Restaurant Labyrinth Founder Had Less Than S$5K In Savings During 'Lowest Point' In Biz, Until Michelin Star Revived It
Back in 2013, I went to a one-night-only pop-up at a Boat Quay restaurant. All I knew was that dinner would be cooked by some guy who was a banker, but also an aspiring chef.
We were young and at the time, there were probably only a couple of Singaporean chefs doing multi-course meals that were kind of fancy. The first course was squid ink paella shaped to look like sushi and topped with seafood. The second was crispy Asian-style roasted pork belly, with risotto. And for dessert, a cheese ice cream with chewy fruit leather that I still think about fondly. The pop-up was a success.
A year later, the banker quit his day job and opened a restaurant.
Many awards, accolades and Michelin stars later, Labyrinth celebrates its 10th anniversary this year.
From an initial low-budget setup in Neil Road with barely functioning secondhand equipment to a plush restaurant at the Esplanade Mall that has retained its Michelin star for eight years running, chef Han Liguang, 39, has had his share of struggles in getting to this 10-year milestone.
It’s something his younger self would never have foreseen. “I never really knew what I wanted until I came to this life,” he mused. “To be honest, when I changed my career, I always told myself, ‘Maybe the restaurant will close down after three years, and I’ll go back to being a banker.’ Get the monkey off the back, right? Scratch the itch.
“It’s been 10 years and there’s no turning back.”
STARTING FROM SCRATCH
"Back then, painting the plate with smudges and smears of sauce” was all the rage, he recalled with a roar of laughter when I reminded him of his first rodeo all those years ago. “It was me alone in the kitchen, cooking for 40 or 50 people. I rented the restaurant for the night. I didn’t charge a lot, I remember – just enough to cover costs.”
He did it because he was toying with the idea of a career switch, which would mean leaving his cushy finance job and going into an industry known for its long hours, physical punishment and low monetary rewards. Everyone told him not to do it.