Sunday, 12 July 2026

SUKA MAKAN: FOUR BEANS IPOH @ JALAN YAU TET SHIN



After a big meal at Tuck Kee, where do you go next for dessert? Just a short block away is Four Beans Ipoh, famous for its soya bean desserts. This looks like a new joint, a gentrified corner of Jalan Yau Tet Shin that is frequented by the young and hipster demographic, which we yearn to be despite our years. 



Great desserts do not discriminate, and we enjoyed soya bean curd with lots of toppings and black sesame shaved ice with lots more toppings. You can hang out here for a long time, but there's always a queue outside, so it's good to be considerate and let others enjoy the desserts too. 



FOUR BEANS IPOH
22 Jalan Yau Tet Shin
Ipoh, Perak

Saturday, 11 July 2026

SUKA MAKAN: IPOH TUCK KEE @ JALAN YAU TET SHIN, IPOH



Suka Makan goes to Ipoh! This is my first overseas post since the batch from Kuching, Sarawak. I'm attending my NUS class of 1989 reunion in the capital of Perak state, which also happens to be a foodie paradise. The first stop is the row of restaurant and snack shops that is Jalan Yau Tet Shin, near the old city centre. The destination is the well-known Chinese noodle restaurant called Ipoh Tuck Kee. There is another restaurant with a similar name but this is the OG one.


It's always better to have more people to share your table - which means you have more varieties of food to try. So, we've got three types of noodles - all sinfully rich, far more delicious than the pictures hope to suggest. The secret is the liberal use of pork lard! No halal or kosher signs here, just good old pork lard is put to extreme good use.

Moonlight hor fun,
with its raw eggs.

Wak tan hor fun,
literally with slippery eggs.

Classic black Hokkien noodles.

Side dishes: I've never tasted
sweeter taugeh (bean sprouts) than these!

Here are the photos of our first reunion meal of this weekend. See how many people you can spot! A final thing: the meal was scandalously inexpensive, which makes one wonder how these places can make a living, and how over-charged we are in Singapore!

That's what admiring the food looks like.



IPOH TUCK KEE
61 Jalan Yau Tet Shin
Ipoh, Perak

32ND SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL PIANO FESTIVAL / Review



SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL 
PIANO FESTIVAL 2026
Victoria Concert Hall / The Arts House
Thursday to Sunday (2-5 July 2026)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 6 July 2026 with the title "Jazz and pop spice up Singapore International Piano Festival under Albert Tiu's direction".


Piano recitals are dime a dozen these days, showcasing a bewildering choice of international and local artists. The Singapore International Piano Festival (SIPF), now in its 32nd edition, remains the nation’s marquee event, distinguished by unity yet diversity, and strong artist and repertoire-based curation. With fifth artistic director Albert Tiu (head of piano in Yong Siew Toh Conservatory) at the helm, the festival has made changes. There were six recitals for the first time, with the uncommon theme of concert pianist as composer, transcriber and improviser.

Photo: LG Lim


Conrad Tao (United States of America) last appeared here as a teenage prodigy at the 2009 Singapore Sun Festival. His recital Emigres and Friends on 2 July comprised 15 short works reflecting his homeland as a melting pot of cultures, where jazz, popular music and atonality found healthy parity.


With George Gershwin songs (The Man I Love, Clap Yo’ Hands, I Got Rhythm) performed alongside Arnold Schoenberg’s dodecaphonic miniatures, variations from Sergei Rachmaninov’s Paganini Rhapsody as viewed through the lenses of Tao and Art Tatum, Maurice Ravel’s Sonatine sandwiching Billy Strayhorn’s Chelsea Bridge, something special and liberating was taking place. Firing on all cylinders in Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, with forearm clusters flashing through its cadenza, one could be forgiven for imagining a full jazz band backing him to the hilt.



Hyung-ki Joo (United Kingdom) was the keyboard half of the musical comedy duo Igudesman and Joo (I&J). Dreams and Nightmares on 3 July saw an exploration of childhood, with pieces Lina’s Waltz and Lullaby for Leo written for his children. Their simplicity and innocence were complemented by seven delightful pieces from Childhood, reliving his early years quite similar to Robert Schumann’s reflections in Kinderszenen.

Photo: LG Lim

The improvisatory segment saw jazzy asides to Debussy’s The Little Shepherd and Golliwogg’s Cakewalk from Children’s Corner Suite as conceived by Gwilym Simcock and Leszek Mozdzer’s anarchical treatment of Frederic Chopin shorts. Whiplash-inducing accounts of the Scarbo from Ravel’s Gaspard de la nuit and La Valse closed each half in a state of intoxication. His encores were a throwback to I&J schtick, with singing, whistling and plucking piano strings to Bach’s Air on G String, and getting director Tiu and Sunday’s pianist “Jackie” Parker to participate in his foot-stomping Funk Yeah!


Photo: LG Lim

Sean Chen (USA) was bronze medallist at the 2013 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. In Music and Magic on 5 July afternoon, the world premiere of his exuberant Daydream No.2: Flight was kinetically charged, combining jazz harmonies and rhythms with late Romantic influences. Crispness of phrasing in Jean-Philippe Rameau’s pieces, in original baroque writing and as transcribed by Leopold Godowsky, was a pleasure to behold.

