
Traditional bak zhang to reach for this Dragon Boat Festival, Lifestyle News
Bak chang season is upon us - it falls on May 31 this year - and if you're in the old-is-gold camp, you'll want to eschew new-fangled flavours for the reliable classics. Pork, mushrooms, chestnuts, and maybe some abalone thrown in for auspicious measure are all we need in a good bak zhang.
If you agree, here's where you can get traditional zhang that'll sate those annual cravings. Li Bai at Sheraton Towers
We can see our Chinese mothers nod in approval at Li Bai's Traditional Rice Dumpling (from $58). Packed with five-spiced pork belly, salted egg yolk, roasted duck, mushrooms, chestnuts, and dried scallops, this thicc beauty is steadfastly traditional and just doesn't try so hard. Joo Chiat Kim Choo
Generations of Singaporeans have grown up on Joo Chiat Kim Choo's Nyonya Rice Dumplings ($8.30), the same ones that made this family-owned brand a household name. In each parcel is the classic mix of braised pork and candied winter melon stewed in a "secret spice blend" and encased in sticky glutinous rice. Most Nyonyas would baulk at the idea of an all-white kueh zhang, and they'll definitely cry, "guuuss-mangat" when they hear that Kim Choo charges more for Blue Pea Nyonya Rice Dumplings (someone's gotta dye that rice, right?). You'll pay $14.80 for the extra effort, thank you very much. Wah Lok at Carlton Hotel
If you're traditional but a bit bougie, try Wah Lok's Dried Oyster and Conpoy Dumpling ($28.80, 600g). Loaded with dried oysters, premium dried scallops, pork, mushrooms, and salted egg, this umami-rich dumpling is giving Cantonese congee vibes. Peach Blossoms
If you're towkay bougie, you're gonna need ingot-shaped abalone in your rice dumplings. Check out Peach Blossoms' Traditional Abalone, Preserved Vegetables and Pork Belly Dumpling ($38.80, 500g). It's so extravagant, it'll feed two people easily. Man Fu Yuan
No surprises lurk in Man Fu Yuan's Traditional Hokkien-Style Premium Rice Dumpling ($22.80). Within its steamed bamboo leaves is that classic combination of pork belly, chestnuts, mushrooms, dried shrimp, and salted egg yolk. Hai Tien Lo at Pan Pacific Singapore View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Hai Tien Lo (@haitienlo)
Hai Tien Lo's Hokkien Rice Dumpling with Pork and Salted Egg Yolk ($18) also keeps things simple and timeless. Think five-spice pork belly, salted egg, green beans, and perfectly sticky rice. Grandma would approve.
[[nid:688704]]
This article was first published in Wonderwall .sg .
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
14 hours ago
- Straits Times
YES 933 DJ Hazelle Teo is engaged to pianist James Wong
James Wong had proposed to Hazelle Teo on the final night of her work trip in Qingdao. PHOTOS: HEYHIHAZELLE/INSTAGRAM SINGAPORE - Wedding bells will soon be ringing for local DJ Hazelle Teo and pianist James Wong. On June 6, Mediacorp's Chinese-language radio station YES 933 DJ Hazelle Teo wrote a collaborative post with her now-fiance James Wong, saying: 'This feels so right. We feel so right. The rest of our lives feels so right.' The pair first met in 2024 when Teo, 31, reached out to Wong, 24, who is also a content creator, for a collaboration . This featured Wong on the keys, while Teo sang a mash-up of Taylor Swift's hits Love Story (2008) and Enchanted (2010). The proposal took place in the Chinese port city of Qingdao, where Wong surprised Teo in her hotel room on the final night of her week-long work trip. In her caption, Teo wrote that she arrived at the hotel at 1.00am, ready to rest before heading to the airport at 6.00am. 'But when I opened the door, I was greeted by soft orange lighting, lots of flowers, someone holding a camera, plenty of confusion... and then I saw my then-boyfriend (now fiance, lol) standing there nervously.' In the series of photographs uploaded on Instagram, a petal-adorned candle-lit walkway was seen leading up to a bouquet of flowers in the centre of the room. The set-up was complete with a heart-shaped cake with the words 'Marry Me'. According to Teo, Wong had helped her apply for additional leave after the work trip, and had also prepared spare change for the rest of their time in Qingdao . 'He planned it all - quietly, sweetly, thoughtfully - and it turned out to be even more beautiful than I ever imagined.' Wong subsequently left a comment on his lover's post, quipping: 'As a wedding pianist, I've always been part of other people's special day. Today, my turn is here. Thank you everybody.' Fellow YES 933 DJ Kunhua left his well-wishes for the couple in the comments, also musing that he can finally tell everyone why he returned from China alone. Other industry friends, including 987FM DJ Sonia Chew and YES933 DJ Zhu Zeliang, have also posted congratulatory messages for the couple. Apart from being a DJ, Teo hosts events. She has also dabbled in acting, playing supporting roles in dramas such as Die Die Also Must Serve (2018) and Babies On Board (2018). Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
