Friday, 12 December 2025

SINGAPORE'S VINTAGE EATING PLACES: WOODY FAMILY CAFE IN SEMBAWANG


This place feels like you are in a different country. Actually, Woody Family Cafe is far closer to Johore Bahru than Orchard Road. Located near the tail end of Sembawang Road, Woody is a residential house converted into a restaurant, like the sort you often see up north in Malaysia. Don't know whether this is even legal, but since this restaurant has existed for fourteen years or so, shows it is legit. And it's a legit eating place full of nostalgic atmosphere.


Woody's speciality is Peranakan food, the cuisine of the Straits Chinese, who have settled in Nanyang and assimilated the local cultures including the customs, costumes and eating habits. My wife Janet was thrilled to find Nasi Ulam (rice dish with finely chopped aromatic herbs and vegetables) in the menu, having enjoyed it in Penang, was not going to pass up the chance. And we were not disappointed.


We also had its beef randang, very tasty despite a smallish portion, fried chicken with varying degrees of hotness. We chose a modest level of spiciness and still felt our tongues and lips sizzling after the meal. The chinchalok omelette was a little too mild, but still tasty. 

Nasi Ulam is definitely an acquired taste.
Woody does it very well.

Wish the beef rendang was more generous in helping.
Fiery hot chicken wings.
Makes you want to drink more.
Got to imagine the chinchalok
in this omelette.

Woody also serves Western food, probably the Hainanese variety, but it was the Nonya food that caught our fancy most. The decor was retro, with local humour to boot, and boomers are most likely to take to its casual non air-conditioned vibe. Not to worry, there are a lot of ceiling fans in the marquee to prevent the place from becoming too stuffy. We should be back, never mind the travelling distance, this time with more people to enjoy a wider variety of dishes.

Who would dream of bringing "outside food" here?


By the way, Woody is named after that cowboy stuffed toy character in Toy Story and not some pesky woodpecker.   


Woody Family Cafe
12F Andrews Avenue
Singapore 759930

Wednesday, 10 December 2025

I JUST DON'T GET MODERN ART!

Tang Da Wu appears in this video.

Try as I may, I just don't get modern art. Ever so often, I stumble on an art exhibition in whatever city, and that always piques my interest. MOMA, Tate Modern, JC Contemporary, MOCA, Queen's Gallery, you name it and I've spent hours in these over the years, and have always wondered. "What's it all about?" The latest stumbling took place back home in Jendela, Esplanade's biggest arts space. And these are the photos.


Entitled The Seminar - Don't Teach Art, it brings together works by Singaporean visual artist Tang Da Wu (born 1943), well-known as founder of The Artists Village during the 1980s at Ulu Sembawang. At 82, he still commands a loyal following among local visual artists but he has yet to receive the Cultural Medallion. NAC, what are you waiting for? It's probably his political leanings and pushing the boundaries of artistic expression that ruffled official feathers. In a way, receiving the CM might be a cop out of sorts, a sure sign of being accepted into the mainstream, and that is what true rebels and real artists try and avoid. 

 
The words in Chinese refer to an over-reliance
of machines to get things done.
So says a helpful exhibition guide.

The installations look imposing.

Perhaps dangerous to Ozempic users.

Is this some butcher's stall?

Bibi Netanyahu meets Kamala Harris.
The futility of politics.


We are constantly reminded of this year.
Not knowing is a sure sign of dementia.

What is this supposed to mean?

A man falls into a heap of bricks.
Looks like he tore a new one, so he's doomed.

The Ascent of Otters.
They'll soon rule the world.

A Zen-like corner space.

No entry permitted, but the lock looks puny.


A pile of sticks. So what?

No idea what this means.

The glory of bubble wrap.

Ladder to nowhere.

Call this number if you are being scammed.

Absolutely no clue on this one.

This reminds me of the North Korean 
communist party symbol.

The exhibits bite. So beware.
Esplanade is not liable for injuries.


This exhibit runs till 1 February 2026.

Admission is free!
(Would you pay to look at this?)

Tuesday, 9 December 2025

HEALING ARTS SINGAPORE OPENING CONCERT / Photographs


This was the Opening Concert (Monday, 8 December 2025) of the 5-day symposium (8-12 December 2025) organised by Healing Arts Singapore in conjunction with the Centre of Music and Health based in Yong Siew Toh Conservatory. There was lots of music performed, and here are some of the photos from a colourfully varied concert.

Opening the evening were excerpts from
Chen Zhangyi's opera Lily, a probing work
about the ravages of dementia.

Soprano Wong Su Sun played the role of Lily,
a singing teacher alongside her son,
sung by tenor Jonathan Charles Tay.

Singapore's only hearing-impaired concert pianist
Azariah Tan related how his performance of
Beethoven roused a patient with dementia.

Here Azariah Tan performed the first movement
from Beethoven's Piano Concerto No.5 "Emperor".

It was a reading of true grandeur,
which he mastered in a matter of a few weeks!

Applause alongside YST Orchestral Institute
conductor Jason Lai.

Seeding The Floor - 
performing mindfulness of everyday
by Arts Fission

Movement and plants.

Finding beauty in the mundane.

The pastoral setting was telling:
country folks are happier people.

Musicians from Beautiful Mind Charity and
YST Orchestral Institute perform popular tunes.

Teng Ensemble joins the fray.
Young Artist Award recipient Syafiqah Sallehin
plays the accordion in Chow Junyi's Journey
with Geylang Sipaku Geylang and Rasa Sayang.

Phoon Yu's contrapuntal
Transi For The Common Man.

Western and traditional Chinese instruments
are highlighted in these works.

A rousing end to the concert
with Chow Junyi's Little White Boat.