Photo: LG Lim

His own transcription of Paul Dukas’ Sorceror’s Apprentice was so convincingly Lisztian as to simulate a one-man-orchestra. Preceding that with Gyorgy Ligeti’s pointillistic Der Zauberlehrling was a touch of genius. His traversal of the entire Italian Book of Liszt’s Years of Pilgrimage – seven works in all – was breathtaking, uniting lyricism of Three Petrarch Sonnets with hell-fire barnstorming in the Dante Sonata.

Photo: LG Lim

Jon Kimura Parker (Canada), winner of the 1984 Leeds International Piano Competition, last performed here in the late 1980s with the Singapore and Toronto Symphony Orchestras. Structure and Spontaneity on 5 July evening opened with sonatas by Mozart (K.311) and Beethoven (the Appassionata). By improvising passages leading into Mozart, he relived the lost art of preluding. With added ornaments, he also made one listen to old works anew.

Photo: LG Lim

Even more freedom was displayed in the second half, which included Ravel’s impressionistic Jeux d’eau, Chinese-Canadian composer Alexina Louie’s Memories in an Ancient Garden – a hazy opium-induced trance - and minimalist musings of John Adams’ China Gates. For their faith, the entranced audience also received doses of Chick Corea (Got A Match?) and Oscar Peterson (Blues Etude) and to bring down the house, his riotous take on Elton John’s Bennie and The Jets.


Two Singaporean pianists performed one-hour late night (10 pm) recitals at the Play Den of The Arts House. Churen Li’s recital Echoes and Reflections on 2 July could be described as a dream. Opening with Claude Debussy’s Clair de lune, the theme of night saw motifs and fragments recurring like an idee fixe.


Original compositions were improvised from melodies by Robert Schumann, Wolfgang Mozart, Felix Mendelssohn and others, using altered harmonies and later going off tangent to nether reaches. Good Night, after Leos Janacek’s On the Overgrown Path, was hauntingly beautiful, while Dream of the Panthere boldly quoted from Rachmaninov’s Second Sonata. By the final piece Burning Moon, Clair de lune had been transformed to the glorious light of day.

Photo: LG Lim

Restless Natures exactly describes Jonathan Shin, whose recital on 3 July matched Parker’s for sheer eclecticism. His night incantation provided an illusion of a smoky nightclub, followed by Mozart’s quasi-improvisatory Fantasy in D minor (K.397), notoriously unfinished, but duly completed by Shin. The House Sings involved the audience, from choosing a theme (Promenade from Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition) and recorded segments being aired from their handphones.


Cervantes Dreams Recurrent Dreams of Consumerism was a fantasy on what the Spaniard might have thought of the Japanese naming a discount store after his literary anti-hero. Works by Lili Boulanger, Bobby Ge, Nico Muhly, Takashi Yoshimatsu and Timo Andres were thrown into the mix before closing with Nathaniel Parks’ From A Great Distance, mixing electronics and recorded voice fragments to recount the Covid pandemic.



The refreshing changes taken by this festival under Tiu’s inspired direction constituted a brave new world. More is needed and “Vive la difference”!

The Singapore International Piano Festival was presented by the Singapore Symphony Group.

Friday, 10 July 2026

LIMITED TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE: BEETHOVEN 3 & 4 WITH RE:SOUND (DENNIS LEE PIANO SERIES)


Abigail Sin: BEETHOVEN 3
Lin Xiangning: BEETHOVEN 4

NOT TO BE MISSED! Limited tickets are still available for re:Sound Collective's Dennis Lee Piano Series concert featuring Beethoven's Third and Fourth Piano Concertos performed by two of Singapore's finest young pianists. Abigail Sin will perform Piano Concerto No.3 while Lin Xiangning puts a shine on Piano Concerto No.4, with re:Sound led by its crack concertmaster Yang Shuxiang. In addition, the fabled strings of re:Sound will also perform Beethoven's Cavatina from String Quartet Op.130.


The inaugural event of this concert series is named in memory of Penang-born concert pianist Dennis Lee (1946-2023) whose performing legacy has enriched the musical life of Singapore and Malaysia for the past five decades. Let's make this special concert a full house!


Passionate playing from 
the strings of re:Sound



Saturday 11 July 2026
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory 
Concert Hall, 7.30 pm

Tickets available at:



Thursday, 9 July 2026

RANDOM HEARTLAND EATS: 378 EATING HOUSE @ CLEMENTI AVENUE 5




Block 378 Clementi Avenue 5 is an area we regularly frequent for breakfast or lunch for the last 16 years or so, dating from the time when our son was studying at Clementi Town Secondary School. The coffee shops and food stalls have come and gone, but the choice has always been the reason why we often come back.




378 Eating House has gentrified over the past few years, but one stall has remained largely unchanged. And that is Sinar Bahru Muslim Food, run by Karim and his helpers / family members. It used to be located at a neighbouring coffee shop but at its present position, it gets more business than ever. Its famous nasi lemak remains at $3.50, and they even apologised when the price was raised from $3 several years ago, post-pandemic. 


Sinar Bahru owner Karim
and his friendly assistants.

We used to enjoy a great bak chor / fishball noodles, a wonderful popiah and rojak but those stalls have all gone. It's just too difficult to make a profit, when the items sell at $2 or $4 these days. All the prices have gone up, and diners will have to make informed choices before they eat. Suffice to say, this is one local coffee shop we will visit for a long time to come.

This new Western stall has a 
basic chicken chop with pasta aglio olio
for just $5.80. Good value.

378 EATING HOUSE
Block 378 Clementi Ave 5
Singapore 120378