15 hours ago
- Straits Times
Chinese man defies demolition orders to build madcap rural home
The higher floors where Mr Chen sleeps sway in the wind and gets the sense of being a nomad. PHOTO: AFP Mr Chen Tianming standing in front of his house labelled China's strangest "nail house" in Xingyi, in southwest Guizhou province, on May 25. PHOTO: AFP Xingyi, China - Surrounded by the rubble of demolished homes, Mr Chen Tianming's ramshackle tower of faded plyboards and contorted beams juts into the sky in southwestern China, a teetering monument to one man's stubbornness. Authorities razed most of Mr Chen's village in Guizhou province in 2018 to build a lucrative tourist resort in a region known for its spectacular rice paddies and otherworldly mountain landscapes. Mr Chen, 42, refused to leave, and after the project faltered, defied a flurry of demolition notices to build his family's humble stone bungalow higher and higher. He now presides over a bewildering 10-storey, pyramid-shaped warren of rickety staircases, balconies and other add-ons, drawing comparisons in Chinese media to the fantastical creations of legendary Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. 'I started building out of practicality, trying to renovate and expand our home,' Mr Chen told AFP on a sweltering May afternoon as he climbed ladders and ducked wooden beams in his labyrinthine construction. 'But then it became more of an interest and hobby that I enjoyed,' he said. His obsessive tinkering and lack of building permits continue to draw ire from the local government. The higher floors where he sleeps sway in the wind, and dozens of ropes and cables tether the house to the ground as if the whole thing might one day float away. 'When I'm up here... I get the sense of being a nomad,' Mr Chen said, gazing out at apartment blocks, an airport and distant mountains. 'People often say it's unsafe and should be demolished... but I'll definitely never let anyone tear it down.' 'Nail house' Mr Chen was now master of a 'nail house' – a Chinese term for those whose owners dig in and refuse to relocate despite official compensation offers. PHOTO: AFP Local authorities once had big plans to build an 800-acre tourist resort – including a theatre and artificial lake – on Mr Chen's native soil. They promised to compensate villagers, but Mr Chen's parents refused, and he vowed to help them protect the home his grandfather had built in the 1980s. Even as neighbours moved out and their houses were bulldozed, Mr Chen stayed put, even sleeping alone in the house for two months 'in case (developers) came to knock it down in the night'. Six months later, like many ill-considered development projects in highly indebted Guizhou, the resort was cancelled. Virtually alone among the ruined village, Mr Chen was now master of a 'nail house' – a Chinese term for those whose owners dig in and refuse to relocate despite official compensation offers. Mr Chen spent seven years and over 100,000 yuan defying authorities' demolition notices. PHOTO: AFP A quirk of China's rampant development and partial private property laws, nail houses sometimes make headlines for delaying money-spinning construction projects or forcing developers to divert roads or build around shabby older homes. Even as Mr Chen forged ahead, completing the fifth floor in 2019, the sixth in 2022 and the seventh in 2023, he continued to receive threats of demolition. Last August, his home was designated an illegal construction, and he was ordered to destroy everything except the original bungalow within five days. This picture taken on May 20 shows the top of Mr Chen's house. PHOTO: AFP He says he has spent tens of thousands of yuan fighting the notices in court, despite losing several preliminary hearings. But he continues to appeal, and the next hearing has been delayed. 'I'm not worried. Now that there's no one developing the land, there's no need for them to knock the place down', he said. Tourist attraction In recent years, ironically, Mr Chen's house has begun to lure a steady trickle of tourists itself. On Chinese social media, users describe it as China's strangest nail house, likening it to the madcap buildings in Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli masterpieces 'Howl's Moving Castle' and 'Spirited Away'. Visitors taking photos near Mr Chen's house, labelled as China's strangest 'nail house'. PHOTO: AFP As dusk falls, Mr Chen illuminates his home with decorative lanterns, and people gather on the nearby dirt road to admire the scene. 'It's beautiful,' local resident He Diezhen told AFP as she snapped photos. 'If there are no safety issues, it could become an (official) local landmark,' she said. Mr Chen said the house makes many visitors remember their whimsical childhood fantasies. '(People) dream of building a house for themselves with their own hands... but most can't make it happen,' he said. 'I not only thought of it, I made it a reality.' AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


