Ping Kee Popiah: Amiable elderly couple runs 30+yo stall selling only 2 dishes — popiah and kueh pie tee
Popiah reminds me of time spent with my family during the circuit breaker, where we would order DIY popiah sets to assemble at the dining table every other weekend. I didn't think I'd be able to find a stall that could replicate this tender feeling, but that was before I tried Ping Kee Popiah at Sembawang Hills Food Centre.
For those unfamiliar with this Chinese delicacy, I'm honoured to be the one introducing it to you! Popiah, which translates to 'thin pancake' in Teochew, is essentially a tissue-thin crepe stuffed with a delicious assortment of veggies, egg, peanuts and sometimes even meats, if fancy enough.
Let me walk you through my experience this morning: Gloomy skies, strong, cool winds and a relatively empty hawker centre with just enough chatter and pitter-patter for background noise.
As if my cosy morning couldn't get any better, the ah ma running Ping Kee Popiah beckoned to me, smiling, 'Xiao mei, what do you want to eat?' After ordering, I watched the ah gong stuff my popiah generously with ingredients and roll it all up tightly with the prowess of a… err, popiah master?
According to a few Facebook netizens, the couple running this stall has been selling only these 2 dishes for the past 30+ years they've been in business. Not to doubt them, but for the prices and in this economy, how good must it be for them to have sustained their business till now?
With only 2 items on the menu, it was a no-brainer that I'd get one of each — one roll of Popiah (S$2) and a set of Kueh Pie Tee (S$3.50 for 4).
Popiah, quite literally, does not exist without the crepe; the 'thin pancake'. It is why this is my first determining factor for what makes a popiah good.
Happy to report that this one is, in fact, great! It was a good in-between, thin enough not to overpower the dish with its doughy taste, but not too thin such that I could still depend on it to envelop all the ingredients without breaking apart the moment I pick it up.
The filling was a mix of the classic — julienned braised turnips (or jicama), cabbage and tiny pieces of egg, topped with a crunchy mix of roasted peanuts and fried flour bits. The main ingredient, the jicama, was deliciously braised in a savoury and rich flavour that still retained the natural sweetness of the fresh root veggie.
A moment for the crunch, please. Although meagre in portion, don't underestimate what it brings to the popiah! I thoroughly enjoyed how the nutty crushed peanuts and crispy flour bits contrasted against the chewy wrapper and soft veggies, contributing to a satisfying mouthfeel.
Frankly, I was feeling a little gaslit because most reviews I've seen of Ping Kee Popiah mentioned their lap cheong (Chinese sausage), yet they were nowhere in sight. I went as far as to dissect each piece, but to no avail; there simply was no meat. Hais.
20 food spots at Yishun & Sembawang that you'll want to take unpaid leave for
Kueh Pie Tee is like popiah's charming little sister; she shares similar features but tries her best to flaunt her own flair.
That's how I felt about this one, at least. Even with the same base ingredients of braised turnips and egg, its taste was distinctly different from the popiah. My guess is that it's attributed to the chilli sauce used. Here, it was on the sweet side with a tangy note, compared to the popiah's potent and salty one that carried a spicy kick.
Also, does anyone else like the shell a tad bit soft, or… just me? I appreciated that this shell wasn't the crispiest, but of course firm enough to still retain its shape and hold the ingredients together. It had a pleasant eggy taste to it, too.
The best way to enjoy kueh pie tee is by stuffing the whole thing in your mouth (according to me). Each ingredient carries its own unique texture and flavour profile, which just makes for an explosion of juices and a perfect bite.
In a world of chicken rice, wanton mee and fishball noodle stalls, old school snacks stalls like Ping Kee Popiah are sparse.
From the ordering experience to licking every crumb clean, my heart and tummy are warm and full. I can't say it's the best for sure, but something about it tastes a little like home, and I stay in the West, mind you.
If I ever happen to be in the area, Ping Kee Popiah will definitely be my choice for a meal fix.
