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    Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore

    To-Ricos Kway Chap

    210pts

    Michelin Plate hawker. Go early, queue once.

    To-Ricos Kway Chap, Restaurant in Singapore

    About To-Ricos Kway Chap

    To-Ricos Kway Chap earned a 2025 Michelin Plate for its silky rice noodles and deeply braised pork belly, feet, intestine, tripe, and dried tofu in spiced soy broth — all at hawker prices. No booking needed; walk into stall #135 at Old Airport Road Food Centre. Go before 1 PM to secure the full range of braised items.

    A Michelin-Recognised Kway Chap Bowl for Under $10 — If You Time It Right

    At the price of a coffee in most Western cities, To-Ricos Kway Chap at Old Airport Road Food Centre delivers a bowl of braised pork, silky rice noodles, and spiced soy broth that earned a Michelin Plate in 2025. For anyone asking whether this is worth a deliberate trip: yes, with one condition. Go before 1 PM. This is a hawker stall operating at hawker pace, and the most popular items sell out as the lunch crowd peaks.

    Old Airport Road Food Centre is one of Singapore's most concentrated hawker destinations, and To-Ricos sits at stall #135. Getting there is direct from the city centre — the food centre is accessible by bus from Kallang MRT, and the walk from the station takes around ten minutes. There is no reservation system and no phone line. You queue, you order, you sit. That is the format, and it is part of why the value proposition is so clear: this is Michelin-recognised cooking at street food prices, with none of the booking friction of a formal restaurant.

    What You're Getting in the Bowl

    Kway chap is a Teochew dish built around broad, flat rice noodles served in a peppery, soy-based broth, accompanied by a separate plate of braised offal and pork. At To-Ricos, the braise includes pork belly, pork feet, intestine, tripe, and dried tofu , all slow-cooked in a spiced soy marinade that the Michelin guide specifically notes for its deep flavour and aroma. The noodles themselves are described as thin and silky, which is a textural point worth noting: kway chap noodles vary significantly between stalls, and the quality of the noodle is as diagnostic as the broth.

    The braised components are the main event. Pork belly and tofu absorb the marinade most visibly, and the broth carries the cumulative depth of the spice blend. If you are unfamiliar with offal-forward dishes, this is not the place to ease in gently , intestine and tripe are core to the dish, not optional garnishes. That said, most stalls allow you to select your preferred combination, so first-time visitors can lean toward belly and tofu before committing to the full spread.

    A Multi-Visit Strategy Worth Planning

    One visit to To-Ricos is enough to understand why it has a Michelin Plate. Two or three visits is how you actually learn the dish. The editorial angle here matters practically: kway chap portions and combinations differ depending on what you order, and the braised items vary in texture and intensity. On a first visit, order conservatively , pork belly, dried tofu, and a full portion of noodles. This gives you the baseline: the broth character, the noodle texture, and how the marinade translates to the milder proteins.

    On a second visit, add the pork feet. The collagen content changes the eating experience significantly , the texture is fattier and more gelatinous, and the flavour is more pronounced. On a third visit, if offal is your thing, the intestine and tripe are where the stall's braising skill is most evident. The marinade penetration on these cuts is harder to achieve and, when done well, is the clearest indicator of why this stall received recognition over neighbouring competitors.

    Old Airport Road Food Centre has a strong supporting cast for multi-visit trips to the area. The food centre is home to a number of other well-regarded hawker stalls, which means you can turn a To-Ricos visit into a longer hawker session rather than a single-dish stop. This is also relevant for groups with mixed preferences: not everyone will want kway chap, and the food centre gives the group flexibility without anyone having to compromise.

    How It Fits the Broader Singapore Hawker Circuit

    To-Ricos is not the only Michelin-recognised noodle stall in Singapore worth scheduling around. Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle holds a Michelin Star (a different tier entirely) and operates on a longer queue and higher profile. 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles and Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle cover the prawn noodle bracket if your group wants to diversify across hawker visits. For a completely different noodle format, A Noodle Story offers a more contemporary take on Singapore noodles and sits in the Michelin Bib Gourmand tier. 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee rounds out the kway teow category if you want to compare the fried preparation against To-Ricos' braised version.

    For visitors building a fuller Singapore food itinerary, our full Singapore restaurants guide covers the range from hawker to fine dining. If you are pairing the hawker circuit with evening plans, see also our Singapore bars guide and Singapore hotels guide. For broader regional street food context, the 888 Hokkien Mee in George Town, Ah Boy Koay Teow Th'ng, Air Itam Duck Rice, Air Itam Sister Curry Mee, Ali Nasi Lemak Daun Pisang, and Phuket's A Pong Mae Sunee show how the Michelin hawker recognition extends across Southeast Asia. Phang Nga equivalents like Anuwat and Bang Dean are worth bookmarking if your trip extends beyond Singapore. Our Singapore experiences guide and wineries guide cover the rest of the itinerary if needed.

