Hawker Converts Japanese Food Stall To Sell Dry Laksa, Now Has 45-Min Queues
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But up until March this year, Ah Huay’s Dry Laksa was a generic Japanese food stall called Tamako Ramen-Ya. Its young owners Xavier Teo, 34, and Jacky Luong (pictured below), 33, decided to convert the stall to sell dry laksa because it’s “something not every eatery has”. The duo had also noticed that a laksa stall at Ci Yuan had closed down, and took the chance to propose setting up a new laksa biz to the hawker centre’s management team, who approved their request.
The laksa one finds in a hawker centre usually comes with gravy. Dry laksa is essentially a stir-fried version of the OG dish, cooked with the requisite rempah (spice blend) and key laksa ingredients like coconut milk, thick bee hoon, fish cake, tau pok and prawns.
Typically, you will have to fork out more money to order dry laksa from higher-end restaurants like National Kitchen by Violet Oon, or home-based businesses like Let’s Jiak.
It is relatively less common in a wallet-friendly hawker setting, which Xavier reckons is because it requires “more steps than making soup laksa”. To make their dry laksa, he explains they have to “cook the noodles first, put it in a tub to absorb the gravy, then fry it one more time [when people order it]”.
Jacky saw a good business opportunity in serving this unique dish, which explains why he wanted to “bring it to a hawker centre to see if people like it”. He broached the idea of opening a dry laksa stall to Xavier, his F&B pal with whom he had been working for eight years. Prior to Ah Huay’s Dry Laksa, Jacky used to work at Xavier’s Thai restaurant Nakara Thai Cuisine.