandes Tables du Monde listing — all at the $$$ tier, which makes it one of Singapore's stronger value cases in top-tier fine dining. The "Reinventing British" tasting menu, served on Level 70 with panoramic city views, demands an early reservation: book four to six weeks out minimum.
- ZénZén holds three Michelin stars, 97.5 La Liste points, and an OAD Asia #3 ranking — the credentialing case for booking it is as strong as anything in Singapore. Chef Martin Öfner runs a Scandinavian-European tasting menu out of a Bukit Pasoh shophouse, Wednesday to Saturday only. Book months in advance; this is one of the hardest tables in the city to secure.
- MetaMeta is one of Singapore's strongest cases for a $$$-tier tasting menu: two Michelin stars, a top-40 position in World's 50 Best Asia (2025), and consistent OAD Asia rankings since 2023. Chef Sun Kim's Korean-rooted, globally informed cooking on Mohamed Sultan Road is serious competition for anything in the city at any price. Book weeks ahead — availability is near impossible at short notice.
Related editorial
- Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026: The Chairman and Wing Go 1-2 from the Same BuildingThe Chairman takes No. 1 and Wing climbs to No. 2 at Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026. Both operate from the same Hong Kong building. Here's what it means.
- Four Seasons Yachts Debut: 95 Suites, 11 Restaurants, and a March 2026 Maiden VoyageFour Seasons I launches March 20, 2026, with 95 suites, a one-to-one staff ratio, and 11 onboard restaurants. Worth tracking if you want hotel-grade service at sea.
- LA Michelin Guide 2026: Seven New Restaurants from Tlayudas to Uzbek DumplingsMichelin's March 2026 California Guide update adds six LA restaurants and one Montecito newcomer, spanning Oaxacan tlayudas, Uzbek manti, and Korean-Italian pasta.
Save or rate Heng Heng Cooked Food on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


