The smoke rises first, and then the light finds it.
It is late afternoon at Adam Road Food Centre, and the satay stall has just lit its coals. The skewers are not on the grill yet. Only the heat is there, lifting in a thin gray column that bends toward the open side of the building. Then the sun, low now and slipping under the roofline, catches the smoke and turns it pale gold for a moment.
I stop walking. The frame is already made before I lift the camera.
The uncle fans the coals with a flattened piece of cardboard, slow and steady, the way you might wave to someone far away. He is not looking at the smoke. He is feeling the heat against his hand, judging it by something the rest of us cannot see. The light moves through the smoke as he fans, breaking and gathering, breaking again.
I raise the camera and wait.
This is the hard part. Smoke does not hold still, and light through smoke holds still even less. I press the shutter once when the column thickens, then again as it thins. The exposure is wrong on the first. The second is closer, the gold caught against the dark of the stall behind him. Still not quite it. Some light you can only chase, never keep.
He lays the first skewers down, and the smoke changes. It grows fuller now, fed by the fat dripping onto the coals, carrying the smell of charred meat and sweet marinade across the walkway. The light has to work harder to push through it. For a second the whole stall softens, the edges blurring, the uncle becoming a shape inside the haze rather than a man with a face.
I think about how often the best moments hide inside the things we usually want to clear away. We open windows to let smoke out. We wave it from our eyes. But here, in this hour, the smoke is what makes the light visible. Without it, the sun would simply pass through and land on the floor, unnoticed.
Around me, the food centre fills slowly. A man carries two plates of carrot cake from the stall across the way, steam rising off them too. Someone drops coins onto a metal tray. The fans turn overhead, pushing the smoke sideways, scattering the gold into smaller pieces of light that touch the tables and then are gone.
The uncle turns the skewers without looking up. He has fanned this same fire through more afternoons than I could photograph in a lifetime. The light has filtered through this smoke long before I arrived, and it will keep doing so after I leave, with or without a camera to notice.
When my satay comes, ten sticks with a small bowl of peanut sauce, I carry it to a table near the open side. The smoke still drifts past, thinner now. The light has dropped lower, almost level with the grill.
I take one last photograph, then set the camera down.
Some light you keep in a frame. Some you only sit inside, while it lasts.
Coal, Fire, and Memory: A Singapore Food Blogger Revisits Tanjong Pagar’s Industrial Kitchens
February 20, 2026
It had been a while since I set a day to wander through the back lanes of Tanjong Pagar. When I decided to come back to the place left me star-struck, not by the polished…
Three Generations, One Perfect Dumpling: A Food Blogger’s Journey in Chinatown’s Hidden Alley
February 16, 2026
Why This Alley is a Must-Visit for Food Lovers and Food Bloggers The first time I ventured into this tucked-away alley in Singapore’s Chinatown, I was awestruck by how different it felt from the bustling…
After Dark Cravings: A Guide to Night Singapore for Foodies
February 13, 2026
When I first landed in Singapore, I thought I knew what to expect: futuristic skylines, spotless streets, and, of course, amazing food. I did end up seeing all those things but what truly blew me…
Dawn Awakening: Morning Market Food Blog
February 9, 2026
The city is still dreaming when the first fires are lit. It is 4:30 AM, an hour that belongs to the insomniacs and the dedicated artisans of our food culture. While the skyscrapers of the…
The Last Hour: Closing Time Through the Eyes of A Food Blogger
February 6, 2026
The roar of the hawker center fades as the clanking woks and sizzling grills soften to a murmur. Most plastic tables are empty, wiped clean, awaiting a new day. This last hour is a sacred,…
Food Blogs as Cultural Archives: Photographing Religious Culinary Traditions
February 2, 2026
We often think of food photography as a way to stimulate appetite or showcase a chef’s creation. However, in multicultural Singapore, it captures much more: history, faith, and identity. Food blogs have evolved from recipe…
Composition’s Sweet Spot: A Guide in Framing Desire for Food Bloggers in Singapore
January 30, 2026
You have found the perfect bowl of bak chor mee. The noodles glisten, the minced pork is perfectly seasoned, and the chili sauce adds a vibrant splash of red. You snap a quick picture, but…
Laksa’s Velvet Embrace Welcomes the Best Foodies
January 26, 2026
There are dishes you simply eat, and then there are dishes you truly experience. For me, laksa falls firmly into the latter category. It’s an intoxicating, full-body immersion into a world of flavor that demands…
Tiong Bahru: The Slow Seduction of Food in Photography
January 23, 2026
Some neighborhoods shout for your attention. They are a riot of sound, color, and frantic energy. Tiong Bahru is not one of them. This corner of Singapore operates on a different frequency, a slower and…
Chili Crab Confidential: Producing Perfect Pics of Food
January 19, 2026
It arrives like royalty, carried to the table with a sense of occasion. A colossal crab, bathed in a thick, shimmering sauce the color of a fiery sunset. The air around it is fragrant with…