Bad Ideas, Made Carefully
A small experimental cocktail room hidden inside The Spiffy Dapper that begins with bad ideas and does the work required to find the one that was secretly good.
Tag
Honest accounts of places, meals, and rooms.
A small experimental cocktail room hidden inside The Spiffy Dapper that begins with bad ideas and does the work required to find the one that was secretly good.
On the Maxwell chicken rice stall that became the city's tourist default, where the honest question is whether the rice earns the permanent queue. The answer is half a yes: the rice is genuinely skilled, the line is genuinely inflated.
On late-2025's most-photographed cafe, a dreamy cloud loft built for the camera, where the unusual bet is a menu developed by a serious fine-dining chef, and a house-made sausage proves the food keeps up with the interior.
On the pioneer of cheap authentic Thai in Singapore's HDB heartlands, whose green curry is genuinely good and no longer uniquely its own. It taught the format so thoroughly that the imitators now match it, leaving consistency across outlets as the surviving edge of being first.
On a small Joo Chiat shophouse bakery from a former Tiong Bahru Bakery pastry head, opened five days a week into a street already dense with serious viennoiserie, and arguing for itself through the dish where the chef has actual editorial freedom.
On a cult Club Street coffee bar that grew out of its hole-in-the-wall and used the extra room to add a dedicated Filter Bar, so it no longer has to choose between the comfort latte that made its name and the single-origin purism the old space could not run.
On a three-storey Amoy Street shophouse that argued, before most others, that the region was not garnish, and now has to figure out how to go deeper rather than louder.
On a Cuscaden Road hotel room where a Sydney chef's whole-fish ethic was supposed to soften into a steakhouse and, two years on, has not, with a 400-gram dry-aged loin carved tableside that holds the working position together.
On a tiny Joo Chiat bakery whose queue-before-opening, sells-out mechanic looks like manufactured hype, until you see the price of the croissant: $3, the genuine limit of a small operation rather than a marketing strategy.
On a twelve-seat basement below Club Street Laundry where the bar has stopped operating as something adjacent to the kitchen above and started operating as the kitchen's downstairs extension, and a cocktail served in a ceramic bowl that shows it.
On a Japanese-cafe chain that expands by differentiating rather than replicating, giving each outlet its own exclusive, where the Tiong Bahru shop's preserved-radish egg sando is more interesting than the IG-famous beef sando the brand's hype is built on.
On a twenty-five-seat Tanjong Pagar bar inspired by Edward Hopper, where the drinks have to survive the design's good taste, and the Nighthawks signature is the case for why they do.