
It is 4:15 AM. The estate is completely still, save for the low hum of the expressway in the distance. I walk through the darkened aisles of the hawker centre, my footsteps echoing against the damp, tiled floor. Most of the stalls are hidden behind locked metal shutters, but at the far corner of the third row, a single rectangle of harsh fluorescent light spills out into the dark.
I stop a few feet away, leaning my shoulder against a concrete pillar. I don’t raise my camera yet. I just watch.
Inside the illuminated box, an elderly man in a thin white singlet is already at work. He moves with a quiet, practiced economy. There is no wasted motion. A massive aluminum pot sits on the roaring burner, sending thick plumes of steam up toward the exhaust fan. He holds a long wooden paddle, stirring the congee with a slow, rhythmic drag that scrapes the bottom of the pot. Scrape. Swish. Scrape. Swish. It is the only sound in the building.
The air here smells of toasted ginger, sesame oil, and the starchy sweetness of boiling rice. I wipe a thin layer of condensation from my camera lens.
Through the viewfinder, the scene is monochromatic. The cool, blue tint of the pre-dawn darkness presses against the warm, yellow glow of the stall. The steam diffuses the light, softening the deep creases on the man’s face and the prominent veins in his forearms. I adjust my shutter speed, slowing it down just enough to blur the movement of his arm and the rising vapor. I want to capture the rhythm, not just freeze it.
I press the shutter. The mechanical click feels almost intrusive in the quiet, but he doesn’t look up. His focus is entirely on the consistency of the rice.
There is something profoundly humbling about this hour. Long before the morning rush, before the queues form and the digital payment QR codes are scanned, this solitary preparation takes place. It happens every single day. We talk a lot about preserving culinary heritage, using big words like tradition and legacy. But standing here in the damp morning air, heritage doesn’t look grand. It looks like tired shoulders, stained aprons, and the quiet persistence of stirring a pot before the sun comes up.
By 5:30 AM, the sky outside begins to turn a bruised purple. A few other vendors arrive, their metal shutters rattling upwards, breaking the silence. An older woman in a floral blouse walks up to the congee stall, placing a crumpled two-dollar note on the metal counter.
The uncle nods, reaching for a stack of ceramic bowls. The rhythm shifts from preparation to service.
I lower my camera, slide the lens cap back on, and step out of the shadows to order my own bowl. Some mornings are meant to be photographed, and some are just meant to be felt.
A Moment of Silence for the Rice, Steaming Gently
June 23, 2026
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…
Isle Cafe at Cuppage Plaza: Local Flavors with Old School Charm
June 22, 2026
I usually come to Cuppage Plaza for the smoke and the izakaya counters, but this time I was here for something far simpler. A plate of cai png, eaten fast, in the middle of a…
To the Memory of the Dishes That Never Return
June 19, 2026
The stall is empty when I arrive. It is a corner unit at Tiong Bahru Market, second floor, where I came to photograph a plate I had been thinking about for weeks. A dry mee…
Savoring Orchard Yong Tau Fu: Cheap and Cheerful in Cuppage Plaza
June 18, 2026
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…
A Letter to the Faces Behind the Counter
June 16, 2026
You are turning over chicken wings when I first notice you. It is just past seven at Old Airport Road Food Centre, and the ceiling fans are pushing warm air down onto the tables. The…
How to Photograph Cuppage Plaza Food Without Disturbing the Room
June 15, 2026
The camera flash went off by mistake. It was a small, clumsy decision, but in the narrow, slightly smoky space of Kazu Sumiyaki, it felt much larger than it was. A few heads turned. The…
To the Stirring of the Wok in the Early Hours
June 12, 2026
The first sound is not the flame. It is the metal ladle touching the side of the wok, a small, hollow note that carries across the half-awake floor of Hong Lim Market & Food Centre….
Cuppage Plaza Food Guide: Japanese Restaurants and Hidden Gems in Singapore’s Little Tokyo
June 11, 2026
I started coming to Cuppage Plaza for the light. The building is old, a little worn at the edges, with narrow staircases and corridors that smell faintly of charcoal and sake by early evening. But…
A Note to the Knife That Cuts, But Never Hurries
June 9, 2026
The knife lands softly before it cuts. I hear it before I lift the camera. A low wooden sound, not sharp, not rushed. At Maxwell Food Centre, the lunch crowd is already pressing into the…
Wang BBQ Chicken Wing & Satay: Photographing Smoke, Wings, and Skewers at Chomp Chomp Food Centre
June 8, 2026
I reached Chomp Chomp Food Centre at 20 Kensington Park Road, Serangoon Gardens, Singapore on a Tuesday evening around 7pm, just as the place was beginning to thicken with supper energy. The tables were filling…