She was a sous chef at a Michelin restaurant. Her grandmother's sudden dementia diagnosis made her rethink her career.
Burnout and her grandmother's sudden dementia diagnosis made her rethink her career.
She now runs a small home-based café, selling $5 coffees and matcha while tending to her grandmother.
When I entered the apartment unit in Singapore's far west, I almost thought I'd taken a wrong turn.
Aside from a wooden bar cart with a sign and a coffee machine station, there was little indication that the apartment hosted a new café run by Chia Jin Fang, who until March cooked at a top restaurant.
Chia guided me to the wooden dining table, which was sitting under a wooden cross on the wall.
Lunar New Year decorations were still hanging from the walls in June. I spotted her 86-year-old grandmother hanging laundry.
Chia's new workplace could not be more different from her kitchen in Les Amis, a three-Michelin-starred French restaurant in Orchard, Singapore's high-fashion shopping district.
A fruitful but unhappy career in fine dining
Chia fell into restaurants early, studying culinary arts at Singapore's Institute of Technical Education. Then followed a short internship at Les Amis, where she was converted to a full time chef in 2016.
She loved how the menus changed with the seasons in France and that she could work with the best produce.
But it was grueling work.
"I'd leave the house at 6:30 a.m. and only be back home at midnight," Chia, 29, said.
Although she got the weekends off, she slept through them to recharge.
"Even though I loved what I did at Les Amis, I felt like I was wasting myself away," she said.
Les Amis did not respond to a request for comment from BI.
An unexpected diagnosis turned her world upside down
The turning point for Chia was when her grandmother, who raised her, was diagnosed with dementia in December.
Chia quit her job at Les Amis in March to take care of her grandmother.
"Somehow it feels like the roles are reversed now, where I am the adult, she's like the kid because of her dementia, and I'm taking care of her," Chia said.
Although she knew it was the right move, she couldn't help feeling a twinge of regret about leaving her restaurant job.
"I still loved what I did there. It felt like a waste, because at the point they were giving me a salary raise as well," she said.
She said she earned 4,500 Singapore dollars a month, or about $3,500, when she worked as a sous chef.
But the cher had always dreamed of building something of her own.
Renting space for a café was out of the question in Singapore, one of the world's most expensive cities.
She landed on starting a home-based café. Like many millennials in Singapore, Chia lives with her parents and her grandmother in a public housing apartment.
She spent SG$7,000 on the equipment needed for a café: an espresso machine, a coffee grinder, a small refrigerator, and some wooden tables.
By May, she launched The Noob Coffee.
$5 drinks and homemade banana cake, served by a chatty grandmother
Chia said that despite her years in the kitchen, the closest she had come to making drinks was preparing sauces. She bought a coffee machine and grinder with no idea how to use them.
But she wanted a break from cooking, so she decided to launch a drinks-only café.
"I named it The Noob Coffee because I'm a noob to drinks. It felt like I was starting afresh," she said.
Her menu includes basic black-and-white coffees, starting from SG$4. Her most popular concoctions are her Earl Gray matcha and strawberry and yogurt matcha, which cost SG$6 and SG$6.50, respectively.
The first sip of the Earl Grey matcha was refreshing, sweet but not overly so. The Earl Grey syrup, which she makes herself, complemented the matcha's bitterness.
The drink paired nicely with a slice of fresh homemade banana cake that was soft, moist, and filled with gooey chocolate chips.
Chia said that she sells about 100 drinks daily on weekdays, and over 200 on weekends. She said the business has made about SG$2,000 a week since the May launch.
Word of her café spread on social media, and demand has been high enough that she asked customers to reserve 15-minute timeslots to buy their drinks.
Ye Min Yin, an after-work regular, said she loves chatting with Chia's grandmother. Ye, a 27-year-old business owner, said Noob's matcha was thick and worth the price, not diluted like other cafés she'd tried.
Guests are welcome to sit around the family dining table to enjoy their drinks. Chia said her grandmother helps where she can, passing drinks to customers and making small talk.
"During the opening, I saw her going around talking to people, and it was nice to see her this way, Chia said. "I cannot cure her dementia, of course, but I can slow its progress down."
For Chia, the café is a chance to take it easier. She says she starts her day by baking banana cake and having coffee, and she mans the operation from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
At Les Amis, she said she barely interacted with customers.
"I feel more accomplished because this is what I started myself," she said. "So, at the end of the day, even though I'm tired, I still feel very fulfilled."
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USA Today
13 hours ago
- USA Today
Camp Mystic girls had a safe haven by the river for 100 years. Then, the flood came.
