Tropical Treats At SBG Centre For Ethnobotany: Free Singapore Botanic Gardens Exhibition Guide

Tropical Treats at SBG — the Centre for Ethnobotany’s exhibition — is the kind of free SBG outing that explains a lot about why Singaporean kitchens taste the way they do. Coconut, pandan, banana, chillies, tamarind — this exhibition walks through the tropical plants that feed Southeast Asia.

If you have ever wondered why your nasi lemak tastes the way it tastes, this is the science-y backstory.

Tropical Treats Centre for Ethnobotany Singapore Botanic Gardens exhibition
Source: NParks / Singapore Botanic Gardens

Tropical Treats at a glance

  • Venue: Centre for Ethnobotany, Singapore Botanic Gardens.
  • Subject: Plants that feed Southeast Asia — the everyday ingredients you grew up with.
  • Format: Permanent gallery space with rotating displays.
  • Cost: Free entry.
  • Best for: Curious foodies, families with school-going kids, anyone who watches CNA Lifestyle food docs.

What you’ll see at Tropical Treats

  • Coconut — from kueh kosui to nasi lemak, the trees that shape regional palates.
  • Pandan — the unsung hero of Southeast Asian desserts.
  • Banana — leaves, fruit, flowers — the whole plant earns its keep.
  • Chillies and herbs — Bird’s-eye chilli, daun kesum, kaffir lime, curry leaves.
  • Heritage cooking traditions — how the plants enter Peranakan, Malay, Chinese and Indian cuisines.

Why this exhibition lands well with families

It reframes the everyday — your kid’s nasi padang and ondeh-ondeh suddenly have a backstory. The Centre for Ethnobotany is one of SBG’s most underrated stops, and the tropical-treats theme makes the content accessible even for primary-school-aged children.

How to get there

  • MRT: Botanic Gardens (CC19/DT9) — Tanglin Gate.
  • Walking time: About 10-15 minutes from Tanglin Gate to the Centre for Ethnobotany.
  • Combine with: National Orchid Garden, Healing Garden, Foliage Garden, or a meal at Park Side.
  • Best day: Weekday morning — quieter, cooler, easier to absorb.

Free, indoor, educational and quietly delicious — Tropical Treats is the kind of stop that earns a place on every June holiday plan.

Nur Aisyah Rahman
Nur Aisyah Rahman
Nur Aisyah Rahman is Little Big Red Dot's Lifestyle, Wellness & Family Editor. She tells stories that help families live well, feel good, and grow closer together. She writes with empathy, warmth, and practicality — whether reviewing family-friendly attractions, sharing wellness tips, or writing about home living.

Latest articles

Related articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here