Category: Singapuraku

  • Would You Pay $12.80 For This Nasi Lemak?

    Would You Pay $12.80 For This Nasi Lemak?

    What? $12.80 for a plate of nasi lemak! That’s crazy!”

    That is a common response you’d get about this popular coconut rice meal, usually served with sambal.

    Chef Lee Eng Su, who worked in chic French restaurants around the world before opening The Coconut Club here, found inspiration from the Kuala Lumpur-style nasi lemak in Village Park Restaurant in Damansara.

    The place was said to be frequented by former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad.

    Chef Lee found a recipe online, tweaked it, and that was the start of his success story.

    Six months after The Coconut Club’s opening late last year, queues can still be seen every day.

    I visited The Coconut Club an hour before closing on a Saturday afternoon, and there was still a queue at the door.

    Apart from the crispy chicken, Chef Lee’s sambal was also outstanding. There was a kick to it despite its sweet undertone at first taste. The chilli-sting crept up on me and lingered for a while.

    The rice was fluffy, loose and did not have too much lemak as it was meant to be enjoyed with roasted peanuts, crispy ikan bilis, fried chicken (ayam goreng berempah), fried sunny side up egg and a few slices of Thai cucumber.

    Sides are available, and I was told some were off-menu, so you just have to ask for the daily specials.

    The Coconut Club is an appealing addition to the growing hipster cafe scene in Singapore.

    The place has a kopitiam-style kopi bar, and a raised centrepiece community table in the middle that lends an undulating multi-level look to the organised hipster chaos.

    Chef Lee (below) said he “spent a bomb on renovations”, and though the place looks good, The Coconut Club is jam-packed because of the nasi lemak and the honest, frank service, and nothing else.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Choa Chu Kang Fire – Washing Machine Running Laundry When It Caught Fire

    Choa Chu Kang Fire – Washing Machine Running Laundry When It Caught Fire

    Stomper James was shocked when he awoke to his washing machine on fire this morning (May 11) at around 9.30am.

    The incident happened at his home in Block 455, Choa Chu Kang Avenue 4, while he was still asleep in his room, and his mother was in the living room.

    According to James, his mother was watching television in the living room when she noticed thick smoke coming from the balcony where the washing machine was placed.

    After that, a power trip followed.

    She woke James up, who went to investigate the source of the smoke, discovering that their washing machine had caught fire, with smoke being emitted.

    He quickly ran to the bathroom and grabbed a pail of water, dousing the machine in water.

    After his second pail, the fire was extinguished at around 9.40am, and he quickly informed his siblings about the incident.

    Said James:

    “The washing machine was purchased in 2010.

    “I’m worried now as I have many appliances at home that are from the same company.

    “I’ve posted the incident on Facebook and brought the matter up to the company, but have received no replies so far.

    “Luckily, no one was hurt.

    “But I work in the afternoons, and during that time, my elderly parents are home by themselves.”

     

    Source: www.stomp.com.sg

  • Koh Eng Khoon – A Man Undeterred

    Koh Eng Khoon – A Man Undeterred

    While the police raid on Mr Koh Eng Khoon’s one-room rental flat on 29 April leaves some questions to be answered, Mr Koh himself is unperturbed, as he told The Independent (TISG).

    The police action came after letters were sent to the Prime Minister and the Deputy Prime Minister, with hell notes attached, expressing disappointment with the upcoming closure of the Sungei Road flea market.

    The letters had been signed off with Mr Koh’s name.

    “Don’t forget the 200 people and supporters. We only ask for this place. That’s not much,” wrote the letter which was signed off by “Koh Eng Khoon (Friend)”.

    The raid, which reportedly took place around midnight, caught Mr Koh by surprise. When asked by the police if he had sent the letters, Mr Koh denied having done so. He has also since made a police report about the use of his name.

    “The police took photos, searched my things and opened my cupboards,” he told the media. “They asked if I knew how to write in English but I don’t. I didn’t even know about the existence of such a letter.”

    Mr Koh, who heads the Association for the Recycling of Second Hand Goods, said he is “not  at all” deterred by the incident.

    “I am doing the right thing,” he told TISG. “I am speaking for the voices of 200 old people. Nobody would speak out if I am intimidated. As long as there is room for further negotiations, I would not call it quits.”

    He said that the process of trying to engage the authorities has been a bitter and hopeless one for him. He is disappointed that during the planning process for Sungei Road, for example, the 200 vendors’ views were never sought. He has, to date, sent many letters to the authorities, including to PM Lee, the NEA and other ministers, only to be met with silence, he said.

    Mr Koh, 76, along with some friends and supporters, has been campaigning for an alternative site from the government for the vendors to continue their trade. His effort so far, however, has been met with rejection from the authorities.

