Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
National Kitchen by Violet Oon
290ptsPeranakan classics, gallery setting, easy to book.

About National Kitchen by Violet Oon
National Kitchen by Violet Oon is Singapore's most accessible entry point into serious Peranakan cooking, holding a Michelin Plate (2024) and three consecutive years on Opinionated About Dining's Asia list at a $$ price tier. Set on the second floor of the National Gallery, it offers a heritage backdrop with an à la carte format that rewards broad ordering. Book with a week's notice; the restaurant is easier to secure than its recognition level suggests.
Should You Go Back? Yes — But Order Differently This Time
If you have already eaten at National Kitchen by Violet Oon, you already know what the room feels like: the dark timber, the Peranakan tile accents, the steady hum of a dining room that runs at a civilised pitch even when full. The energy here is deliberate — never loud, never sterile. It sits at a volume that lets you hold a real conversation across the table, which is rarer than it should be for a restaurant of this profile. What changes on a second visit is not the atmosphere but your relationship to it. You know where to sit, what to order, and , crucially , what to skip. This page is written for exactly that reader.
National Kitchen holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Asia list three consecutive years running, ranked #215 in 2024 and #251 in 2025. That slight slide in the OAD ranking is worth noting: it does not suggest a deteriorating kitchen so much as a competitive field that keeps expanding. Singapore's dining scene has absorbed a wave of ambitious new openings, and a Peranakan specialist with deep roots in the cuisine holds its ground differently than the tasting-menu formats that dominate rankings. At the $$ price tier, National Kitchen remains one of the most accessible ways to eat Violet Oon-level Nonya cooking without committing to a long, expensive format.
The Setting: National Gallery, Second Floor
The restaurant occupies the second floor of the National Gallery Singapore, at 1 St Andrew's Road. That address carries practical weight: the building is a restored colonial courthouse and city hall complex, and the restaurant draws a crowd that skews toward professionals, tourists with cultural intent, and celebratory groups. The setting does real work here. Dining inside a heritage building lends the meal a context that a standalone restaurant would need to manufacture. If you are bringing someone from abroad, the location alone makes the booking easier to justify.
The room operates across two distinct sittings: lunch (12pm to 3pm Monday through Thursday, 12pm to 5pm Friday through Sunday) and dinner (6pm to 10:30pm daily). The extended weekend lunch window is genuinely useful , it gives you room to linger, which is worth flagging if you are planning a long mid-afternoon meal rather than a quick lunch stop.
The Counter Angle: Why Where You Sit Matters
Counter and bar seating at National Kitchen adds a dimension that the main dining room does not fully replicate. If you visited before and sat at a standard table, consider requesting counter or bar-adjacent seating on your return. The energy from that position is more immediate , you pick up the rhythm of the kitchen and the bar prep in a way that makes the meal feel participatory rather than passive. For a solo diner or a pair who wants engagement over privacy, it is the sharper choice. For a group of four or more celebrating something formal, the main dining room will suit better.
Bar program at National Kitchen is not an afterthought. Arriving early for a drink before dinner , especially on a Friday or Saturday when the extended lunch window transitions into the evening service , gives you a read on the room before committing to a full sitting. It is also one of the better ways to experience the space without the pressure of a full booking.
What the Kitchen Does Well
Violet Oon's reputation is anchored in Peranakan cooking , a cuisine that blends Malay, Chinese, and, in certain preparations, Indian influences into dishes that require significant technical depth and ingredient knowledge. At the $$ price point, this kitchen is doing something that very few Singapore restaurants attempt at this tier: presenting a culturally specific, labour-intensive cuisine with enough consistency to earn recurring recognition from both Michelin and OAD. That is a meaningful data point, not just a credential to paste on a menu.
The long-term visitor should be aware that the kitchen's strength is in its braised and slow-cooked preparations , the kind of dishes that absorb the most from the Peranakan pantry. If your previous visit leaned toward grilled or stir-fried items, the return visit is the moment to shift toward the longer-cooked formats. The restaurant's OAD recognition across 2023, 2024, and 2025 implies consistent kitchen output rather than a one-year spike, which matters when you are deciding whether a second visit will hold up to the first.
For context on how this fits within Singapore's broader dining options, see our full Singapore restaurants guide, our full Singapore hotels guide, our full Singapore bars guide, and our full Singapore experiences guide.
Booking and Logistics
Booking difficulty at National Kitchen is rated Easy. Given its profile , Michelin Plate, three years on OAD's Asia list, a Google rating of 4.4 across 1,575 reviews , that accessibility is the most underappreciated practical fact about this restaurant. A venue with this level of sustained recognition in most other major cities would require lead times of three or more weeks. Here, you can plan with a shorter runway, which makes it a viable option for visitors with flexible itineraries.
