The old man measures by hand, and I never see him weigh a thing.
It is mid-morning at Hong Lim Market, and the bak chor mee stall has slowed for a breath between the breakfast and lunch crowds. He reaches into a tin without looking, takes a pinch of something dark, and lets it fall into the bowl. His fingers know the amount. There is no recipe written down anywhere I can see.
I stand to the side, camera lowered, watching the way his hand returns to the same tins in the same order. Vinegar, then the chilli, then a small spoon of pork lard that catches the light for a second before it melts. He has done this so many times that the motion has left his thinking and gone somewhere deeper, into the wrist, into memory.
I lift the camera and frame his hands against the dark of the counter.
I think about how much of this is kept nowhere but inside him. The exact balance of sour and savory. The moment the noodles are ready, judged by sound more than sight. A recipe like this does not live on paper. It lives in a body, and bodies do not last.
I have met hawkers who tell me their children will not take over. The hours are long, the work is hot, and the young have other lives waiting for them. I never argue. It is not my place. But I notice how the recipe sits there between us, unspoken, like a thing already half gone.
Two stalls down, an auntie stirs a pot of her own. Tau suan, thick and pale gold, the sweet soup she has sold for longer than I have been holding a camera. She tastes it from a small spoon, adds a little more sugar, tastes again. The adjustment is tiny. Only she would know it was needed.
I press the shutter on the old man’s hands, then again as he tosses the noodles in the bowl.
These images will not hold the taste. That is the part I cannot photograph, no matter how close I stand. The flavor lives in the doing, in the pinch and the pour and the timing, and the doing ends when the hands stop.
So I photograph the hands instead. The tins, worn smooth at the rims. The spoon resting against the pot. The small private gestures that carry everything the menu does not say.
Some inheritance has no will, no signature, only a pair of hands repeating themselves until they cannot anymore.
He slides the bowl across the counter. A regular takes it without a word, the way you take something from family. The old man wipes his hands and turns back to the tins, already reaching for the next order, the next pinch, the next quiet act of remembering.
I order a bowl and sit close.
I eat slowly, tasting for the things I will never be able to keep, and let the recipe stay where it belongs, guarded in the heart of the stall, for as long as the hands hold out.
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