New Station Snack Bar Owner’s Daughter Opens Her Own Zi Char Eatery, Her Parents Initially Disapproved
['If the name ', 'New Station Rice Bar', ' rings a bell, you may have been reminded of New Station ', 'Snack ', 'Bar, the perpetually packed ', ' at Far East Plaza with long dinner queues. You’re not far off though — New Station Rice Bar is a new zi char shop opened by Chloe Tan, 30, the daughter of New Station’s boss. And yes, it also sells the joint’s famous salted egg pork rice.\xa0', 'No part of this story or photos can be reproduced without permission from ', '8days.sg', 'New Station Rice Bar opened at Fortune Centre in March 2024, taking over the space that used to be Japanese Curry Express (another popular stall that was known for its mentaiko salmon dons). Prior to opening this shop, Chloe had been working at her parents’ Far East Plaza diner for seven years as their front-of-house (though she occasionally cooked there whenever the chefs were on MC), before deciding to branch out on her own.\xa0', "“I just wanted to try a new and different concept, and I think I have a lot of good recipes that I wasn’t able to do at my parents’ place ’cos their menu was already very extensive,'' she tells ", '.\xa0']
- by autobot
- April 7, 2024
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If the name New Station Rice Bar rings a bell, you may have been reminded of New Station Snack Bar, the perpetually packed at Far East Plaza with long dinner queues. You’re not far off though — New Station Rice Bar is a new zi char shop opened by Chloe Tan, 30, the daughter of New Station’s boss. And yes, it also sells the joint’s famous salted egg pork rice. No part of this story or photos can be reproduced without permission from 8days.sg New Station Rice Bar opened at Fortune Centre in March 2024, taking over the space that used to be Japanese Curry Express (another popular stall that was known for its mentaiko salmon dons). Prior to opening this shop, Chloe had been working at her parents’ Far East Plaza diner for seven years as their front-of-house (though she occasionally cooked there whenever the chefs were on MC), before deciding to branch out on her own. “I just wanted to try a new and different concept, and I think I have a lot of good recipes that I wasn’t able to do at my parents’ place ’cos their menu was already very extensive,'' she tells . 1 10 Parents “very against” Chloe opening her own zi char biz Despite owning a successful eatery, Chloe says her parents did not approve of her entering their line of work, as “zi char is a very male-dominated industry”. She explains: “You’re always in front of the hot stove, and alcoholism and gambling addiction is an issue [with some staff]. That’s why my parents didn’t want me to be in this line.” 2 10 As she grew up watching her parents work long hours, Chloe says she “didn’t really like F&B”, and ended up studying accountancy in NTU. She worked a short stint as an auditor after graduation, but resigned after just three months. “I didn’t like the job, and I realised I was already so used to the F&B lifestyle,” she recalls. This prompted her to begin working at her parents’ stall — something they weren’t super keen on in the beginning, but ultimately decided they could use Chloe’s help. However, when she decided to open New Station Rice Bar, her parents were “very against it”. She explains: “They were like, ‘There are so many other things you can do, why must you open one more new shop when F&B is already so hard and competitive?’” But Chloe’s parents didn’t even get the chance to stop her. Joking that she was “very rebellious”, the ambitious millennial signed a tenancy lease before informing her parents, and invested $40,000 from her own savings to set up shop. When she finally told her parents, she recalls: “They got a shock. They were very angry and kept saying, ‘Faster get out [of the lease]!’” 3 10 But thankfully, her parents have since come around to Chloe’s chosen career. She says: “They’re very supportive now. They realised that I planned the menu all by myself, and I think I serve pretty good food, so they reckoned that this could work. If it doesn’t, at least I tried lor.” Currently, her mum comes down to her stall to help out with food prep and order-taking whenever she’s free, while Chloe and a hired chef take turns to cook. Chloe sees her business as an extension of her parents’ stall, hence the intentional decision to give it a similar name. She shares: “I sell the same salted egg pork rice, so I don’t want it to seem like I’m different from them,” adding that she wanted her shop to be linked to her parents’ as she is “trying to continue my dad’s legacy”. She notes that her parents also view it the same way. “It’s not competition lah, cos we’re not located super close to each other. It’s more like we’re affiliated,” she explains. 