A Letter I Never Gave to the Noodle Uncle

The bamboo strainer hits the edge of the aluminum pot with a hollow, rhythmic thud. It is two in the afternoon at Hong Lim Food Centre. The frantic lunchtime crowd has finally vanished. The heavy, humid air settles over the empty plastic tables, carrying the faint scent of roasted pork fat and alkaline water.

I stand a few steps away from your stall. I hold my camera near my chest, keeping the lens pointed slightly downward. I watch you work. Your hands move with a mechanical grace that only comes from decades of strict repetition. You toss the thin yellow noodles into the air. They catch the harsh white glare of the fluorescent tube above your head before dropping perfectly back into the boiling water.

You do not look up. You never do.

We have maintained this silent routine for seven years. I arrive on quiet Tuesday afternoons. I order the same bowl of dry wanton mee. You give the same brief, silent nod. I pay with exact change. You hand me a bowl where the dark soy sauce coats every single strand of noodle with perfect, glossy precision. We do not exchange stories. We do not ask about each other.

Yet, looking through the viewfinder, I feel a strange sense of familiarity.

I lift the camera to my eye. I dial the shutter speed to 1/250th of a second. I want to freeze the exact moment the hot steam curls around your knuckles. Through the glass, I see the deep lines etched into your skin. I see the faded red apron, dusted with a fine layer of white flour. The background falls away into a soft, dark blur.

The craft is held entirely in your hands. It is a physical memory. It is the exact flick of the wrist to shake off the boiling water. It is the precise pour of the pork lard oil. You do not measure anything, because the recipe became a part of your body a long time ago.

I press the shutter. The quiet click disappears under the sound of a large standing fan oscillating nearby.

Sometimes, I wonder what will happen when you finally decide to turn off the lights and hang up your apron. The city moves so fast. Old stalls close quietly, replaced by new signs and different routines. I take these photos because I want a record of your presence. I want to remember the way the afternoon light hit your counter.

My bowl is ready. I lower the camera and step forward to collect it. You push the tray across the wet stainless steel counter. I take it, offer a quiet word of thanks, and walk to a corner table. The noodles are hot, rich, and deeply comforting. Some things do not need to be spoken. They are simply understood, passed across a metal counter, and eaten in silence.