Expected damage: S$2 – S$3.50 per pax
Bites by Ann Chin: Michelin popiah, loaded waffles & local bites in hole-in-wall eatery
The post Ping Kee Popiah: Amiable elderly couple runs 30+yo stall selling only 2 dishes — popiah and kueh pie tee appeared first on SETHLUI.com.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Japan-US-Philippines coast guards simulate crisis amid China threat
Helicopters buzzed in the shadow of a smouldering volcano and boats rescued dummies from the sea this week in a show of maritime unity by Japan, the United States and the Philippines. The joint coast guard exercises held off Japan's southwest shore follow a warning from the three countries about Chinese activity in disputed regional waters. Tensions between China and other claimants to parts of the East and South China Seas have pushed Japan to deepen ties with the Philippines and the United States. This week marked the second time the countries' coast guards have held training drills together, and the first in Japan. They took place over five days off the coast of Kagoshima, where Sakurajima volcano dominates the skyline, quietly puffing out smoke and ash. Dozens of personnel took part, with Friday's final exercises featuring one vessel from each of the three countries' coast guards. They included the BRP Teresa Magbanua, which was provided to the Philippines by Japan through a loan agreement. The 2,265-ton vessel, named after a schoolteacher and revolutionary, usually monitors Chinese boats in the South China Sea. China and the Philippines have engaged in months of confrontations in the contested waters, which Beijing claims almost entirely, despite an international ruling that the assertion has no legal basis. Chinese and Japanese patrol vessels in the East China Sea also routinely face off around disputed islands. On Friday, Manila accused China of using a water cannon on two of its fisheries department boats as they attempted to resupply Philippine fishermen near the disputed Scarborough Shoal. - Man overboard! - The US Coast Guard was represented in the exercises by the cutter Stratton, which can carry up to 170 personnel, and Japan by the 6,000-ton Asanagi. Friday's drills began with a simulation of a person falling overboard. Once the dummy, wearing a bright red lifejacket, was in the water, a US drone was launched from the Stratton, circling high above as it scanned the area. A small Philippine rescue boat then emerged from the Teresa Magbanua, zipping across the water before coast guard personnel fished the dummy out of the water. Other rescue scenarios enacted included a Japanese helicopter racing from shore to pull a human subject from the sea. The helicopter's rotor blades whipped up the calm blue waters, where the occasional small hammerhead shark could be seen idly swimming alongside the Asanagi. The exercises concluded with a simulated collision and fire, with all three coast guards blasting the stricken vessel with their water cannons. - Trust-building - Japan Coast Guard official Naofumi Tsumura said the joint exercises had "built mutual understanding and trust". "More than anything, we have strengthened coordination and cooperation between us," he said. In 2024, the three countries issued a joint statement that included strong language aimed at Beijing. "We express our serious concerns about the People's Republic of China's (PRC) dangerous and aggressive behavior in the South China Sea," it said, describing "dangerous and coercive use of Coast Guard and maritime militia vessels". They also expressed "strong opposition to any attempts by the PRC to unilaterally change the status quo by force or coercion in the East China Sea". This week's joint exercises were the first since the statement was released. Tsumura said there were small details that could have worked better and vowed to improve in future collaborations. He said the three countries' coast guards had "come to understand each other better, or as the Japanese often say, to know each other by face". "I believe we are now able to conduct maritime rescue operations more effectively," he said. amk/kaf/cwl


National Geographic
3 days ago
- National Geographic
The city of 700 languages
New York is the most linguistically diverse city on the planet. Can it stay that way? Bringing with them the languages of their homelands, immigrants newly arrived by ship at Ellis Island await official processing and approval to reach their destination—New York City, already in sight. Photograph by Ullstein Bild via Getty Images Seke is an endangered language originally spoken in five villages of northern Nepal, but its future may depend on a handful of vertical villages: apartment buildings in the middle of Brooklyn, New York. How did a little-documented, oral-only language used by no more than 700 people in the high Himalaya come to the concrete jungle? Rasmina Gurung, in her 20s one of Seke's youngest speakers, learned the language from her grandmother in the village but soon moved to the country's capital, Kathmandu, and eventually New York—where she estimates at least a quarter of her people have ended up. Here they join speakers of dozens of other endangered languages from across the Himalaya, all forming new communities while getting by in an ever evolving mix of Nepali, Tibetan, English, and their own embattled mother tongues. But New York City—the most linguistically diverse city in the history of the world—may be hitting peak diversity. Its 700-plus languages represent over 10 percent of the global total. Though largely invisible (and inaudible) to outsiders, the city's languages are from all over. Many immigrants have arrived in just the past few decades from linguistic hot spots such as the Himalaya, West Africa, insular Southeast Asia, and heavily Indigenous zones of Latin America. Today, however, many of the forces that brought people together are beginning to pull them apart. (More than 300 languages are spoken along this NYC street.) Across its five boroughs, New York's rich linguistic diversity is impossible to miss in its streets, shops, and signage—from Arabic and Hindi advertising to the Bengali, Chinese, and Spanish words for 'freedom' on a single mural. Photographs by Ismail Ferdous Chinese signage, Sunset Park, Brooklyn Photograph by Ismail Ferdous Given accelerating language loss even in the languages' homelands, threats to immigration, and the rising costs of city life, time may be running out. The remarkable linguistic convergence in New York and similar cities could vanish fast, before there has even been time to document or support it. This urgency is what drives the work of the Endangered Language Alliance, the