S’porean Chef LG Han Competes With ‘Culinary Class Wars’ Chef Choi In Korean Show ‘Chef & My Fridge’
“My hands were shaking because I was running out of time,” says the chef of mod Sin restaurant Labyrinth. Did his chilli crab dish using Korean ingredients win or lose against CCW’s chef Choi Hyun-seok’s plate?

Singapore is represented for the first time on popular Korean reality cooking competition series Chef & My Fridge, by way of one-Michelin-starred Restaurant Labyrinth’s chef Han Liguang (left in pic), better known as LG Han. He competed in a special “50 Best” episode of the show that challenges chefs to cook a dish from ingredients in a celebrity’s fridge.
Chef And My Fridge first aired in South Korea from 2014 to 2019. It made a comeback on Netflix in 2024. The show’s premise: competing chefs cook dishes using ingredients rummaged from the fridge of a featured guest — the guest will then sample the food and pick the winner of the challenge. A-list guests who allowed the contents of their fridges to be raided on the show include actor Song Joong-ki, BTS’ J-hope and actress Ha Ji-won.
Aired on Korea television on May 11, the episode featured “Team Asia” – made up of Singapore’s chef Han, chef Yusuke Takada of two-starred La Cime restaurant in Japan and chef Antimo Maria Merone of one-starred Estro in Hong Kong – going up against “Team Korea”, which was represented by dashing chef Son Jeong-won of one-starred Eatanic Garden as well as Culinary Class Wars alumni Choi Hyun-seok (right, in main pic) and champion Kwong Seong-jun (known as Napoli Matfia).
Han was invited to participate because of Labyrinth’s standing at number 37 on the latest Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants list, and he accepted because he wanted to “have fun, make friends and, most importantly, showcase what Singapore has,” even though his policy up until now has been not to compete in on-air competitions because “I don’t want to lose,” he quipped.
Han flew to Seoul and filmed over 13 hours for the episode on April 26.
He explained: “I didn't want to do a modern, Labyrinth-style dish, firstly because of the timing; and secondly, I wanted to do something that could showcase Singapore's traditional foods to the world. My point is that I think the knowledge of Singapore cuisine is still not there when it comes to the world stage. It’s not like Korean cuisine, Japanese cuisine, Thai cuisine or Filipino cuisine. What I do has always been about showcasing what Singapore is, whether traditional or modern.”
During the competition, there were a few moments of panic, he said, like chopping up mushrooms and then forgetting to use them, and the rice cakes cooking unevenly due to the shape of the pan.
There was also the language barrier. “I had an earpiece with live translation,” he revealed, and “when I spoke in English, there was a loudspeaker in the studio translating it into Korean” for the others. Of course, with many people speaking simultaneously, the translation got a little confusing at times.
It helped to have Choi there as a friend, he said, offering to show him how the equipment worked and being generally supportive.
Chef & My Fridge’s “Asia’s 50 Best” episode will air on Netflix in Singapore by June 20. Catch new episodes every Sunday.
Source: CNA/my
The original version of this story first appeared in CNA Lifestyle.
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