There is something special, almost sacred about a place where girls go for four weeks, putting down phones and away from boys, which brings them closer together. The first time Allie Coates ran barefoot across the buffalo grass at Camp Mystic, she was eight. Her tiny strides nestled among the cypress trees near the Guadalupe River. She caught a catfish, mailed her first letter and learned to ride a horse. Thirteen summers later, she was still there, this time as a counselor, teaching 8-year-old girls how to swim and fish, French braid hair and play guitar. She can still see herself as the shy girl snuggled under the hot pink comforter. Her name embroidered in white across her bunk in Bubble Inn. It's the same cabin where this year, 13 girls and their counselors were swept away in a Fourth of July flood in Texas hill country. In all, 27 children and staff from Camp Mystic died among at least 120 in the state. Today, her Los Angeles apartment smells like chocolate chips and oatmeal. She's finding comfort baking 'Tweety' cookies, named after camp director Tweety Eastland — whose husband died in the flood trying to get girls to higher ground. She is 25 now, a social media manager, and is wearing a silver bracelet filled with charms from her time at camp, including an M for the most improved at canoeing. She pulls out her camp Bible, reading from crumpled papers in her bubbled teenage handwriting: Matthew 5:16, 'Be a light for all to see.' As Coates' mom drove her to camp from Dallas each year, she began to relax. The highway that cut through scrubby desert turned to flat gentle hills with mesquite trees until Highway 89 and its craggy limestone led them through the green metal gate emblazoned with a 'CM.' It was a place that felt timeless, away from selfies and cell phones, boys and social media, a place where Sunday fried chicken lunches gave way to One Direction dance parties. Mystic Girls, as the former campers call themselves, are mourning what was lost: the girls beginning their camp journeys and their counselors who tried to save them. The innocence of a place and time where they say they found the best version of themselves, a place that made them who they are. 'It was a safe space to be weird and awkward, where we could be silly and just be ourselves,' Coates says. 'Just to be girls.' In the week since the flood as they hear heartbreaking stories of loss, generations of Mystic Girls across the country are turning to each other. They are hosting prayer vigils and fundraisers, sharing photos and favorite stories. They are seeking the familiar that takes them back to camp, the cheese enchilada recipe and the yellow sheet cake with chocolate frosting, the songs and prayers that sustain them. See how the Texas floods unfolded: Why Camp Mystic was in a hazardous location A generation of campers Julia Hawthorne's first year at Camp Mystic was 1987. She followed her older sister, who had followed their aunt who had gone to the camp in the 1970s. Hawthorne later became a counselor at the camp, teaching girls what she had learned. Her cousins went to Camp Mystic in the 1990s. When she was pregnant in 2006 and learned she was having a girl, the first thing she told her sister: 'Oh my gosh, she can go to Mystic.' Her second daughter, Presley, would be born four years later, also a Mystic girl. Her two nieces are in second grade and are registered to attend next year, if the camp re-opens for what will be its 100th anniversary. 'These songs that we sang every day at camp, they are the same songs that my aunt learned, my daughters learned,' says Hawthorne, 49, a dentist in Austin. 'There is some comfort in that right now.' Girls often look for their grandmother's names written on ceilings of the unairconditioned cabins, a tradition dating back to when the camp moved to all girls in 1939. There are so many names and so little space, the girls now often write on plaques that line cabin walls. The camp opened in 1926 and three generations of the same family have run it, with disagreement over money among siblings in 2011 that was sorted out through court, and the family kept it, even when summers of travel volleyball teams and volunteer trips threaten it. Each summer, about 2,000 girls from 8 to 18 attend the camp over three sessions. Little has changed over the years, other than baton twirling giving way to lacrosse, and a charm school class changing to beauty inside and out, where girls are taught that painting your nails red can help keep you from biting them. Former First Lady Laura Bush was a counselor. There is something special, almost sacred about a place where girls go for four weeks. A place where they put down their phones. A place where they get away from the boys. A place that brings them closer together. The days are measured by sunsets, with rituals and traditions, the same ones your mother had. Brooklynn Hawthorne learned to ride horses in the same place her mom did, slept in the same cabins and ate chocolate chip cookies from the same recipe. It's the only place in the world where she and her mom could share the exact same experience, not bound by space and time. 'You feel like you're in your own little world,' Brooklynn, 19, now a sophomore at the University of Texas Austin says. 'You don't have to worry about boys. You don't have your phones, but you don't even want them. You have your camp friends that you've known since you were 8 and it's all you want." Her mom concedes that it's much more difficult to be a girl now 'with the pressures of social media,' but even in 1987, she relished the time. 'For us, it wasn't so much as unplugged,' she says. 'You don't have to think about the pressures. You just get to be a girl.' While the camp is Christian, it also draws girls who are agnostic, Jewish and some who are atheist. What drives everything about the camp are three tenets that women say they try to still live beyond the green gates of Camp Mystic: Be a better person, let camp bring out the best in you, and grow spiritually. On Sundays, the girls wear white go to a worship service on the banks of the Guadalupe, the river that has washed so much away, where they sit with their cabinmates, and sing a Capella. Sunday evenings, the older girls read vespers and share their gratitude. 