    “The government is suggesting that we go through further education,” Mr Koh said. “How is that even possible for uneducated old people? I feel cheated by their proposed solutions. We have worked for employers enough. It’s time to work for our interests within our limited capability and resources.”

    Mr Koh tells TISG that his Member of Parliament, Tin Pei Ling, had paid him a visit and offered him help with his necessities. Mr Koh said he declined the offer as he does not require such help.

    The authorities, including the NEA and the Ministry of Social Development and Family, have also extended assistance to the stall owners in Sungei Road, including offering to help them obtain hawker stalls.

    Out of those who play their trade at the flea market, however, only 5 have taken up hawker stalls, Mr Koh said.

    He explained that setting up and running a hawker stall is not cheap, and that they would not be selling secondhand goods if they could afford the rents of hawker stalls.

    The Sungei Road flea market, on the other hand, is a rent-free place to cater to the elderly who even have difficulty to finance their household utilities bills.

    Supporters have taken to petition campaigns to try and change the fate of the flea market, but it is unlikely to move the authorities’ position on the matter.

    As for the letters sent to the PM and the DPM, the police have arrested two persons suspected to be involved in the incident.

    Some have questioned the police action against Mr Koh, and asked if it was appropriate for the authorities to raid his home and seize his handphone simply based, apparently, on a letter with his name on it.

    The police visit, Mr Koh said, had startled his wife, who had been sleeping in the room.

    Since there was apparently no evidence to link Mr Koh to the letters, could the police have instead requested that he went down to the police station the next day to help with investigations, instead of raiding his home at midnight?

    Was there a need to pay him a visit so late in the night, especially considering that Mr Koh and his wife are both senior citizens?

    Could anyone be put through the same situation if his or her name was used by others for nefarious purposes?

    Mr Koh, when asked if he is upset that his name was used in such a way, said he is not.

    “In a way, I am glad because it brought publicity to the issue we have been campaigning on,” he said. “Until this incident, not much publicity was given to our cause.”

     

    Source: www.theindependent.sg

  • Touts Profiteering From Purchase Of Ed Sheeran Concert Tickets

    Touts Profiteering From Purchase Of Ed Sheeran Concert Tickets

    UK Singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran’s two-night concert sold out within hours of being put on sale.

    Given the demand, tickets for Sheeran’s first show are being touted on third-party sites – but at a premium. There have been offers circulating on online marketplace Carousell, with some advertising two pairs of tickets for as much as S$4,000 – up from the original price of between S$108 to S$248 for a ticket.

    One Carousell user, for instance, was selling Cat 1 tickets at S$2,200 for four or S$600 for one – up from the original price of S$248 per ticket – with a “guaranteed best view of Ed Sheeran”.

     

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Alfian Sa’at: The Voice (Nanyang Edition) Debacle A Lesson In The (Lack Of) Equality

    Alfian Sa’at: The Voice (Nanyang Edition) Debacle A Lesson In The (Lack Of) Equality

    Yes, I am tired of stuff like The Voice (Nanyang Edition) cropping up time and again, I am tired of some Chinese people who saw nothing wrong with it, of them seeing no problem when Chineseness is squarely equated with Singapore when it is just one square in the giant patchwork that is Singapore culture, I am tired of them mentioning Shila Amzah any chance they get as if that settles the debate, I am tired of the fact that they don’t see that it’s not just a matter of learning Mandarin to join the contest but that I’m not considered significant enough for the show to be marketed to someone like me, I am tired of having to remind others that I exist too, that my language is not the same as yours, that if I want to choose to learn your language it will be out of my own free will and not because I have to succumb to a monolingual environment that you have shaped in your image, whether out of thoughtlessness or convenience or a demonstration of majoritarian might…

    But I am aware that this fatigue will interfere with my own openness to other cultures, to my curiosity about the beauty and the wisdom contained within them, that I must never close myself to the other even when the other wears the garments of an oppressor, that I will continue to catch the offerings at the Huayi Festival and the M1 Chinese Theatre Festival even if I don’t see a reciprocal gesture of those catching Pesta Raya or the Kalaa Utsavam programmes, that I must always be conscious that in any multicultural society there is a relationship between language and power, that there are those who believe to speak another’s language is to submit to their rule and power (and this is the pathology of the vernacular school system in Malaysia), that however difficult it is to de-link language and power one has to do it because it will otherwise trap your ways of thinking, that there is no such thing as a superior or inferior culture, as there is no superior or inferior language, that though there are dominant languages they do not exist to dominate and though there are minority languages their fate is not to be subordinate, that however foreign a language might be one must always keep faith that it contains the word for ‘patience’, or ‘forgiveness’, or the very concept at the heart of this: ‘equality’.

     

    Source: Alfian Sa’at

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