AsiaOne
18 hours ago
- AsiaOne
40 S'poreans going on 'Single's Inferno' trips to Japan to find love, minus the cameras, Singapore News
SINGAPORE - In a few weeks' time, five women and five men will be flying to a villa in Japan on a trip inspired by South Korean reality television series Single's Inferno. The participants will not have met before going on the four-day, three-night trip, and will share a room with those of the same gender, as in the show. They are paying $1,111 each for a yacht trip, an Osaka day trip and an activity of their choice such as Universal Studios Japan and tea ceremony in Nara, among other things. Around 40 Singaporeans have signed up for three such trips, planned by Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts design practice student Leo Ching Ling, 24, and business owner Ric Ang, 50. The pair, who met while Ms Leo was interning at a company Mr Ang was working in, have held around 10 social mixers around the numerology theme since August 2024 under their events brand Until 1111. Their parties offer compatibility readings, tarot card readings and purpose-infused crystal-making. Numerology is a practice that assigns a number to individuals based on their birthdate and name. The belief is that these numbers hold insights into personality, life path and potential. The parties are some of the latest initiatives to help sparks fly among singles, offering an alternative to dating apps. Others include singles pitch nights and dating mixers bringing games seen on platforms like YouTube and TikTok to the public. These events tend to be small-scale, with guests vetted for a more intimate setting. The idea for the trip came when Mr Ang's friend, who owns a villa in Japan, reached out to him to collaborate. Ms Leo said that they shared the idea on TikTok, and many expressed interest. "A trip together would be a good chance to create a core memory with each other, as well as a potentially long-lasting relationship." Participants asked to see photos of one another before the trip, but Ms Leo refused, wanting to keep the "surprise element" and not have them judge one another based on physical looks before meeting. Held every month, their mixers are attended by 20 to more than 40 guests bonding over speed dating, tarot readings and other activities. For some singles, signing up for such mixers is a way to expand their social circle and boost their odds of finding a partner after leaving school. Ms Lim Yun Qian and Ms Lynette Kee started a series of Plus One dating mixers in February as an answer to dating app fatigue, under their Footnotes initiative, which offers hosted experiences. "I think the idea of a 'meet cute' or meeting in a real life situation is something that everyone wants," said Ms Lim. "We want to make people comfortable," she added, likening their role to hosting a house party. Nearly 1,000 signed up for the three mixers, but each session was capped at 48 participants. Participants were chosen based on a form outlining their goals for the event, with online profiles reviewed to curate a more compatible group, said Ms Kee. Participants, who were aged 24 to 35, came with a friend as their "plus one" to put them at ease. Ms Lim and Ms Kee, who are both 29, tapped their expertise as full-time creative producers to create experiences usually seen on dating shows on TV and YouTube. The mixers' activities included doing a pitch for the single friend, helping to pass on messages to someone their friend was eyeing, or going around doing challenges on a Bingo card. The prize for the winning pitch was a 10-minute speed date with someone of the winner's choice, set up by the organisers. Proving that Singaporeans are not boring: Meet the people making dating fun again Falling out of love with dating apps? Young singles switch to events, other algorithms, old tricks The meticulous curation of guests paid off for one attendee, who said: "The selection of people was quite well put together. Everyone was friendly and willing to meet people. The activities made things a little less awkward." Added the 30-year-old content strategist, who declined to be named: "App interactions are