'There's something about the beauty of camp mystic that you just feel God's presence when you are there,' Julia says. From fear to lifelong friends Katherine Haver's family moved to Texas when she was 2. Their neighbor told them about Camp Mystic, and her mom put her on the waiting list. The first year she could go, she was too afraid. The next year, she nervously agreed, a little girl whose front two adult teeth had come in full size, who liked to read and asked a lot of questions. 'Girls who had just met the last year were already close,' she says. 'But being around them just felt happy.' That night the girls were sorted into two groups which they'll remain each year at camp and will compete with in activities and sports. Pulling out a blue or red piece of construction paper from a big cowboy determined something that defines the girls to this day and when they meet, they'll ask: Kiowa or Tonkawa. She drew blue – Kiowa – and the older girls rushed to pick her up and carry her to sit with her group. 'You feel so special, here are these older girls who include you, you get to be kind of a grown up,' says Haver, 24, who is in her third year of medical school in Galveston, Texas. When she reflects back on eight years of camp, there were the dance parties to Hannah Montana and Taylor Swift, movie nights, the Blue Bell ice cream she had at lunch each day (and still looks for Birthday Cake flavor in the grocery store). But it was more than that, it was to grow spiritually. 'You could take that to mean whatever you wanted. You really just worked at becoming a better person,' she said. 'It was how do you go out in the world and be a better human.' 'What's really beautiful, those memories, they only exist between us,' Haver says. 'Regardless of what separates us, will always unite us.' A place to belong While Coates often struggled with friends in high school, Camp Mystic was a refuge. She could be herself, whether that meant trying a new hairstyle or wearing matching T-shirts with her friends with a cat DJing on it. 'The opportunity to unplug, get off my phone, be in nature and be with people who genuinely care about you was one of the best experiences I ever had,' she says 'No matter what was going on, I always had Mystic to look forward to.' She moved from cabin to cabin from Bubble Inn to Rough House to Hang Over, to a counselor during summer breaks from Pepperdine University. The girls she met at 8 were still her friends. This, she says, made campers more like family. 'You got to know them when you were little so there was less judgement than when you meet girls as teenagers,' she says. 'You could be loud. You could be silly. You didn't have to prove anything to anyone. You just show up as you.' She worked to create that same feeling for the 23 little 8-year-old girls who came into her Bubble Inn not knowing anyone. She taught them to braid their hair, where to put a stamp on a letter home, everything. 'You forget, these girls are so little, they are just babies. They don't even know how to brush their teeth sometimes because their moms were always with them, doing everything for them' she says. 'So you love them and teach them.' The counselors loved the girls as if they were their own little sisters. Girls who often became so homesick that she and other counselors used Camp Mystic's time-tested remedy: a special homesick pill, a colorful Tums. And a hug. She thought about the girls the camp lost this year, the girls who won't get to use their cute bedding they picked out and used year after year, like she did. And the parents who will retrieve their colorful trunks, but not their girls. It feels impossible. She looks for the good as camp taught her. She takes comfort in knowing all those girls, just like she did each night under her same hot pink comforter, drifted to sleep their last night to taps playing over the camp loudspeaker and a message at 10:30 p.m.: 'Goodnight Camp Mystic, we love you.' Laura Trujillo is a national columnist focusing on health and wellness. She is the author of "Stepping Back from the Ledge: A Daughter's Search for Truth and Renewal," and can be reached at ltrujillo@


Indianapolis Star
a day ago
- Indianapolis Star
USA TODAY reveals readers' favorite type of fry condiments for National French Fry Day
Friday is National French Friday Day, and when it comes to what we're dipping those deep-fried potatoes in, USA TODAY readers are overwhelmingly in support of ketchup. In an Instagram and Facebook poll shared on Friday morning, 59% of USA TODAY followers voted ketchup as their favorite condiment for dipping French fries. As of 2:45 p.m. ET on July 11, 663 followers had taken the poll, with 59% in favor of ketchup. Surprisingly, "other" came in second at 15%, and ranch and mayo tied for third at 13%. USA TODAY readers aren't outliers. A survey published by Talker Research in New York last month found that 81% of Americans deem ketchup as the best condiment for fries. And not only that, but 78% of participants said dipping sauce can make or break a meal and 73% of Americans eat their French fries with a condiment. National French Fry Day 2025: Get free fries and deals at McDonald's, Burger King, more Interested in weighing in? Visit USA TODAY's Instagram or Facebook account to take the poll on each platform's Story (accessible by clicking or touching the USA TODAY profile photo). Meta Story polls only allow up to four options, and voters could not indicate their specific preferences if they answered "other." National French Fry Day, a made-up holiday, is celebrated every second Friday of July, according to the National Day Calendar. For the "holiday," countless restaurant chains offer free fries or promotional deals to customers.


