Wang BBQ Chicken Wing & Satay: Photographing Smoke, Wings, and Skewers at Chomp Chomp Food Centre

A blurred bus and cyclist speed past the large entrance sign for Chomp Chomp Food Centre, featuring a distinctive red-tiled roof and an outdoor dining area shaded by red umbrellas.

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 slowly. Plastic stools scraped across the floor. Smoke rose from the BBQ stalls in soft gray sheets, catching the white hawker-centre lights before drifting into the crowd. At Wang BBQ Chicken Wing & Satay stall, the grill was already busy. Chicken wings sat over the heat, their skins turning glossy and dark at the edges. Skewers of chicken satay and pork were arranged in rows, waiting for their turn.

I came with a camera, but the first few minutes were hard to frame. Everything was moving. Customers waited near the stall, hawkers worked over flame, and the air carried the smell of charcoal, sweet marinade, and hot fat. It felt like a neighborhood version of after-work grilled food culture: less polished than the CBD, but warmer, closer, and more lived-in.

A Neighbourhood Grill Scene After Dark at Chomp Chomp Food Centre

A side-by-side photo showing the bright yellow storefront of a chicken wing and satay hawker stall on the left, and a top-down view of glossy, roasted BBQ chicken wings served with two small bowls of chili sauce on a wooden table on the right.

Wang BBQ Chicken Wing & Satay is located inside Chomp Chomp Food Centre, 20 Kensington Park Road, Singapore 557269. Chomp Chomp has always felt more like an evening and supper place than a daytime food centre. Many stalls come alive from late afternoon onward, and the mood builds after sunset.

Wang BBQ Chicken Wing & Satay has been listed with hours around Tuesday to Sunday, 4:30pm to midnight, closed on Monday, though I’d still check current hours before going. Hawker timing can shift.

Compared with Lau Pa Sat’s CBD satay scene, Chomp Chomp feels more neighborhood-based. There are fewer office towers in the frame, more families, supper groups, regulars, and people who seem to know exactly what they came for. For more reccomendations on spots that are great for a good skewer and drink, check out my guide to shooting the best izakayas in Singapore.

As a photographer, I liked that. The place doesn’t perform for the camera. It just keeps moving.

Chicken Satay and More: What I Ordered at the Food Centre

A close-up, overhead view of grilled chicken satay skewers on a white disposable plate, garnished with thick slices of raw cucumber and red onion, served next to a bowl of chunky peanut dipping sauce.

I ordered the three things that made the most sense for this stall: BBQ Chicken Wings, chicken satay, and a small mix of lok lok-style BBQ skewers.

For a light shared supper meal, I’d estimate around S$5 to S$15 per person, depending on how many wings, skewers, and drinks you add. Some listings place chicken wings from around S$4.80, chicken satay from around S$9, and lok lok items roughly around S$1.30 to S$4 each, depending on the item. Prices can change, so treat these as a guide, not a promise.

The BBQ Chicken Wings are the stall’s clearest hero item. Mine arrived hot, simple, and slightly greasy, with caramelized skin and charred edges. The flavor leaned savory-sweet, with enough smoke to stay on the fingers after the first bite.

The thick chilli sauce was spicy and punchy. It clung to the wing instead of sliding off, cutting through the sweetness and fat.

The chicken satay brought the strongest connection to the after-work skewer rhythm. Options may include chicken, pork, mutton, and beef, depending on availability. The skewers created repetition in the frame, and the peanut sauce added texture: grainy, thick, and warm in color. The satay was served with fresh onions, cucumber, and ketupat, classic accompaniments that enhanced the eating experience.

Carrot Cake and Other Hawker Centre Delights at Chomp Chomp Food Centre

A side-by-side photo displaying a bustling Carrot Cake hawker stall with a vendor cooking at a wok on the left, and a bright green plate piled high with dark, pan-fried radish cake on a wooden surface on the right.

No feast at Chomp Chomp is complete without trying some local hawker favorites like carrot cake. Despite its name, carrot cake here is actually fried radish cake, available in light (white) and dark versions. I opted for the light carrot cake, which was fried to order with egg, prawns, and a handful of chopped fresh spring onions, giving it a fresh and savory flavor.

The hawker centre is packed with other great food stalls offering a variety of vegetables, prawns, and other fresh ingredients that make every meal a feast. The vibrant atmosphere, combined with the smoke and sizzling sounds of the BBQ, creates an unforgettable eating experience.

Practical Notes on Visiting Wang BBQ Chicken Wing Satay

Commuters walk along the platform and ride the escalators inside the brightly lit Lorong Chuan MRT station on the Circle Line.

The nearest MRT is generally Lorong Chuan, but the walk can take around 20 minutes. Buses such as 73, 136, 315, and 317 serve the area from Serangoon Gardens. If you’re carrying camera gear, ride-hailing may be easier.

For fewer crowds, I’d come shortly after opening, around 4:30pm to 5:30pm. For stronger atmosphere, come later in the evening. If you’re photographing, early evening gives cleaner stall shots, while supper hours give more human movement.

Bring cash as backup, tissues or wet wipes, and a compact setup. A fast lens or small zoom is enough. I wouldn’t bring a tripod. It gets in the way, and the place moves too quickly.

Final Verdict on Wang BBQ Chicken Wing Satay at Chomp Chomp Food Centre

A vendor in a black shirt cooks skewers over a smoky grill at the brightly lit Wang BBQ Chicken Wing & Satay stall, which features glowing neon signage and a large, illuminated menu board.

Wang BBQ Chicken Wing & Satay isn’t a polished restaurant experience, and it doesn’t need to be. The wait can be long, the smoke can be heavy, the lighting can be difficult, and the food may depend on timing.

But as a photographer, I found value in all of that.

The stall works because of its rhythm: wings turning over heat, skewers stacked in rows, smoke catching the hawker-centre light, chilli left at the edge of the plate, and diners leaning into conversation as the table slowly fills with empty sticks.

It’s best for after-work groups, supper diners, people who enjoy BBQ wings and chicken satay, and anyone interested in Singapore’s local version of grilled food after dark. Not quiet. Not refined. But honest, smoky, and full of small moments worth waiting for.

Taste more beyond beers and satay at night and reset your midday with Singapore’s best Japanese curry spots.