The morning air at Jalan Berseh is still cool, but the heat radiating from the charcoal fire is immediate. I stand a few steps back from the counter of Sungei Road Laksa. I watch the man tending to the broth. He does not stop moving. His right hand scoops the thin, pale orange liquid. His left hand holds a small porcelain bowl. He pours the hot broth over the thick rice noodles, drains it, and pours it again. It is a rhythm born of pure repetition.
I raise my camera. I set the shutter speed to 1/200th of a second. I want to freeze the exact moment the broth leaves the ladle, capturing the heavy droplets before they sink back into the pot. Through the lens, I focus entirely on his hands. They are worn, dusted with humidity and heat, moving with an inherited muscle memory. The light from the glowing charcoal casts a warm, flickering shadow against the tiled wall.
The man cooking is not the one who invented this bowl. The original maker has passed on. Yet, the food remains exactly the same. We often think of recipes as written words on a piece of paper, hidden away in a kitchen drawer. But a true street food recipe does not exist on paper. It exists entirely in the body. It is passed down through the angle of a wrist, the pinch of sambal, the precise judgment of a charcoal flame.
I lower the camera and step forward to order a bowl. The gravy is light, fragrant with dried shrimp and coconut milk. The cockles are barely cooked, just warmed by the residual heat of the broth. I eat quietly at a small metal table near the back of the coffee shop. As I watch the morning crowd gather, I realize that cooking a heritage dish is a quiet form of resurrection. Every time the fire is lit and the broth is stirred, the person who first created it is brought back. They are present in the scent of the steam and the taste of the soup.
The queue grows longer behind me. The scooping continues. The fire glows bright orange under the battered aluminum pot. The light shifts slowly across the floor as the morning wears on. Some things refuse to be forgotten. They simply change hands, resting quietly in the care of those who stay behind to stir the pot.
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