Eleventh day of Chinese New Year, we went on a rabbitfish trail this morning. No lah..., we just went to our usual places for rabbitfish pilgrimage. (If you know of other good rabbitfish places, please share with us in the comments 🙏 )
Eating rabbitfish is a must do tradition for Chinese New Year even though I am not Teochew (am Cantonese). For more on why Teochew people eat rabbitfish during Chinese New Year 👈 click
Stall name: Mama Bay 馬媽媽
Address: 22 Lor 7 Toa Payoh, stall #01-96, Singapore 310019 (inside Kim Keat Palm Market & Food Centre)
Nearest MRT: 15 minutes walk from Toa Payoh station
Tel: 9633 3389 ☎ 9830 3141
Hours: 7:00am - 10:00am (Mon, Tues, Weds off)
Ellenborough Market was Singapore's wholesale centre for vegetables and fish. Ah Yong would get his fish from Ellenborough Market and make traditional Teochew "fish rice" there by boiling it with sea water. Image courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.
When Ellenborough Market was demolished in 1995, Ah Yong moved to Hong Lim Market. When Ah Yong retired, he handed over the stall to his sister 馬媽媽.
A lot has changed from Ah Yong's time - I mean from Ellenborough Market to Hong Lim Market and now Toa Payoh (Keat Kiat Palm Market). Singapore's fish wholesale centre had also moved from Ellenborough Market to Jurong Fishery Port.
Today, Jenny has Ikan Kambong, Ikan Kurau, Yellow Crocker, and seafood like prawns, squid and krill.
Stall name: Teo Heng Teochew Porridge
Address: Stall #01-25, Hong Lim Food Centre, 531A Upper Cross Street, Singapore 051531
Nearest MRT: At Chinatown station
Hours: 8:30am - 1:00pm (Sat & Sun off)
Ah Yong boils his rabbitfish in his signature stock which main ingredient is salted vegetable (kiam chye).
The two rabbitfish were part of our fishy lunch of grouper, rat grouper (barramundi cod), fish cake and braised duck today. Everything was tip top, ranks with the best in Singapore. Teo Heng always delivers 💪👍
I am mind blown every time I taste Teo Heng's unique boiled fish with kiam chye. The salted vegetable weren't that salty at all - in fact, they were soft, subtly crunchy, and taste mildly savoury, sweet, tangy. The stock or sauce's unique savoury, sweet, tangy flavour was overlaid with sweet savouriness from the juices of dozens of fishes that went through the pot during the day. You can imagine the depth of flavours.
Beware of sustainability issues from our wanton consumption:
ReplyDeleteNever consume away our future: wild catch need to be given time and opportunity reprieve to replenish.