Do young chefs have more culinary skill? Singapore restaurants take a chance on under-30 masters
Banking on bright new culinary talents, many Singaporean restaurants find their businesses increase when a young chef takes the helm
In May of 2018, Tan Ken Loon, owner of Singapore seafood eatery Naked Finn, initiated Magic Square, a 12-month-long incubation project to, in Loon’s words, “nurture future talents in the [food and beverage] industry”.
For each month, one of the three under-30 chefs – namely Abel Su, Desmond Shen and Marcus Leow – would take the lead, aided by the other two, in steering the nine-course menu of locally inspired dishes, sometimes using local ingredients.
In May, there was an awe-inspiring Malay-accented petai (stinky beans) miso by Shen. The next month, it was an eye-opening Peranakan-style Brussels sprouts in buah keluak (Indonesian black nut) emulsion by Leow that stole the show. And last June, Su doled out a local duck liver pate rounded with Hua Tiao wine and topped with a black citrus powder of yuzu and lime, a Chinese take on a decidedly French delicacy.
In the wooded reaches of Portsdown Road, the makeshift restaurant catering to 18 guests at a communal table roars to life at 6pm each night, and again at 8.30pm for the second seating.
In a city known for costly cars and expensive housing, Magic Square’s SG$78++ (US$56) per head price tag was a breath of fresh air. Perceived as a steal, the seats sold out fast. But more importantly, the year-long project sent out a message loud and clear – that we, Singapore’s foodies, as a community need to groom our pool of young cooking talents.
Perhaps a testimony to the success of Magic Square, Su, a former junior sous chef at Odette, wasted no time in landing a sous chef position at Christopher Kostow’s newly opened Ensue in Futian, China, hot on the heels of Magic Square’s cessation.
While the pop-up has come and gone, the city’s obsession with young chefs continues to simmer.
Like Magic Square, Mustard Seed started as a pop-up in June 2017 from the home of its chef-owner, Gan Ming Kiat, who turns 30 this November. Despite his relative youth, Gan has chalked up credible kitchen experiences including three and a half years at the now-defunct kaiseki eatery, Goto, and two years at one Michelin-starred Peranakan restaurant in Singapore, Candlenut, before he packed his bags and took off to Canberra to cook at the Singapore High Commission.