Favourite Chicken Rice in Singapore – Wee Nam Kee New Premises

Having just visited the new premises of Wee Nam Kee Chicken Rice today, 24 November, 2013, I can report that it is still my favourite Chicken Rice in Singapore and the new location at United Square more convenient and accessible than there old Novena location. Moreover, with a brand new, modern fit-out and much more space, the place feels a lot more conducive and everything more organized, and I sense that the move is a ‘breathe of new life’.

They were as busy as ever and I am sure that their loyal clientele has had no trouble assimilating to the new premises and no doubt the catchment in the area of United Square will also be a significant boost for business. The new address is 101 Thompson Road, level 1, shop 08 – United Square Ph 6255 6396. Level 1 is actually the ground floor and the restaurants looks out from the  buildings frontage to Thompson Road. Access from the car park is very convenient, simply turn left from the car park lifts and they are immediately on the right, although you need to go outside of the building to enter the restaurant.

Totally approve of the move and glad to see my favourite Chicken Rice people settled in and enjoying their new location. And if you are reading this for the first time scroll down for my original article.

Wee Nam Kee new premises at United Square

Wee Nam Kee new premises at United Square

I have purposely titled this ‘favourite’ rather than best chicken rice in Singapore, mindful that I am a New Zealander married to a Chinese Malaysian and whilst fairly well assimilated in Asia, out of respect for the highly attuned indigenous palate here, the emphasis is on my personal choice, rather than a critique.

You see, food is a national sport in Singapore and right at the very top of the games program is chicken rice, or Hainanese chicken rice, Singaporean style. It is so popular that it vies with Singapore Chilli Crab as the National Dish.

Hainanese Steamed and Roast Chicken

Needless to say, opinions on who has the best chicken rice run high and you could spend a year getting around the numerous hawker stalls (individual vendors) and restaurants, as many people do, including the indefatigable Makansutra team www.makansutra.com, the indispensible local food guide.

I must confess that I am not involved in any exhaustive chicken rice stall research although having tried most of the well-known ones, considering myself reasonably well acquainted on the subject, moreover cook it myself at home.

Indeed, on my first trip to Singapore in the early 90s as a guest presenter for a food and wine event at the Mandarin Hotel on Orchard Road, I practically lived in their famous chicken rice restaurant, Chatterbox, our unofficial working office and canteen. I even had chicken rice there one lunch time with two Thai Army Generals and a Singapore Army Colonel, who were more intent on absorbing as much of Singapore’s best food that anything military.

Chicken rice for Saturday lunch has become a ritual in our family, all of us craving it by the weekend, my daughter and I sometimes sneaking off after school for a mid-week fix.

We were loyal to a chicken rice establishment in Upper Thompson Road for a number of years, the quality certainly meriting this however; the owners were such a mournful bunch and the service so surly, it was like a training ground for Changi Prison wardens and it was getting depressing going there.

I am somewhat intrigued by the habitual churlish restaurant service nature in Chinese culture. It almost seems it’s a matter of principal or a matter of ‘face’, that to serve means to abuse and inflict a sense of authority over the customer. What’s impressive is it comes naturally. Not like the French, who have to put on an act, well most of the time, to have the upper hand on the diner.

Wee Nam Kee Chicken Rice

Geography also influenced change as my daughter took up karate and on Saturday and Sunday mornings to which we travel past Novena Ville on the way to her karate school in McNair Road. And as any local savvy chicken rice aficionado will know, Novena is where the famous Wee Nam Kee chicken rice hawker is located.

Watch your fingers

They say location can be everything and I am sure this is an influencing factor on people’s preference for certain hawker stalls in Singapore; the convenience effect impacting on their judgement. There is also a degree of rivalry here, like any sport, a certain pride in the local entity, in this case neighbourhood food courts and hawker stalls, with a tribal resistance outside of their environs.

That said Singaporeans will travel across the Island to have good food. Granted it’s a 20km by 40km country and anything more than an hour car travel time you had best have your passport with you, but its all relative and location here is not the panacea for success in the restaurant business.

