
Morning light slants across the stainless steel table, starting as a narrow beam before slowly spreading out.
I’m sitting in the corner of Maxwell Food Centre, my camera still tucked away. I like to watch first. Some moments need to be waited for.
The fan overhead spins with that familiar, slightly shaky old sound. At the next table, an uncle unfolds his newspaper, holding it down with one hand while lifting his coffee with the other, the glass leaving a faint ring of water on the table. He isn’t in a rush. No one here seems to be.
The line at Old Nyonya has already started to form. It’s short still, and quiet. A man in a collared shirt studies the laminated menu even though he looks like he’s been here before. In front of him, a woman in office clothes shifts her tray from one hand to the other, waiting. I don’t lift my camera. This moment doesn’t belong to me yet.
What I want to capture has never just been about the bowl of laksa.
It’s the ladle going into the pot, the coconut broth moving in a slow circle. The careful spoon of sambal set at the edge of the bowl, vivid against the orange. The tofu puffs settling into the broth and slowly taking its color. That surface glimmer fades within minutes. Either you catch it, or you let it go. Today, I let it go. I just watch, as the motions repeat again and again, like a language no one consciously remembers yet instinctively carries on.
I shift my attention and walk over to the Fuzhou Oyster Cake stall.
The oil in the wok sizzles. A ladle of rice batter is poured in, rising slowly as it cooks, the color deepening from pale gold to a rich brown. The beauty of fried food isn’t in its perfection but in its imperfection. Jagged edges, uneven surfaces, and the glow of oil soaking through. The vendor’s hands never stop, scooping, draining, bagging, movements so practiced they seem effortless.
I crouch slightly, waiting for the next oyster cake to come out of the fryer.
The moment the steam rises, I take the shot. Just one. I don’t want ten. In a hawker centre, stand too long and you’ll block someone’s path or their lunch. Sometimes, restraint matters more than technique.
With the oyster cake in its paper bag, I return to my table. The crust is hard and crackles with each bite, the inside soft and filled with oysters, minced meat, shrimp, and coriander. Warmth and savory flavor rush out as I bite in. I don’t immediately think about composition or lighting. I’m just eating.
Some things no camera can truly capture.
I think of being a child, sitting at a hawker centre like this with my grandmother. The same tables, the same fans, the same light. She wasn’t one for much talk, just pushing the bowl toward me and watching me eat. Back then, I didn’t understand. Now, I think I do. Food isn’t always meant to be documented. It’s meant to be remembered.
I set the camera aside.
The uncle is still reading his newspaper. The Old Nyonya queue has turned over to a new group of people. The oyster cake stall’s wok keeps sizzling. None of this will go viral or pull in a crowd of photographers, yet it carries on quietly, naturally, like breathing.
The light shifts again, sliding from the table to the back of my hand. I don’t reach for the camera this time.
Some stories only unfold bite by bite. And I’m willing to wait, slowly.
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