Jiuhu slaves buy these breakfast and lunch at 4am in JB before coming to Singapore to earn SGD. bro , their breakfast quite standard

Penang's street food are actually over hyped. I've tried their famous char-kuey-teow at Chulia Street before, which claimed to have legs and hands, but for my wife and me, they are not even of average quality. Many of their street hawkers along Gurney Drive are just average only, nothing fantastic. In KL, their Hokkien noodles are filled with so much pork lard that I was very much shocked. However, the locals like it this way and told me it tastes good, but will it be healthy? We'd once tried the fried chicken nasi lemak at a Malay restaurant in PJ where they had claimed that even Mamak Kutty had patronized them, with a photo of him giving a thumbs up with the boss on its walls. However, we find that the fried chickens are too dry and saltish to our taste.

As for the noodles, they use excessive alkaline water to make them, which if consumed in excessive amount will be bad for your body. They are doing so in order to make the noodles springy but at the expense of your health and longevity. From my interactions with many Malaysian Chinese, I'd realize that they only care to nourish/enrich their pockets and nothing else matters more. Since there is not much regulations governing their F&B trade, so, who cares? As long as good money comes in, that's all that is important.
I have not been to eat at Gurney Drive in a while, I feel those are tourist traps. In any case, everything in moderation. And I tend to enjoy their street food when I am there. I also love their ciggie prices!:biggrin:
 
My dream is to 躺平 in this small town in Malaysia where pap cannot pester me to pay gst and various forms of taxes

 
If pack and put till lunch time the food still can eat meh???
The recommended time to safely consume cooked food is 2 hours after it is prepared, but who knows how long it has been kept warm at the vendor's stall prior to its purchase?
 
This gem of a stall selling prawn noodles is at
Loyang Industrial Estate near Changi Airport

masterchef3.jpg
 
I have yet to receive my monthly enhance retirement scheme salary
May I ask are you leefering to ers current at $426k?

May I also ask, what is the difference of sinkies topping up ers at the withdrawal age I.e current at 65yo vs sinkies who topup now? Of course it is to get more interest at the RA, but same time they also saying the interest earned in RA is not yours but belong to the pool.

So does it mean that the topup above frs interest is ours until when we reaches 65yo, the interest becum the pool interest and no longer ours?
 
May I ask are you leefering to ers current at $426k?

May I also ask, what is the difference of sinkies topping up ers at the withdrawal age I.e current at 65yo vs sinkies who topup now? Of course it is to get more interest at the RA, but same time they also saying the interest earned in RA is not yours but belong to the pool.

So does it mean that the topup above frs interest is ours until when we reaches 65yo, the interest becum the pool interest and no longer ours?

Yes 426k but this figure keep increasing

The rest question, I don’t know how to answer u

I cannot transfer from OA to SA
Cause I already hit the limit
 
I know a Malaysian couple - husband is an engineer and wife a teacher - who own a terrace house and 2 cars in Penang. In S'pore, this couple would be staying in a HDB flat and rely on public transport.
Who is dumb ? Mudlander or Sinkie ? The answer is obvious. Only retards believe the PAP.
 
Mudland soo bagus that singkies now opening eateries in JB..

Johor Bahru called a lifeline for Singapore's struggling food businesses - Singapore News​

40358129_1885908784789841_5428687316086423552_n-e1753087756631-1068x602.jpg
Photo: Facebook/Amari Johor Bahru
July 21, 2025
SINGAPORE: It has been widely reported that many eateries in the Little Red Dot have been having a difficult time due to high rentals, manpower issues, rising ingredient costs, and other reasons. For a city that has made a reputation for itself as a foodie haven where delicious and affordable food is abundant, this has been a cause for no small concern.

A report last week in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), however, says that Johor Bahru, the Malaysian state closest to Singapore, is offering a “lifeline” of sorts to struggling eateries, providing food business owners an opportunity to continue serving up delicious meals.

The report cited the high number of restaurant closures in Singapore in the past year and a half. In 2024, 3,047 eateries shut down, the highest number in nearly two decades. And this year, 1,404 food businesses folded between January and June.

Among the notable eateries that are now gone are established names such as Eggslut, Burger & Lobster, and Manhattan Fish Market, as noted by the SCMP. In addition, Wala Wala Cafe Bar also shut its doors, as has the 20-year-old Holland Village branch of Crystal Jade La Mian Xiao Long Bao.

The main attraction of Johor Bahru, and indeed the rest of Malaysia, for Singaporean food businesses is the affordability of both manpower and rent. This gives eateries a chance not just to survive but to thrive, even though the restaurateurs SCMP spoke to said they recognise that ingredients are costlier in Malaysia. For example, Govinda Rajan, who opened a Mr Biryani outlet in Johor Bahru last April, told SCMP that in Singapore, his priority had stopped being profitability and had shifted to survival.

Not that the food business is slowing down in Singapore itself, as more F&B establishments opened than closed last year. In 2024, 3,793 new outlets opened, the second highest in more than 30 years.

The Singapore Business Review reported on Jul 17 that in 2023, there were 22,747 licensed food establishments in the city-state, which is the highest number ever. It added, “The risk of oversupply is no longer theoretical.”

Moreover, in a commentary published last week in Channel NewsAsia, former restaurant owner Chua Ee Chien asked whether it’s time to change Singapore’s F&B rules.

“Licensed F&B outlets shoulder an enormous burden well before serving their first customer. Rent in prime locations can exceed S$20,000 monthly. You don’t have to run a fancy fine-dining joint for fit-out costs to reach six figures. There are various regulatory requirements that businesses must meet across agencies, such as the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), Singapore Food Agency (SFA), National Environment Agency (NEA), Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF), and Building and Construction Authority (BCA).

“On top of that, daily costs are compounded by things like utilities, safety inspections, staff training and wages, Central Provident Fund contributions, pest control, professional fees, regulatory delays, and so on.” /TISG
https://www.8days.sg/eatanddrink/ne...-final-outlet-boss-sell-fish-soup-home-845841
Increase aliens population, increase housing prices & rental, increased alien F&B, manpower crunch. Only decrease in quality & quantity. Hertitag & soul of sinkies gone.
 
In S'pore, we overpay for everything because our govt acts like the Mafia to extract money from every conceivable source.
https://www.8days.sg/eatanddrink/ne...-final-outlet-boss-sell-fish-soup-home-845841

https://www.8days.sg/eatanddrink/ne...sing-rents-after-57-rental-hike-siglap-843416

Jhks buying food in JB crossing over to Sg. NEA bidding system for tiny hawker stall, kopitiam rental increased by alien bidding, manpower snatching of FWs blue collars, not white collars.
Another quality F&B gone. Le Chasseur (No msg, no preservatives, no artificial flavorings) relocated to AMK, Flor Passtisserie & next might be Charlie Paranakan. Support them.
 
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