Admittedly our patronage of Wee Nam Kee is largely da-bao (takeaway) although this does not diminish our customer ranking here; having struck up a good relationship with the staff and such status is not easily earned. Like any Chinese eatery worthy of going to, the service here is brutal, although the difference here is there is an underlying sense of joviality and humility.

My favourite Auntie, who always tales my order, but don’t mess with her!

The place is wonderfully chaotic, so much so you can understand why expatriates are conspicuous in their absence. Personally, I love restaurant theatre. The frenzy of hungry people and buzz of a packed restaurant is intoxicating and vital to the experience, moreover a sure sign the food is excellent. Rule number 1, avoid quiet Chinese restaurants.

Adding to the ambience and energy of Wee Nam Kee, is the open service-kitchen with enticing roasted and steamed chickens hanging in rows and an enormous stainless steel fan tong of wonderfully perfumed rice cooked in chicken stock engulfing the senses.

There are two lively cooks wielding razor sharp cleavers, dismembering and chopping up chooks with such speed and expertise that even Hannibal Lecter would be impressed. There is a palpable sense of pride in their monotonous work, like the precision and dedication of Japanese sushi chef; there is dignity in technique and maintaining impeccably high standards.

On my first few visits, I struck the normal Chinese resistance and communicating my order was difficult however, with a few words of Mandarin and a good deal of patience, a rapport was starting to build. Perhaps the icebreaker here was my stainless steel five-dish Tiffin and soup tin that was cause for great amusement amongst the staff.

I am still the only person among the thousands of takeaway customers here weekly to bring my own containers, having a strong aversion to polystyrene and plastic. It is mindboggling to think how much completely avoidable rubbish is generated on this island.

Even more obvious, I am noticeably usually the only Ang Mo in the place, save for the occasional tourist. I know it’s a bit of rhetoric with me, but I cannot understand why expatriates do not frequent these places, especially when they continually complain about the cost of living and yet chicken rice is one of the most affordable, satisfying and nutritious meals you can have.

So, what’s the fuss about this boiled chicken? Like anything glaringly simple in gastronomy, it is the pureness and clarity of flavour, the texture and integrity of ingredients. The chicken literally melts in the mouth and the combination of the oily rice is simply addictive.

Chicken Rice da-bao

The chicken is not actually boiled, rather immersed in hot water along with some concentrated chicken stock, sesame oil, light soy sauce, salt, chopped fresh ginger and garlic (some add Pandan leaf) and gently steamed within the water, just below simmering point. It only takes about 30 minutes to cook a 1.5kg bird, the chicken dunked in cool water immediately after for a few minutes to stop the cooking process to ensure the meat stays tender.

It is strategic to cook the rice in the resultant chicken stock and I’m told additional chicken fat and shallot oil, perhaps not entirely healthy, but it sure tastes good and infinitely superior to any steamed white rice you will ever have.

Chicken Rice – all important soup and in a tiffin carrier – no plastic please!

For some, it is the soy sauce drizzled over the chopped chicken that is strategic although personally we prefer no soy sauce as in our opinion it adulterates the pureness of the subtle chicken flavours. Also the chilli sauce accompanying it is seen as equally important, although again I personally much prefer the ground fresh ginger and garlic that most serve as an option.

We also usually order breast meat only, which is effortlessly carved away by our expert choppers, however I know many people prefer other cuts, bone and all, as the theory goes the meat is most flavoursome near the bone.

Nothwithstanding our devotion to chicken rice or questioning the integrity of the purveyors, it is somewhat mindboggling that in the chicken capital of the world, a nation obsessed with the quality of chicken rice and many other chicken dishes, you cannot buy a free-range, organic bird, unless its frozen and only from the USA.

Yes, I know it sounds preposterous, and the reality is everyone is eating battery raised, intensive farmed chicken, which is a far cry in quality and flavour from a free-range and organic poultry, not to mention ethically and nutritionally questionable.

