The lid lifts, and the steam rises before the smell does.
It is just past noon at Chinatown Complex Food Centre, and the queue at the chicken rice stall has thinned for a moment. The auntie opens the rice cooker the way you might open a window, slow and without ceremony. White steam climbs into the air above her, catching the light from the bulb overhead. For a second, the whole stall seems to pause inside that cloud.
I am standing to the side, camera against my chest, doing nothing. I have learned that the rice asks for stillness before it asks for anything else.
The grains are pale gold, slick with chicken fat and the ghost of pandan. She fluffs them once with a wide spoon, then leaves them alone. There is no hurry in her hands. The rice has already done its slow work in the dark, swelling, softening, holding the warmth she gave it hours ago. Some food is made loudly. Rice is made by waiting.
I lift the camera and try to hold the steam in the frame.
It is harder than it looks. Steam does not stay. It thins and bends and disappears the moment you think you have it. I press the shutter once, then again, knowing most of these will not work. The light is flat above the counter, and the white rice wants to blow out into nothing. Still, I keep looking. There is something honest in the way the steam refuses to be kept.
Around me, the food centre carries on. A man slurps fishball noodles two stalls down. Somewhere a cleaver meets a board, then meets it again. The afternoon light leans in through the open sides, warm and slow, touching the edge of a stainless steel pot.
I think about how rice holds the centre of so many meals here. Not the star, not the thing people queue an hour for, but the quiet floor beneath everything else. The plate of char siew rests on it. The curry pools into it. The last spoonful is almost always rice, eaten after the meat is gone, when no one is watching anymore.
We remember the dish. We rarely thank the rice.
The auntie scoops a portion onto a plate, presses it gently into a mound, and sets it down without looking up. The motion is so worn it has become invisible to her. She has done it ten thousand times, and she will do it ten thousand more, each plate carrying the same small warmth she folded into the pot before the crowd arrived.
I order a plate and carry it to a corner table.
The steam has settled now. The grains glisten faintly under the overhead light. I take one more photograph, then put the camera down and pick up my spoon.
Some things you shoot. Some things you simply sit with, while they are still warm.
The Peranakan Seduction: A Food Photography Photographer’s Insight
January 11, 2026
There are some cuisines that you photograph, and there are some that you court. Peranakan food falls firmly into the latter category. It is a seduction of the senses, a rich tapestry of history, flavor,…
Geylang’s Forbidden Flavors: The Best Foodies District
January 9, 2026
Mention Geylang, and you will likely get a mix of reactions. This neighborhood, with its gritty reputation and neon-lit side streets, exists in a space separate from Singapore’s polished image. But for those in the…
Holland Village: East Meets West Journey of Food and Photography
January 2, 2026
There is a corner of Singapore where the laid-back charm of a European village collides with the vibrant energy of a Southeast Asian city. It is a place where the aroma of freshly brewed espresso…
The Tease of Motion: Capturing Culinary Food in Photography
December 29, 2025
Food is rarely static. It drips, sizzles, steams, and crumbles. It is poured, flipped, chopped, and shared. Yet, so often, we see food in photography presented as a perfectly still, lifeless object on a plate….
Chili Crab: Singapore’s Sultry Affair Captured in Food Photography
December 26, 2025
It arrives at the table not as a dish, but as an event. A magnificent Sri Lankan mud crab, resplendent in a sea of vibrant, glossy sauce the color of a tropical sunset. Steam rises…
Flame & Flesh: The Primal Art of Satay Through Food Photography
December 22, 2025
Sparks dance into the twilight sky, illuminating a face etched with concentration. The air fills with the scent of charred meat, caramelized marinade, and burning charcoal. Rows of bamboo skewers are turned rhythmically over glowing…
Hands of Time: A Food Photographer’s Encounter with Traditional Kaya Toast Masters
December 19, 2025
The air before dawn has a quality all its own. It is cool and hushed, thick with anticipation. On a quiet street corner in Singapore, long before the city awakens, a soft, golden light spills…
Steam & Seduction: Singapore for Foodies
December 15, 2025
The air in Singapore is never just air. It is a potent cocktail of sensation, a humid embrace laced with the fragrant perfume of pandan, the sharp zest of calamansi, and the deep, soulful aroma…
Spice Affair: Singapore Foodies’ Guide to Little India
December 12, 2025
The moment you step onto Serangoon Road, the world changes. The air grows thick with the heady perfume of jasmine garlands, sweet incense, and a complex blend of toasted spices that seems to emanate from…
The Morning Ritual: Street Food Hawkers Before Dawn
December 8, 2025
The world is dark, cloaked in a tranquil stillness that precedes the sunrise. A deep blue hue hangs over Singapore, and the only sounds are the distant hum of a lone vehicle or the gentle…