Set of 2 Stainless steel kopi pot (Q38): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created claim: Provenance/History (P17): Images of these traditional brass Kopi pots are closely associated with our hawker centres for most, reminiscent of a time in the past rich with history surrounding the beginnings of our hawker culture.) |
(Created claim: Provenance/History (P17): Queenstown, with its rising population, was a natural magnet for itinerant hawkers. Many were residents, but a fair sum also came from other parts of Singapore as far as Thomson Road – such as Lim Thiam Choor, who started selling popiah (Hokkien: spring rolls) from his bicycle cart in 1961. Today, the 67-year old is a popiah legend at the food centre in Commonwealth Avenue.) |
||
Property / Provenance/History | |||
Queenstown, with its rising population, was a natural magnet for itinerant hawkers. Many were residents, but a fair sum also came from other parts of Singapore as far as Thomson Road – such as Lim Thiam Choor, who started selling popiah (Hokkien: spring rolls) from his bicycle cart in 1961. Today, the 67-year old is a popiah legend at the food centre in Commonwealth Avenue. | |||
Property / Provenance/History: Queenstown, with its rising population, was a natural magnet for itinerant hawkers. Many were residents, but a fair sum also came from other parts of Singapore as far as Thomson Road – such as Lim Thiam Choor, who started selling popiah (Hokkien: spring rolls) from his bicycle cart in 1961. Today, the 67-year old is a popiah legend at the food centre in Commonwealth Avenue. / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Revision as of 03:28, 15 August 2023
These traditional brass kopi pots are reminiscent of a time in the past rich with history surrounding the beginnings of our hawker culture. (2018-0002, 2 parts)
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Set of 2 Stainless steel kopi pot |
These traditional brass kopi pots are reminiscent of a time in the past rich with history surrounding the beginnings of our hawker culture. (2018-0002, 2 parts) |
Statements
30 x 39 x 19 cm
0 references
Unknown
0 references
1970s
0 references
Unknown
0 references
Hawker life
0 references
Unknown
0 references
Unknown
0 references
The perfect remedy after a long day is – arguably – a humble meal and a complementary cup of kopi/teh in the homespun communal space of a hawker centre. Our hawker culture is a defining hallmark of the Singaporean food scene, with practices like idiosyncratic methods of kopi/teh brewing perpetuated through time.
0 references
Images of these traditional brass Kopi pots are closely associated with our hawker centres for most, reminiscent of a time in the past rich with history surrounding the beginnings of our hawker culture.
0 references
Queenstown, with its rising population, was a natural magnet for itinerant hawkers. Many were residents, but a fair sum also came from other parts of Singapore as far as Thomson Road – such as Lim Thiam Choor, who started selling popiah (Hokkien: spring rolls) from his bicycle cart in 1961. Today, the 67-year old is a popiah legend at the food centre in Commonwealth Avenue.
0 references