I want do want to labour on the point in this piece, however if you want the truth of the matter, and also find out about the excellent Sakura Chicken, read more at http://www.thewanderingpalate.com/produce/a-happy-chook-is-a-tasty-chook/

Wee Nam Kee is located at 275 Thomson Road #01-05 Novena Vile (opposite Novena Church) open every day between 10.15am-1.30am. You can call through your takeaway orders on 6333 9830. I would try to avoid peak lunch hours as it gets pretty chaotic.

The Wandering Palate uses a tiffin for takeaway – We need to make Singapore a Polystyrene and plastic bag free island


 

By Curtis Marsh | Restaurants | Related to: , , | 4 comments

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4 Comments to Favourite Chicken Rice in Singapore – Wee Nam Kee New Premises | Comments Feed

  • felice lim says

    Thanks for sharing your food adventure.. As for one of the better chicken rice, you can try :Nam kee chicken rice’ at upper thomson Rd shop house, just a few door away from
    Le petite cuisine. Heard it is the original Chicken rice shop and one of the relative branched out to open the
    ‘wee nam kee’..It is much tastier !!all the best & thanks again.

    August 26, 2011
  • Surprise says

    NEIGHBOURHOOD CHICKEN RICE STALL SURPRISES ME!
    LIVED AROUND ANG MO KIO AREA FOR ALL THESE YEARS AND I HAPPENED TO GIVE THIS NEW CHICKEN RICE STALL A TRY A FEW WEEKS AGO. WHAT APPEALS ME GREATLY WAS THE FRAGRANT RICE AND THE SOFT AND TENDER STEAMED CHICKEN THAT COMES WITH A SPECIAL SAUCE WHICH I MUST SAY I NEVER TASTED BEFORE IN MY WHOLE LIFE. IT IS JUST SO APPETIZING THAT I FINISHED EVERY SINGLE GRAIN OF RICE. FURTHERMORE, THE THAI-STYLE BEANCURD WAS JUST SIMPLY MOUTH-WATERING. THIS MILD SPICY DISH WAS SERVED WITH FRESHLY SLICED ONION AND SAVOURY THAI SAUCE. HONESTLY, I THINK THIS IS THE ONLY STALL THAT PROVIDES CONSUMERS WITH SUCH UNIQUE TOFU. I STRONGLY URGE YOU TO GIVE THIS STALL A TRY AND THE ADDRESS IS BLK 226H #01-10, ANG MO KIO ST 22 S(566 266)
    ?

    IT IS DEFINITELY WORTH THE TRY!:)

    January 30, 2012
  • Surprise says

    NEIGHBOURHOOD CHICKEN RICE STALL SURPRISES ME! LIVED AROUND ANG MO KIO AREA FOR ALL THESE YEARS AND I HAPPENED TO GIVE THIS NEW CHICKEN RICE STALL A TRY A FEW WEEKS AGO. WHAT APPEALS ME GREATLY WAS THE FRAGRANT RICE AND THE SOFT AND TENDER STEAMED CHICKEN THAT COMES WITH A SPECIAL SAUCE WHICH I MUST SAY I NEVER TASTED BEFORE IN MY WHOLE LIFE. IT IS JUST SO APPETIZING THAT I FINISHED EVERY SINGLE GRAIN OF RICE. FURTHERMORE, THE THAI-STYLE BEANCURD WAS JUST SIMPLY MOUTH-WATERING. THIS MILD SPICY DISH WAS SERVED WITH FRESHLY SLICED ONION AND SAVOURY THAI SAUCE. HONESTLY, I THINK THIS IS THE ONLY STALL THAT PROVIDES CONSUMERS WITH SUCH UNIQUE TOFU.I STRONGLY URGE YOU TO GIVE THIS STALL A TRY AND THE ADDRESS IS BLK 226H #01-10, ANG MO KIO ST 22 S(566 266)
    ?

    IT IS DEFINITELY WORTH THE TRY!:)

    January 30, 2012
  • Greetings Thanks for your passionate account on chicken rice and Thai-style beancurd, sounds excellent and the wandering palate shall most definitely be wandering over to Ang Mo Kio… actually I also have a lead from another good palate who highly recommends Pow Sing in Serangoon Garden way… have you been there? Anyone else have an opinion on this Cheers! Curtis

    January 30, 2012
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