The evening air at Old Airport Road Food Centre is thick and warm. It wraps around me the moment I step away from the open street. I walk past the bright neon signboards, letting the noise of clattering woks wash over me. I am looking for something specific, but I do not use my eyes to find it. I follow the scent.
At the edge of the second row, the uncle at Chuan Kee Satay stands surrounded by a pale blue haze, back when it still had smoke emanating from its stall. The smell is intoxicating. It is a heavy mix of charred lemongrass, sweet coriander, and melting pork fat hitting white hot charcoal. A photograph is a memory missing its most important sense. I sit on a plastic red stool a few meters away and watch him work.
He holds a worn woven fan in his left hand. His right hand turns dozens of bamboo skewers in a single, fluid motion. The rhythm never breaks. I lift my camera and rest my elbows on the sticky table. I open my aperture to f/2.8. I want to isolate the glowing red embers and let the thick smoke soften the sharp edges of the background. The light is difficult. The harsh fluorescent bulbs clash with the deep orange glow of the fire.
I press the shutter. I check the screen. The image is beautiful. It shows the heat, the focus in his eyes, and the blur of his moving hand. But looking at the small digital screen, I feel a quiet frustration. The camera cannot record the heavy, sweet air. The true weight of a meal is often carried in the air long after the plates are cleared.
Hours later, I am sitting on the train heading home. The carriage is empty and cold. I look down at my canvas camera bag resting on my knees. I can still smell the roasted peanut sauce and the sharp tang of charcoal smoke clinging to the fabric. It is woven into the threads of my shirt.
People often talk about the taste of a dish or the visual beauty of the plating. We leave behind empty bowls and wiped tables. But the fragrance remains. It is a quiet souvenir that follows you into the night. I close my eyes and lean my head against the cold glass of the train window. I do not need to look at my photos yet. The story is still sitting there, woven into my clothes.
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