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Singapore Day 4-- Little India, Mustafa Centre, Indian Food, Bugis, Afternoon Tea (2008-12-03)

After stuffing down some Delifrance rolls in the morning, we set foot to Little India by MRT. 

The tickets for the subway are no longer the same kind we used 10 years ago, now all their tickets are in a sense like the "Octopus" cards in Hong Kong, which means one can top up the card's value by paying through the ticket machines. Single-trip ticket carries a one-dollar deposit fee which is refundable upon returning the card to the ticket machine to ensure passengers return the cards, otherwise it'd cost the subway company too much money if they lose those cards.

The moment you step outside Little India station, the smell of incense and flowers bombard your senses.  There are many stalls that sell strings of flowers and leaves and stuff in side streets and alleys.  Unfortunately famous Tekka Market was closed for renovation till mid next year, we missed a great chance to visit an Indian wet market and hawker centre.

The 4-storey Mustafa Centre on a side street off Serangoon Street (the main street) is to say the least, MIND-BOGGLING.  It's like a Costco and Walmart and Macy's rolled into one.  The merchandises are stacked high up, sometimes all the way to the ceiling, the aisles are narrow because they have crammed 50 shelves on the floor instead of a comfortable 20. I reckon they sell everything under the sun there, except maybe cars and ammo; the problem is whether you can find what you're looking for.  I could spend a whole afternoon just in the kitchen department alone. 

The things in Mustafa Centre is cheaper than other stores and it is open 24 hours!  If you like to shop, you could definitely find something you want there.  I reckon 3 in the morning would be a pretty good time to go if you hate crowds.

The restaurant nextdoor looked like a pretty clean and decent place to grab lunch.  KL got the Briyani Mutton set and I ordered the Chicken Dosa set.  The mutton had no dreadful "lamby" taste but a tad tough, but overall quite delicious with the rice.  My dosa was made to order that's hot and crispy when brought to the table.  The chicken curry stuffing was spicy but yummy.

I saw another diner order the paper dosa set with a huge crunchy dosa that came with curries to dip into.  Wanting to try that, I went to the counter to order one plain dosa. Sadly, the dosa, though freshly made, wasn't the crispy paper kind, but the normal doughier kind.  Although written as plain dosa on the menu, it did come with three dipping curries, the whole thing was only S$1.8!! (平到震) @_@!

After lunch, we decided to check out Bugis.  There's now a mall inside the station leading to a glass covered area outside full of little stalls selling trinkets and whatnots.  We found The Coffee Connoisseur, tcc, a coffee shop chain there with comfortable seats, so we went in to rest our tired little feet and stayed till we headed to Chinatown.



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