The sky outside is still a deep, bruised purple. Inside the food centre at Toa Payoh Lorong 8, the air is cool and heavy with the scent of damp concrete and raw ginger. I sit at a round green table. My camera rests in my lap. I am the only person sitting in this row.
A few meters away, the fluorescent lights flick on at a traditional Teochew porridge stall. The uncle does not look out toward the empty tables. He focuses entirely on the stainless steel counter in front of him. He moves with a slow, deliberate grace that cannot be taught. He unpacks bundles of fresh scallions. He lines up small ceramic bowls in perfect, identical rows. The sound of his knife meeting the heavy wooden chopping board is rhythmic and hollow.
I bring the viewfinder to my eye. The 35mm lens frames him perfectly between a stack of bamboo steamers and the hanging yellow menu board. The light is difficult. It is a harsh, blue-green fluorescent glow that washes out the warmth of the wood. I lower my ISO. I slow my shutter speed down to a fiftieth of a second. I wait. I want to catch the exact moment the steam begins to rise from the large metal vat of rice.
We spend so much time chasing the peak moments of the day. We look for the long lines, the shouting vendors, and the loud chaos of the lunch rush. But this quiet hour is different. There is a profound weight in the act of preparing for others. The uncle wipes the edge of the counter with a damp cloth. He checks the blue flame under the broth. He is setting a stage for people he has not even met yet.
A single drop of condensation falls from the ceiling fan and hits the table next to my elbow. The sharp noise breaks the silence. The uncle looks up, notices me in the shadows, and gives a brief, silent nod. I nod back.
I do not press the shutter just yet. Sometimes the best way to respect a scene is simply to witness it. The camera remains resting in my lap. The water in the vat finally comes to a rolling boil. A thick cloud of white steam spills over the edge, catching the harsh overhead light and softening the sharp edges of the entire stall. The day begins long before the first coin changes hands. I raise the camera again, hold my breath, and take the picture.
A Letter to Stories That Unfold With Every Bite
July 14, 2026
Morning light slants across the stainless steel table, starting as a narrow beam before slowly spreading out. I’m sitting in the corner of Maxwell Food Centre, my camera still tucked away. I like to watch…
Old Nyonya at Maxwell Food Centre: A Quieter Bowl Among the Noise
July 13, 2026
I didn’t go to Maxwell Food Centre for Old Nyonya. Almost nobody does. You go for the chicken rice. You go for the queue that bends around the corner, the one everyone photographs. But that…
To the Sound of the First Chopsticks Clinking
July 10, 2026
The first pair lifts before the bowl has even cooled, and the sound finds me before I see it. It is early, just before eight at Maxwell Food Centre, and the porridge stall has opened…
Maxwell Fuzhou Oyster Cake at Maxwell Food Centre: A Golden and Crispy Frame
July 9, 2026
I didn’t set out to eat an oyster cake that day. I’d originally planned to grab chicken rice, specifically the famous Hainanese chicken rice, but after wandering around Maxwell Food Centre and exploring the many…
A Quiet Thank You to the Stirring Hands in the Back Alley
July 7, 2026
The pot has been going for hours, and the woman stirring it does not look tired. It is late afternoon behind a row of shophouses near Old Airport Road, in the narrow lane where the…
Tian Tian Hainanese Chicken Rice: A Review of Maxwell’s Most Photographed Plate
July 6, 2026
The long queue moves in inches. Plates leave the counter fast. Chicken lands. Rice follows. Chilli sauce, black soy sauce, and ginger sit beside the plate. The next order is already being called. Tian Tian…
To the Forgotten Recipes, Guarded in the Heart of the Stall
July 3, 2026
The old man measures by hand, and I never see him weigh a thing. It is mid-morning at Hong Lim Market, and the bak chor mee stall has slowed for a breath between the breakfast…
A Photographer’s Guide to Maxwell Food Centre: Frame Shots, Timing, and Table Scenes
July 2, 2026
My first visit to Maxwell Food Centre left me with dozens of uninspiring photos, grey chicken rice, missed steam, and annoyed diners. It took time to learn that Maxwell Food Centre Singapore doesn’t pose for…
A Note on the Flicker of the Flame That Feels Like Home
June 30, 2026
The wok catches first, and then the whole stall seems to breathe. It is just past six at Tiong Bahru Market, second floor, and the char kway teow uncle has tilted his wok toward the…
The Stalls That Hold Maxwell Food Centre Together
June 29, 2026
I have been coming to Maxwell Food Centre for years now, at all the wrong and right hours. Early mornings when the porridge stalls are stirring and the room still smells of bleach and steam….