    Practical Notes

    To-Ricos Kway Chap is at 51 Old Airport Road, stall #135, inside Old Airport Road Food Centre. There is no booking system , walk in, queue, and order at the counter. The Google rating sits at 4.3 from 255 reviews, which for a hawker stall at this price point reflects consistent execution rather than a one-off performance. Dress code is hawker casual. Go early in the lunch window, before the post-midday crowd builds, to get the full range of braised items before anything sells out.

    FAQ

    • What should I order at To-Ricos Kway Chap? Start with pork belly, dried tofu, and a full noodle portion. These are the components the Michelin recognition specifically calls out for depth of flavour. On a return visit, add pork feet for texture contrast, or intestine and tripe if offal is your preference. The braised tofu is a reliable anchor for first-timers who want the marinade flavour without committing to offal.
    • Is To-Ricos Kway Chap good for solo dining? Yes , hawker stalls in Singapore are built for solo diners, and kway chap is a single-bowl format. At the $ price tier, you can eat a full meal for well under $10 SGD. For solo diners building a hawker circuit, pair To-Ricos with another stall in the same food centre rather than making it a standalone trip. Old Airport Road Food Centre has enough variety to make a half-day of it.
    • How far ahead should I book To-Ricos Kway Chap? No booking is needed or possible. Walk in and queue. The stall can be busy during peak lunch hours, but the queue moves at hawker pace. Arriving before noon gives you the leading chance of getting the full selection of braised items. No phone number or reservation system is listed.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at To-Ricos Kway Chap? There is no tasting menu , this is a hawker stall. You order from a fixed menu of kway chap components and pay per item or per combination. The value question is different here: at $ pricing with a 2025 Michelin Plate, the question is not whether it is worth the money (it clearly is) but whether the dish format suits you. If braised pork and offal in spiced soy broth is not your preference, no price point changes that.
    • Is To-Ricos Kway Chap worth the price? At the $ price tier with a 2025 Michelin Plate and a 4.3 Google rating from 255 reviews, yes , this is among the clearest value propositions in Singapore dining. The comparison that matters here is not against fine dining but against other kway chap stalls: Michelin recognition at hawker prices means you are getting externally validated quality without any premium attached. The dish format is specific (Teochew braised noodles with pork offal), so worth it only if that is what you want to eat.

    Compare To-Ricos Kway Chap

    How To-Ricos Kway Chap Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    To-Ricos Kway ChapStreet Food$Michelin Plate (2025); This kway chap shop serves the broad rice noodles with pork belly, feet, intestine, tripe and dried tofu braised in a spiced soy-based marinade. Noodles are thin and silky; braised pork and tofu impart deep flavours and aromas.Easy
    ZénEuropean Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Jaan by Kirk WestawayBritish Contemporary$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Summer PavilionCantonese$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Burnt EndsAustralian Barbecue, Barbecue$$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    SerojaSingaporean, Malaysian$$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between To-Ricos Kway Chap and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at To-Ricos Kway Chap?

    Order the kway chap set — the Michelin Plate recognition is for the full combination of silky broad rice noodles in spiced soy broth served with braised pork belly, pork feet, intestine, tripe, and dried tofu. If you are new to the dish, ask for a mixed plate so you get across the range of braised items rather than selecting individual cuts.

    Is To-Ricos Kway Chap good for solo dining?

    Yes, and it is arguably the format the stall suits best. Hawker centre seating at Old Airport Road Food Centre is communal, a single bowl is a complete meal, and there is no pressure to share or order more than you want. Solo diners can work through the braised pork and tofu at their own pace without the dish sitting too long.

    How far ahead should I book To-Ricos Kway Chap?

    There is no booking system — walk in, join the queue, and order at the counter. The practical planning question is timing: Michelin-recognised hawker stalls in Singapore frequently sell out before official closing, so arriving at opening or during an off-peak mid-morning window is the safest approach.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at To-Ricos Kway Chap?

    There is no tasting menu — To-Ricos is a hawker stall at Old Airport Road Food Centre with a single-dish format. You order kway chap, choose your braised accompaniments, and pay under $10. That simplicity is the point, and it is the same format that earned the 2025 Michelin Plate.

    Is To-Ricos Kway Chap worth the price?

    At under $10 for a Michelin Plate bowl of braised pork belly, intestine, tripe, pork feet, and silky rice noodles, the value case is straightforward. The only cost that matters here is your time in the queue, not the price of the food.

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