fleeting, so an in-person event feels like you get to know people a bit more before you cast judgment." Although he is not dating anyone from the two Plus One mixers he attended, he has made friends who he has gone bouldering with. Ms Joell Tee, who founded Dinner with Strangers in 2022, started co-hosting singles pitch nights called Fishbowl, inspired by American reality TV show Shark Tank, where entrepreneurs make business pitches to investors. "The premise feels quite low stakes, friendly and safe. Signing up with your friends kind of takes the edge off a dating event, because even if nothing comes out of it, it's still something that you were able to do with your friends, and it's still fun," said the 28-year-old, who works as a project manager in a bank. Around 160 people in their early 20s to late 30s have attended the three pitch nights held since August 2024. Attendee Denise Ong, 27, said going through the motions on dating apps has turned into "a numbers game where everyone starts to treat each other as disposable". "While the main objective (of going to Fishbowl) is to find a partner, I think it was nice to be reminded of everyone's humanity and individuality," said the marketing executive. It was her first time being pitched to a crowd. "I was a bit nervous, naturally. But I saw the deck beforehand, plus she's my best friend and knows me inside out, so overall I was enjoying it, even though I was a little 'paiseh'." Still, some singles have reservations about attending newfangled dating events, which may not meet expectations. Ms Ong went for a social mixer by Never Strangers, run by entertainment company Unfiltered, where she was drawn to a participant but later found out that he was not looking to date. She added: "There were even people who signed up together, and just didn't talk to anyone the entire night." "I think the more 'mass' these events are, the more superficial and unlikely it is to have good conversations, and I really do feel like that's what it's all about." Another participant Khor Kai Xiang, 29, who went for the same event, said he was matched with a man due to male participants outnumbering females. One Fishbowl participant, 29-year-old Nick, said he and his friend put together more "haphazard" presentations than the other participants who took the pitch more seriously. Nick, who works in finance and declined to give his full name, said: "We were slightly taken aback that some participants went straight to listing their expectations or requirements. The subjects ranged from marriage, number of children, to the infamous BTO (Build-To-Order flats)." Less crowd, more chemistry Meanwhile, Mr Lim, a 26-year-old financial adviser who did not give his full name, said his friends questioned why he was going to an Until 1111 mixer, pointing to a stigma attached to dating events. Little did he know he would meet a girl at the party's speed dating segment - though their brief conversation went "terribly". She was not interested in him at first, as he was a year younger than her and shared the same name as her former boyfriend. But he slipped her a note to say he enjoyed talking to her and hoped to keep in touch. They went out with a group of friends from the event a few weeks later, and he succeeded in asking her out after. "I was really lucky. These things are really hit or miss," said Mr Lim, adding that both his girlfriend and himself are introverts. "She's funny in her own way. She's a bit weird, but I'm also weird, and I just feel like she just complements me, and I can talk to her about anything. She's sort of like my safe place." Yet others have found love in interest group communities. Mr Luqman Rahamat, 33, met his girlfriend Elise Tan, 28, at non-fiction book club, The Saturday Book Club. Mr Luqman, a maths tutor, and Ms Tan, a pre-school teacher, first chatted about decluttering, and Ms Tan lent him a book on minimalism called Love People, Use Things. They then went to check out the social enterprise bookshop Books Beyond Borders. She was intrigued by his blog posts detailing his travels and analysing dating apps and other topics using mathematical concepts. The couple made it official over a year ago. "It feels like the universe planned it for me. I was in a phase of self-improvement and didn't have any expectations on finding a long-term partner," said Mr Luqman. "She made me feel like I am enough and also taught me how to love myself more and accept my flaws." To romantic hopefuls, he has this advice: "If dating apps don't work, move to communities where you can meet people, be yourself and find someone who can appreciate and accept you for who you are." This article was first published in The Straits Times . Permission required for reproduction.