Hamilton Spectator
a day ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Norma Bidwell's comfort foods: Chilled soup and easy summer recipes
Editor's note: Norma Bidwell was The Spectator's beloved food columnist for more than half a century, signing off her popular Stoveline column in 2006 at the age of 91. With rising grocery costs and global turmoil, now seems a perfect time to revive her recipes for simple, comfort foods for you to enjoy. Home cooking has never been so top of mind. From easy salads and comfort food to share. We've got some of the best recipes, picked from The Spectator's Stoveline archives in hopes to help everyone with that time-honoured daily thrill of cooking. Q: I love to serve chilled soups in the hot weather. Recently, I tasted a wonderful cream of carrot cold soup and would like to have such a recipe — one to serve about six. A: This comes from a wonderful cookbook, 'Good Food From The Garret,' by the Dundas Valley Art School. Makes 6 to 8 servings To achieve perfect smoothness when making this soup, you need a food processor. It has a definite flavour and a beautiful colour. Garnish with a sprig of watercress and a carrot curl. Using the steel blade in the work bowl, process onion until coarsely chopped. Sauté in butter until translucent, stir in the curry powder and dill and a dash of nutmeg and continue cooking for several minutes. Pare and slice carrots, combine with onions; add stock. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Cook until carrots are soft. Purée the mixture in three or four batches. Chill thoroughly. Stir in the chilled cream just before serving. Carrots and cream have an affinity for each other. Serve in chilled soup bowls. Q: I can't be bothered making pizza crust, but would like to make miniature pizzas. What could I use instead of the crust? A: Either English muffins or hamburger buns make tasty little pizza snacks with practically no work. Vary the topping to suit yourself. Makes 8 Split muffins or hamburger buns and toast lightly under the broiler. Place on cookie sheet and spread with spaghetti sauce and top with slivers of sausage and narrow strips of cheese. Sprinkle with oregano. Bake in 350 F oven for 10 minutes or under broiler until cheese melts. Note: Instead of sausage, you could use crumbled crisp bacon. Q: My mother used to make a baked strawberry pie with a lattice topping. She never wrote down recipes and didn't teach me how to cook, so I need your help in trying to duplicate her pie. A: This delicious pie is served cool but not refrigerated. The chopped almonds cover the bottom of pastry shell, and they really make the pie extra special. Makes 6 to 8 servings Add sugar to strawberries and stir to mix. Add chopped almonds to cover bottom of pastry shell. Top with the sugared berries and add a lattice topping. Bake on lowest shelf of preheated 425 F (215 C) oven until juice bubbles in the centre, about 35 minutes. Serve cooled, but not refrigerated. Sprinkle with icing sugar put through a wire sieve just before serving. Pass bowl of sweetened whipped cream or French vanilla ice cream balls. Approximate nutrition per serving (when serving 8, pie only): 240 calories; 10 g fat; 4 g protein; 35 g carbohydrates; 4 g fibre Q: My family loves peach cobbler. Now, with the strawberry season near, I am wondering if I could make a strawberry cobbler. I would need a detailed recipe, if you have one. A: Cobblers have always been family favourites in the fresh-fruit season. The same cobbler topping can be used for a variety of fruit desserts. I am sure your family will enjoy the strawberry version. Makes 8 servings For the topping: For the fruit: To make topping: Stir together flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Cut in butter until crumbly. In another bowl, combine egg and milk; add all at once to dry ingredients. Stir with fork just until all dry ingredients are moistened. Set aside. To make fruit: In saucepan, combine ⅔ cup (160 mL) sugar and cornstarch. Stir in water; cook and stir until thickened and bubbly. Cut any large berries in half. Add berries to mixture in saucepan; cook and stir until bubbly, about 5 minutes longer. Stir in vanilla. Turn into a 2-quart (2-L) casserole. Drop topping in 8 mounds on top of hot fruit. Sprinkle with 1 tbsp (15 mL) of sugar. Bake, uncovered, at 425 F (215 C) until lightly browned, about 25 minutes. Serve warm with ice cream. Approximate nutrition per serving: 330 calories; 7 g fat; 3 g protein; 40 g carbohydrates; 2 g fibre