Cedele, the homegrown bakery cafe chain known for its wholegrain breads, cakes and all-day dining menu, comes up often when Muslim diners plan a cafe meal. The register answer is at the top of this page; here is the context around it.
What Cedele says
Cedele addresses the question directly on its own website. The FAQ page on cedele.com states plainly that “Cedele is not Halal-certified.” That is the brand’s published position, and it is more transparency than many uncertified chains offer. The company does not make Muslim-owned or no-pork-no-lard claims on that page, and it does not label individual menu items as halal. Questions about specific ingredients in its bakes and dishes are best directed to the chain itself, since recipes and suppliers can change without notice.
What this means for you
Because the brand itself says it holds no certification, there is nothing to verify against the register, and eating at Cedele becomes a personal judgement about ingredients rather than a checkable certification status. If certification is your standard, treat Cedele as uncertified by its own account, and re-check the register from time to time - brands do enter the register when they certify premises, and positions like this can change.
Certified alternatives
If you want bakes and cafe food with a certificate you can actually check, start from these register-backed pages:
- Snack bars and bakeries - the register category that covers most certified bakery and pastry counters.
- Swee Heng Bakery - a certified local bakery chain for breads and buns.
- Paris Baguette - a certified bakery cafe if you are after the sit-down cafe experience with cakes, pastries and light mains.
To check any specific outlet, use the register search with the outlet name or the mall’s postal code.