The address (1 St Andrew's Road, #02-01 National Gallery) is central and walkable from several MRT stations. Parking is available at the National Gallery. If you are combining dinner with a visit to the gallery itself, check the gallery's opening hours separately , they do not align perfectly with the restaurant's evening service.
Quick Comparison: National Kitchen vs. Peers
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty | Key Differentiator |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Kitchen by Violet Oon | Peranakan | $$ | Easy | Peranakan specialist, heritage setting, accessible price |
| Summer Pavilion | Cantonese | $$ | Moderate | Ritz-Carlton Cantonese, strong dim sum program |
| Jaan by Kirk Westaway | British Contemporary | $$$ | Moderate | Tasting menu format, Swissôtel views, one Michelin star |
| Iggy's | Modern European | $$$ | Moderate | Long-form European menu, strong wine program |
| Zén | European Contemporary | $$$$ | Hard | Three Michelin stars, serious tasting menu, leading of market |
For more Singapore dining options across price tiers, see our full Singapore restaurants guide. If you are exploring international reference points for tasting-menu formats at comparable recognition levels, Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, and Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen represent the tasting-menu benchmark National Kitchen is deliberately not trying to be.
Compare National Kitchen by Violet Oon
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Kitchen by Violet Oon | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #251 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #215 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Highly Recommended (2023) | $$ | — |
| Zén | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Jaan by Kirk Westaway | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$ | — |
| Iggy's | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$ | — |
| Summer Pavilion | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$ | — |
| Waku Ghin | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
Comparing your options in Singapore for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about National Kitchen by Violet Oon?
Come for the Peranakan cooking, not the novelty of the address. The restaurant sits on the second floor of the National Gallery Singapore at 1 St Andrew's Road, which gives it an impressive backdrop, but Violet Oon's kitchen — recognised by Michelin Plate and ranked on OAD's Top Restaurants in Asia list three years running — is the real draw. At $$ pricing, it is accessible relative to the calibre of the cooking, so order generously and avoid playing it safe with the menu.
Is National Kitchen by Violet Oon good for a special occasion?
Yes, the combination of the National Gallery setting and Violet Oon's Peranakan cooking makes it a natural fit for a celebratory dinner. At $$ pricing, it sits well below what most Michelin-recognised venues charge in Singapore, which means you can spend on the food rather than covering a steep baseline cost. It works better for a focused group of two to four than a large party, where the more intimate counter seating becomes difficult to secure.
How far ahead should I book National Kitchen by Violet Oon?
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so a week's notice is generally sufficient for most slots. Weekend lunch and dinner on Friday and Saturday may fill faster given the extended 12–5 pm lunch service draws both gallery visitors and locals. For a specific table type or large group, booking two weeks out removes the risk entirely.
What should I order at National Kitchen by Violet Oon?
The kitchen is built around Peranakan cooking, which draws on Malay, Chinese, and Indian culinary traditions. Because venue-specific menu details are not confirmed here, the practical advice is to ask the team what is cooking well on the day — the restaurant's three-year OAD Asia ranking signals consistent execution rather than reliance on any single dish. Avoid over-ordering on appetisers; the main dishes are where Peranakan cooking shows its depth.
Is National Kitchen by Violet Oon worth the price?
At $$ pricing with a Michelin Plate and consistent OAD Asia recognition (ranked #215 in 2024, #251 in 2025), the value case is straightforward. You are paying National Gallery rents and getting Violet Oon's decades-long command of Peranakan cuisine — that ratio holds up. Compared to Zén or Waku Ghin, where $$$$ buys a tasting format, National Kitchen gives you more flexibility to order to your appetite at a fraction of the cost.
Is the tasting menu worth it at National Kitchen by Violet Oon?
Tasting menu availability and structure are not confirmed in the venue record, so committing to a verdict here would be speculative. What is confirmed: the kitchen operates lunch and dinner services daily, pricing sits at $$, and the cooking has earned Michelin Plate recognition. Check directly with the restaurant on current set-menu options before building your visit around that format.
Is lunch or dinner better at National Kitchen by Violet Oon?
Dinner is the stronger choice for a proper sit-down meal, with the kitchen running until 10:30 pm every day of the week. The extended lunch on Friday through Sunday (12–5 pm versus 12–3 pm on weekdays) makes the weekend afternoon slot a reasonable alternative if you want a lighter commitment. Dinner at the National Gallery location also benefits from a quieter building once gallery foot traffic drops off.
Hours
- Monday
- 12–3 pm, 6–10:30 pm
- Tuesday
- 12–3 pm, 6–10:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 12–3 pm, 6–10:30 pm
- Thursday
- 12–3 pm, 6–10:30 pm
- Friday
- 12–5 pm, 6–10:30 pm
- Saturday
- 12–5 pm, 6–10:30 pm
- Sunday
- 12–5 pm, 6–10:30 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Singapore
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- 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.
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