
I’d walked past this stall maybe a dozen times before I finally stopped. Cuppage Plaza isn’t the kind of place you go to be impressed, and that’s exactly why I keep coming back to it with my camera. So one Tuesday, just before noon, I finally sat down for a proper bowl of Orchard Yong Tau Fu.
I got there around 11:40am on purpose. By the time I left, the queue had already started curling into the corridor, so the timing mattered during the busy lunch hour.
A Quiet Corner in the Old Hallways of Cuppage Plaza

The stall sits in a quieter stretch of Cuppage Plaza, away from the izakaya smoke and the dinner crowd. It’s a no-frills local eatery in the truest sense. Plastic seats, a metal counter, a glass case of ingredients lined up and waiting, including vegetables stuffed with fish paste, tofu stuffed with meat paste, and fried tofu.
Getting there is easy. Cuppage Plaza is a short walk from Somerset MRT and just off Orchard Road, so you can drop in on foot without much fuss.
For more wallet-friendly hawker discoveries near Orchard, check out our full guide to Fortune Centre’s hidden gems on Street Food Photographer.
Building the Bowl of Yong Tau Foo
If you’ve never been, the ordering is part of the experience. You pick your pieces from the case, hand them over, pay first, then find a seat. I went with seven items plus bee hoon, which landed me around S$7, right in that usual prices start range for a lunch bowl.
The Broth: Ikan Bilis and Soybean-Rice

I asked for the soup version, and I’m glad I did. The broth is pale, almost shy looking, the kind of color that makes you brace for something thin and forgettable. Then you taste it. It’s soybean-based, gentle but layered, with a depth that doesn’t lean on the heavy MSG punch you sometimes get elsewhere. The broth is simmered slowly with ikan bilis (anchovies) and soy beans, giving it a light but rich flavor.
The Stuffed Tofu: Dish’s Highlight

The stuffed tofu was the quiet star. Soft and smooth, holding the broth like a sponge, warm all the way through. The tau fu and tau pok soaked up the soup beautifully too, and the fish paste items had that springy, fresh bite I look for.
Little Bits and Bobs to Include
I added a bitter gourd piece on a whim, and it was the right call. The slight bitterness cut against the sweetness of the broth in a way that felt balanced rather than harsh. If you spot eggplant or stuffed tomatoes in the case, grab those too.
The Dry Version: A Sweet Sauce to Elevate the Dish
On a separate visit I tried the dry version, and that’s where the sweet sauce earns its keep. The sweet sauce, dotted with sesame seeds, plays off the chili in a way that’s genuinely moreish. If you like a bit of contrast, the dry option lets those flavors stand on their own instead of getting lost in the soup.
Presentation is simple. There’s no styling here, just a bowl, broth or sauce, and food that does the talking. As someone who spends a lot of time framing meals, I found that honesty refreshing.
Service and Atmosphere at the Orchard Yong Tau fu Stall

The folks running it are friendly enough, the kind of family-run efficiency where regulars get a nod and a bit of chatter. During the lunch rush, though, things get brisk. You might get firm guidance on where to sit or how to order, and honestly, that’s fair. The turnover is quick and the space is small.
A few small things to flag. The vegetable pieces aren’t always uniform in size, so your seven items can vary a little. And the seating really is compact, so this isn’t a meal you stretch out over.
Through the Lens: Capturing Orchard Yong Tau Fu
The build-your-own concept allows for vibrant, contrasting compositions, emerald green vegetables, creamy tofu, and the pale sheen of fish paste create visual layers in a single bowl. Overhead shots work well to capture the full spread, while close-ups reveal the texture of stuffed tofu and glistening sauces.
For first-timers with a camera, the key is to observe the rhythm of the stall, anticipate movement, and let the textures and colours tell the story of a familiar, comforting Singaporean lunch.
Frame Shot | What to Capture | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|
Overhead Bowl Shot | The full assembled bowl of yong tau fu, including noodles, broth, tofu, vegetables, and stuffed pieces | Shoot directly above the bowl before eating, while everything still looks tidy and balanced |
Broth and Steam Shot | The bowl just after it is served, with light steam rising from the soup | Take this quickly while the broth is hottest, ideally with light coming from the side |
Sauce Detail Shot | Sweet sauce and chili drizzled over the dry version, or sauces in small dishes beside the bowl | Angle slightly low or at 45 degrees so the sauces catch light and look vivid |
The Verdict on Orchard Yong Tau Fu at Cuppage Plaza

Orchard Yong Tau Fu is a comfort lunch, plain and good. It’s best for local food lovers, office workers chasing a quick bite, and budget-minded diners who want something filling and warm for under S$10.
If you’re after fine-dining polish or a slow, leisurely meal, this isn’t your spot. But if you want a homestyle bowl in an old building near Orchard Road, eaten while it’s still warm, I’d point you here without hesitation.
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