There are only two pictures of chap cai pngs in my collection for the year 2025.
It's not because I took only two pictures.
It's because I ate only two times.
Yes, chap cai png, or mixed economy rice, is a popular go-to meal amongst local Singaporeans and generally just about anyone who has been to a coffee shop or hawker center.
Perchance there might be those who have it three times a week or maybe four.
But I run around a lot, I vary my meals a lot, and so rare does it become that I get to have a plate of chap cai png for lunch, or dinner.
What's interesting about these two meals here is that I'd had them at the same place only one week apart.
Had I expected it?
No, of course not.
I might have ordered different dishes otherwise.
But that's life.
That's how life with chap cai png is.
You never know what it is you want until you're in front of the stall, eyes skimming quickly through the dishes on display whilst the uncle or aunty stands there impatiently armed with plate and tongs as you frantically try to make up your mind.
First box at the Kangkar Mall Kopitiam food court I'd gotten stewed lettuce- or is it cabbage- and then unsure me had dawdled a bit trying to decide if I should get meat or eggs and whether it should be fried or stir fried or steamed. Eventually I decided on brinjals and omelet.
Meat is expensive these days.
Having mostly vegetables however didn't mean that the meal was compromised.
On the contrary, the food was easy to eat, there was great taste, and because it had been prepared with the diner in mind, there was even a good chew.
You know how some places like to make their food really small, or slice their pieces really thin?
Not so here.
The lettuce (I think it's cabbage) was cooked perfectly well with a little bit of bean curd skin and some black fungus hidden amongst the vegetable. I liked how they had the vegetables all chopped up to small little bite size pieces so it was easy to pick up. And the lettuce/cabbage wasn't hard either.
When it came to the brinjals they were sliced thick, and slant, making them pieces soak up the gravy and again very easy to pick up and chew. I loved that I didn't get mushy brinjal pieces but the thick, soft, slightly chewy ones.
Perhaps the only dish that was familiar was the omelet.
Tell the truth, I actually had no idea what kind of omelet I was getting.
I didn't get to ask the uncle.
Sometimes one gets spring onions, sometimes one gets onions, sometimes one gets long beans.
I had thought I would be getting the long bean kind.
As it turned out, it was more of an onion and spring onion kind.
But I don't mind.
Onions and eggs are one of the most fragrant dishes ever, not to mention tomatoes, but you don't get tomatoes in omelet very much. They mush up the whole egg, making it so hard to fry.
Onions are easier.
It was a very comfortable, comforting meal, one that really spoke and appealed to me.
Perhaps the best decision I made for this meal was to have all my food in the dabao styrofoam box instead of having it on a plate.
The sight of everything piled up squished and squashed inside the box made me feel so much fuller than had they been spread out on a plate.
The impressions of this meal stayed with me so much that the following week when I found myself back at the same food court again I went back for the same stall.
What's funny is that I could have gone on to have other foods, like YTF Laksa, Ban Mian, or even dumpling noodles, but $7 for YTF Laksa seemed a little high. (Perhaps I still remember a time when it was just $5)
Moreover, I felt like having the joy of having all that variety of food in my dabao styrofoam box again, so back to the same stall I went.
The great thing about chap cai png is that you can order whatever you want depending on your mood, so it were different dishes for me this time, save for the cabbage/lettuce that I really, really like, and which I saw glistening so prettily at the counter.
So first things first, I got back the lettuce/cabbage, ignored the uncle looking over willing me to make my decision, chose the sweet-savory stir-fried hot dogs with potatoes, a portion of soft bouncy steamed egg, and then had the cashier uncle ladle curry all over the rice in my box.
I had a need for something spicy.
And I wanted something warm.





























