In the afternoon I was charged $0.80 for a cup of kopi "o" at a Tanglin Halt coffeeshop. I think its a little expensive.
Y A W N ... 80c wanna KPKB ... one word for you .. L O S E R
In the afternoon I was charged $0.80 for a cup of kopi "o" at a Tanglin Halt coffeeshop. I think its a little expensive.
Thanks, so maybe you all should be careful when you go to this prata shop in HV.
In the afternoon I was charged $0.80 for a cup of kopi "o" at a Tanglin Halt coffeeshop. I think its a little expensive.
Normal price of a plain prata is $0.80, with egg is $1.60.
S11's kopi is now $1. Banned.
You still can finding $0.80 prata. Most places now is costing $1.00 for prata kosong, with egg prata is costing $1.60-$1.80. I donch drinking kopi but my cup of teh is now costing $1.00.
You still can finding $0.80 prata. Most places now is costing $1.00 for prata kosong, with egg prata is costing $1.60-$1.80. I donch drinking kopi but my cup of teh is now costing $1.00.
Y A W N ... 80c wanna KPKB ... one word for you .. L O S E R
Please la I am not kowpaying la, I have not been back a long time just thought to discuss with fellow light minded people la. Also maybe highlight some some unreasonable hawker to all of us. In think the prat a shop I highlighted is really unreasonable.
Perspective lah ...
$5 for 1 prata + 1 drumstick is excessive.
$0.80 for a kopi is not.
Thanks, so maybe you all should be careful when you go to this prata shop in HV.
Obviously it is not worth $6.50 however notwithstanding the taste is this normal price in Singapore now?
You still can finding $0.80 prata. Most places now is costing $1.00 for prata kosong, with egg prata is costing $1.60-$1.80. I donch drinking kopi but my cup of teh is now costing $1.00.
That chap in corner Hollad V has never done well,compared to the smart Malay stall who started with his own BBQ chicken,he is doing very well.
This Malay guy knows what is biz,the Indian stall,maken full and wait to die.
In Bangkok prata is sold everywhere on the streets. Thais call them roti. The problem is it is eaten as a sweet snack meaning: fry the dough when its all open before folding ; throw in a lump of ghee or planta butter ; then throw in a fist full of sugar ; then fold it into square ; after that pour onto it sweet condense milk ; finally roll it on paper. (banana , chocolate , milo etc etc are extras).
Damn sweet.
I was quite shocked at Thai eating habits when I first visited Thailand. You know for western food, the table condiments are usually salt, pepper and ketchup. For Chinese food, usually soy sauce, pepper and chili. But for Thai food, they actually have sugar on the table besides fish sauce and chili. I actually saw some Thais happily adding spoonfuls of sugar to their soup noodle. It's a wonder that Thais generally look slim and fit.
Yes I've been living there for 5 years and travelled there more than 15 years until today I still cannot understand why put sugar into noodles or anything. Yes see they will usually add fish sauce (very salty) in too so if it's too salty they will add sugar to try to balance then if it become too sweet they add fish sauce again and this may be repeated a few times until they get it right.
Diabetes is actually a big problem in Thailand.