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Tatler Asia
23-05-2025
- Tatler Asia
A feast for the senses: 9 immersive food museums around the world
2. Cup Noodles Museum, Japan With headquarters in Osaka and Yokohama, this museum transforms the humble cup noodle from a convenience store staple to a canvas for creativity. Its centrepiece is the My Cup Noodles Factory, where you can design your own cup, choose the soup flavour and toppings and watch as your personalised creation is vacuum-sealed before your eyes. In the Chicken Ramen Factory, you'll knead, steam and flash-fry noodles using the same method that inventor Momofuku Ando pioneered. Between hands-on experiences, check out exhibits on the cup noodle evolution and the humble shed where it was invented in 1958—a reminder that it's not the tools, but the idea that makes innovation possible. Also read: Japan's famous Cup Noodles Museum has opened in Hong Kong 3. Hollands Kaasmuseum, Netherlands In a weigh house where cheese traders have conducted business since 1365, the Hollands Kaasmuseum (Dutch Cheese Museum) puts visitors at the centre of a centuries-old industry. Exhibits display traditional tools, from wooden moulds and antique butter churns to hand-carved carriers, which cheese porters still use during Friday market demonstrations from April to October. Right outside the museum doors, visitors can witness the cheese-trading ritual that has remained largely unchanged since the Middle Ages—complete with white-uniformed guilds, rhythmic bargaining calls and the distinctive hand-slap method of sealing deals. Also read: To brie or not to brie: These are the best cheese platters and charcuterie boards in Hong Kong 4. Wonderfood Museum, Malaysia In Penang, dubbed Malaysia's food capital, the Wonderfood Museum features larger-than-life handmade replicas of over 100 dishes. What makes the museum extra interesting is its focus on action—visitors can pose as hawkers dramatically tossing noodles or pulling teh tarik with theatrical flair. Beyond the unique photo opportunities, the exhibits serve as an archive, documenting the country's multicultural food culture and preserving culinary techniques and presentations. Also read: A weekend in Penang: Must try spots to eat, drink, and play 5. Musée Art du Chocolat, France Explore chocolate in its most extraordinary forms, ranging from architectural replicas to life-sized sculptures that could be mistaken for bronze if not for the unmistakable aroma. Housed in an 18th-century mansion, the museum reveals its treasures in a series of immersive displays. Discover chocolate-making secrets from plantation to finished product, techniques to create chocolate sculptures and works of art by master chocolatiers and contemporary sculptors. With its rich storytelling and hands-on confectionery workshops, this culinary museum is one of the most unique museums to visit for chocolate lovers. Also read: What makes a great chocolate dish? We ask chefs and chocolatiers 6. World Coffee Museum, Vietnam Located in the coffee-growing region of Buon Ma Thuot, this museum houses over 10,000 artefacts spanning coffee's global journey, from traditional coffee grinders to modern brewing equipment. Exhibits follow coffee's essential stages—planting, harvesting, roasting, preserving and enjoying—showing how each step has evolved across cultures and centuries. The museum's architecture reflects its natural setting through curved blocks that evoke traditional Ede long houses and Central Highlands rooftops. Founded by the Trung Nguyen coffee company, the museum has an on-site cafe that serves speciality brews reflecting the styles and techniques explored in the exhibits. Also read: The ultimate bucket list for discerning coffee lovers: 9 best travel destinations to visit 7. Food Wanderer x Lakbay Museo, Philippines Manila's tribute to Filipino culinary identity blurs the line between food museum and immersive theatre. Set in a village-like environment with jeepneys and corner sari-sari stores, the experience is like going on a culinary road trip across the archipelago's over 7,000 islands. Watch a dance performance inspired by the Pahiyas Festival, taste local delicacies such as dried fish and puto (steamed rice cake) and try on traditional handwoven costumes. Between activities, snap photos with replicas such as the Chocolate Hills or Mayon Volcano, connecting food traditions to the land that shaped them. Nearly all of the 14 exhibits are constructed from repurposed materials, including used rubber slippers, rubber tires and old car mats. The museum also partners with over 100 micro-, small- and medium-scale businesses across the Philippines, creating a market for their products and connecting urban visitors with rural producers. Also read: All the new restaurants in the Tatler Best Philippines Guide 2025 8. Southern Food and Beverage Museum, USA This New Orleans landmark doesn't just document Southern cuisine—it deconstructs the historical forces and cultural exchanges that shaped it. From plantation-era cooking traditions born under slavery to the vital role of Black-owned restaurants during the Civil Rights Movement, the museum reveals how food has long been a site of power, resistance and identity in the American South. Exhibits explore the evolution of Cajun and Creole cuisines, the legacy of Louisiana's shrimping industry, and the regional nuances of barbecue. Cooking classes, available through advance booking, offer hands-on opportunities to engage with these traditions. Also housed within the museum is the Museum of the American Cocktail, which traces the storied history and offers a taste of New Orleans' cocktail culture. 9. Museum of Food, Singapore Unlike conventional museums, this mobile museum functions as a roving cultural ambassador, popping up in shops, schools and public spaces. Exhibits showcase traditional kitchen tools such as stone grinders, mooncake moulds and specialised implements behind heritage recipes. Beyond preserving artefacts, the museum brings vintage recipes to life, ensuring Singapore's multicultural food traditions live on through practice. You might find yourself tasting sambals and chutneys, pickling vegetables for achar or wrapping nasi lemak in banana leaves—not just observing history, but living it in this hands-on culinary experience.


Time Out
23-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Time Out
Heard of them? These are Asia's most underrated museums
There are many blockbuster museums in Asia that we'd recommend to any traveller: the ArtScience Museum, the Hong Kong Film Archive, and the Thailand-Burma Railway Centre, among others. But if you've ticked these off your list or are simply in search of something more quaint, then we've got a list of unsung heroes for you. For International Museum Day (May 18), our team of global editors pitched in for a round-up of the world's most underrated museums. Three spots from Asia made the list, ranging from quirky miniature museums to larger-than-life playgrounds for naturalists. The first is the Miniature Museum Small Worlds in Tokyo, a stinking cute museum featuring small-scale reproductions of real-world and fictional places. Gallery A has seven zones to explore, including a miniature diorama of Kansai International Airport and a small-scale recreation of Tokyo's Azabu-Juban neighbourhood from the '90s Sailor Moon manga. We're always amazed at the intricacy and artistry on display: these tiny exhibits are complete with sound, light, and moving parts. And here's a cool bit: you can create a small-scale model of yourself to place into the miniature world for a whole year for just ¥2,000. Love instant noodles? There's a museum dedicated to cup noodles in Osaka called (what else?) the Cupnoodles Museum. Learn about the history of cup noodles, the creative thinking process of inventor Momofuku Ando, and even create your own cup noodle at the My Cupnoodles Factory. Don't miss out on Noodles Bazaar, where you can slurp noodle dishes and down canned drinks from around the world. If National Geographic and BBC Earth count among your favourite channels, then you'll love this natural history museum in Singapore. The Lee Kong Chiang Natural History Museum is low-key, but houses one of the largest collections of Southeast Asian animals in the region. Trace the history of life on Earth through 15 zones featuring specimens of plants, amphibians, mammals, and dinosaurs. Some of the most impressive exhibits: a trio of diplodocid sauropod dinosaur fossils and a skeleton of a female sperm whale found dead off Jurong Island in 2015. The most underrated museums in the world, according to Time Out: