Popular 26-Year-Old Nasi Padang Hawker Biz Which Closed Down During Pandemic Reopens To Long Queues In Industrial Estate - 8days Skip to main content

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Popular 26-Year-Old Nasi Padang Hawker Biz Which Closed Down During Pandemic Reopens To Long Queues In Industrial Estate

Pondok Indah Indonesian Nasi Padang used to operate in various kopitiams. Five years after its closure, it has resurfaced as a standalone eatery. All dishes are cooked by its Indonesian-Chinese founder.
Popular 26-Year-Old Nasi Padang Hawker Biz Which Closed Down During Pandemic Reopens To Long Queues In Industrial Estate

Although it’s tucked inside a quiet industrial building in Aljunied, two-week-old Pondok Indah Indonesian Nasi Padang manages to attract snaking long queues on a daily basis. Customers often have to wait up to an hour for their food during peak periods. 

As it turns out, the 65-seater eatery already had a cult following from pre-Covid times - the biz first opened at a Siglap coffee shop in 1998, and had a total of seven outlets across several kopitiams in Ubi, Kallang and Bedok Reservoir, until it shut down in 2019. It reopened as a larger standalone air-con restaurant in Johnson’s Building on 1 July.

The popular stall is owned by Indonesian-born Chinese Lindawaty Siam, 64, who moved to Singapore in 1994 after marrying her local husband. The cook, who got her Singapore citizenship in 2005, worked at several F&B establishments before opening Pondok Indah, including at a cai fan hawker stall and an army camp canteen. She learned the basics of how to cook nasi padang from a friend who owned a nasi padang hawker stall, and later went on to open her own shop. Currently, Lindawaty runs her biz together with her 40-year-old son, John Ng. 

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