The glass of my lens fogs over the second I take off the cap. It is 6:15 AM at Maxwell Food Centre. The heavy, cool air of the morning clashes immediately with the immense heat rolling off the corner stall. I pull a microfiber cloth from my pocket. I wipe the glass clean, wait three seconds, and lift the camera to my eye before the condensation can return.
Through the viewfinder, the world is reduced to a massive aluminum pot and a thick cloud of white vapor.
I am standing in front of Zhen Zhen Porridge. The auntie behind the counter moves with a quiet, relentless energy. She plunges a long metal ladle deep into the boiling vat of rice congee. When she pulls it up, the thick mixture bubbles and heaves. A dense plume of steam erupts toward the low ceiling. It is the unmistakable breath of the morning.
I adjust my exposure compensation, dropping it down slightly. Steam is notoriously difficult to photograph. If the frame is too bright, the vapor completely disappears into the background. You need shadows to give the mist a shape. I wait for the exact moment she shifts her weight, allowing the pale fluorescent light from the neighboring stall to backlight the rising heat.
The shutter clicks. The sound is tiny, easily lost under the rhythmic scraping of the metal ladle against the bottom of the pot.
We take so many things for granted when we eat early in the day. We sit down, scroll through our phones, and swallow mouthfuls of hot food to wake ourselves up. But looking closely at this single bowl, I see a beautiful, temporary architecture. The steam dances above the rim of the porcelain bowl. It carries the scent of roasted sesame oil and sharp, fresh spring onions. It is a fragile structure that collapses the moment the food cools.
The auntie slides a fresh bowl across the stainless steel counter. The porridge is incredibly thick, hiding tender slices of chicken and a raw egg waiting to be stirred in.
I lower the camera. I step forward and wrap my cold hands around the sides of the bowl. The heat transfers instantly into my skin. The steam curls upward, brushing against my face. This ritual has happened here every single morning for decades. Long before the tourists arrive and the loud lunch queues form, this quiet exchange of heat and sustenance takes place in the dark.
Some stories are not meant to last forever. They are only meant to be felt for a few brief minutes while the city slowly opens its eyes. I pick up my porcelain spoon, stir the warm congee, and let the morning begin.
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