4 10 Learned cooking from a Hong Kong chef Since her parents didn’t want her in the biz, Chloe says her dad initially refused to teach her how to cook. She struggled to find a mentor, as all the chefs she knew through her parents “refused to teach [her], as they felt that a zi char kitchen was not an environment for a lady to be in”. When asked if she was upset at her father for not mentoring her, Chloe admits: “Yes, just a little bit.” But she concedes: “Afterwards I felt like, okay lor, if you don’t want to teach me, then I’ll go and learn from someone else.” Fortuitously, her friend introduced her to a retired chef from Hong Kong, whom she reverently calls Zhang shifu (‘teacher’ in Mandarin). The 75-year-old chef is trained in Cantonese cuisine, and had worked in a Chinese restaurant in London for 16 years before retiring in Singapore. 5 10 She says that Zhang shifu “very luckily didn’t mind teaching me on my days off from work, and through him I learnt how to do things fast and cook all the dishes.” Chloe paid him a “very reasonable” fee of $150 per day for teaching, and learnt how to whip up dishes like chilli oil dumplings, wok hei porridge and how to boil good soup stock from him. As she picked up some skills from Master Zhang, the other chefs who initially turned her down for an apprenticeship saw that she was serious in learning how to cook, and began teaching her their recipes as well. Her dad never ended up teaching her how to cook. “He realised he didn’t need to teach me,” Chloe laughs. 6 10 The Menu New Station Rice Bar has a small menu featuring nine mains: Salted Egg Pork Chop or Chicken Cube ($8.50) , Mapo Tofu with Minced Meat ($9) , Lu Rou Fan with Shitake Mushroom ($8.50) , Assam Sauce Fish Katsu ($8) , Caramelised Marmite Chicken ($8) , Chinchalok Fish Katsu ($8) , Gu Lau Rou ($8) , Collagen Clam Soup with Wujiapi Wine and Rice ($10) , and Gong Bao Ji with Sesame ($8) . Chloe also has monthly specials, where she introduces potential new dishes to get customers’ feedback. This month, her best-selling specials include Chloe Style Curry Rice ($9.50) and Chilli Oil Dumplings ($8 for six pcs) , both of which will be added to her permanent menu. 7 10 Salted Egg Pork Chop, $8.50 [8 DAYS Pick!] Featuring meaty chunks of fried pork chop doused in a creamy salted egg yolk sauce and topped with a runny-yolked fried egg with crispy edges, this dish tastes just like the one served at New Station Snack Bar (Chloe confirms it’s cooked with the same recipe). The velvety sauce — a concoction of salted egg yolk, butter, curry leaves, chilli padi and a dash of evaporated milk — has a slightly runnier consistency than the usual zi char salted egg offerings. But that’s a good thing. It makes this dish more palatable and less jelak . 8 10 Mapo Tofu with Minced Meat, $9 Our bowl of mapo tofu came loaded with silken tofu cubes and minced meat. Made with three types of bean paste, the dish is flavourful, with a shiok mouth-numbing sensation from the Sichuan peppercorns. It’s layered with both sesame oil and homemade chilli oil, which makes it extra fragrant but also slightly greasy and cloying. 9 10 Chloe Style Curry Rice, $9.50 [8 DAYS Pick!] Don’t mistake this for a Japanese Curry Express copy, despite its outward appearance. Our plate has crispy, juicy chicken katsu served with curry, a soft-boiled egg and seasoned pickles. The crispy chicken cutlet is generously portioned, but the star of the show is definitely the robust curry, which tastes somewhat like a mix of sweet Japanese-style curry and spicy Indian curry, though Chloe says she does not use any Japanese ingredients. Instead, it leans heavier on local flavour, imbued with her own house-made rempah and Indian curry spices. 10 10 Chilli Oil Dumplings, $8 for 6 pcs The classic Chinese ‘ hong you chao shou ’ dumplings here are generously stuffed parcels of minced pork rolled with bits of earthy squid, crunchy black fungus, carrots and shallots. The succulent filling is savoury with a good bite, while the house-made chilli oil — laced with chopped dried red chillies and drizzled over the dumplings — adds a spicy punchiness to the dish. Bottom line For fans of New Station Snack Bar at Far East Plaza, second-gen Chloe’s Rice Bar sister outlet is pretty much more of the same good thing in a just-as-accessible location. It’s worth visiting for this plucky young boss’s rendition of her parents’ iconic salted egg pork chop rice, or for her own hearty creations, which she painstakingly makes from scratch. If you’re looking for a spicy meal, her fiery chilli oil dumplings and curry offerings also hit the spot. New Station Rice Bar is at #03-04 Fortune Centre, 190 Middle Rd, S188979. Tel: 8817-5572. Open daily except Sun, 10.30am-8.30pm. More info via their Facebook and Instagram . Photos: Dillon Tan No part of this story or photos can be reproduced without permission from 8days.sg . 8days.sg is now on #tiktok! 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