organization I co-direct, which has started to map this landscape. At stake is an unprecedented set of cultural, scientific, educational, and even economic possibilities. Never before have linguists and speakers been so well positioned to document languages for which few if any records exist while also pushing for their maintenance and revitalization. Just as exceptional are the artistic, musical, and culinary possibilities, as worldviews from around the globe come together and share space. (The Māori saved their language from extinction. Here's how.) The ever growing city eventually demolished most of its elevated train lines, such as this one in Jamaica, Queens, as part of an effort to expand the subway system. Photograph by Robert Walker, The New York Times/Redux Irwin Sanchez, a chef and poet in Queens who speaks Nahuatl, once the language of the Aztec, makes tacos, moles, and tamales with the words' original meanings in mind. Husniya Khujamyorova, a speaker of Wakhi from Tajikistan, creates some of the very first children's books for speakers of six Pamiri languages—all now represented along Brooklyn's own Silk Road. Ibrahima Traore, who made it from Guinea to the Lower East Side, teaches N'ko, a pioneering West African writing system, and pushes for its use in every new technology. Boris Sandler, a Yiddish-speaking writer born in Moldova, contributes in his own way, novel after novel, to the miraculous rebirth of Yiddish in New York. Lenape, the original language of the land the city is built on, is also being revived against all the odds. From its last stronghold in rural Ontario, where there is just a single native speaker, a new generation of activists is bringing the language to a wider audience. One of them was Karen Mosko, who before she passed away would come down once a month to teach the language in Manhattan—'the place where we get bows' in Lenape. And then there's Rasmina Gurung, the young Seke speaker. For seven years she has been documenting the language in both Nepal and New York with dozens of hours of recordings, many transcribed and translated, as well as a growing dictionary. But now elders are passing away and taking the language with them. Questions about immigration and asylum hang over the community's future. Housing is increasingly challenging, and their village-like cohesion may not last. (How do you save a language from extinction? With creative thinking—and some help from Wikipedia.) Bengali, Kensington, Brooklyn Photograph by Ismail Ferdous Spanish, Sunset Park, Brooklyn Photograph by Ismail Ferdous Hindi and Malayalam, St. George, Staten Island Photograph by Ismail Ferdous Spanish, University Heights, the Bronx Photograph by Ismail Ferdous Over the past decades, by chance, Gurung's Brooklyn neighborhood has become a place where people from around the world establish hometown associations, religious institutions, restaurants, and a range of other businesses and spaces—forming radically different worlds that now dwell side by side. Just minutes from the Seke vertical village you can hear Ghanaian churchgoers speaking Twi, Azerbaijani barbers speaking Juhuri, and Uber drivers gathering over kebabs and whiskey and chatting in Uzbek. Auto body shops, informal commuter or 'dollar' vans, mosques, and bars ring with the sounds of African, Asian, European, Caribbean, and Latin American languages. For all the unrealized potential, Babel—not the biblical myth but the contemporary reality—has been working in cities like New York to an extraordinary degree. Now is the moment to understand, appreciate, and defend it. (Hawaii's Native language nearly vanished—this is the fight to bring it back.) A version of this story appears in the July 2025 issue of National Geographic magazine. Ross Perlin is a linguist and author of Language City: The Fight to Preserve Endangered Mother Tongues in New York.

Miami Herald
6 days ago
- Miami Herald
US Aircraft Carrier USS George Washington Counters China Navy Presence
Nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington is on patrol in the western Pacific, where China has been expanding its naval presence. Newsweek has contacted the Chinese defense and foreign ministries for comment by email. The George Washington is one of the U.S. Navy vessels homeported in Japan. The aircraft carrier, which is equipped with F-35C stealth fighter jets, returned to Yokosuka naval base near Tokyo in November 2024 after undergoing maintenance and upgrades in Virginia. The George Washington's first patrol since returning to Japan comes as two Chinese aircraft carriers were deployed simultaneously to the wider western Pacific for the first time earlier in June, marking a major milestone in China's efforts to challenge U.S. naval dominance. Another U.S. aircraft carrier, USS Nimitz, has been redeployed to the Middle East from the western Pacific amid the ongoing Iran-Israel conflict. This leaves the George Washington as the only U.S. aircraft carrier currently positioned to help keep China in check as of Monday. Officially released photos show the George Washington and its carrier strike group transiting the Philippine Sea on Monday. The U.S. Navy said the aircraft carrier is currently on patrol in the Seventh Fleet's operating area, which covers the western Pacific and Indian Oceans. The Philippine Sea lies east of the First Island Chain-a defensive line formed by Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines as part of a U.S. containment strategy aimed at restricting the Chinese navy-the world's largest by hull count-in the western Pacific in the event of war. In addition to the George Washington, which left its home port on June 10, the carrier strike group includes two other warships-the cruiser USS Robert Smalls and the destroyer USS Shoup. It remains unclear whether the George Washington will also be sent to the Middle East, should the situation there worsen. The Nimitz is expected to relieve its sister ship, USS Carl Vinson, in the region, allowing the latter to return home, U.S. Naval Institute News reported. The Chinese aircraft carriers CNS Liaoning and CNS Shandong remained underway in waters east of the Philippines as of Monday, each leading a naval task group and transiting westward, according to a map provided by Japan's Defense Ministry. The U.S. Navy said on Tuesday: "George Washington is the U.S. Navy's premier forward-deployed aircraft carrier, a long-standing symbol of the United States' commitment to maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific region, while operating alongside allies and partners across the U.S. Navy's largest numbered fleet." U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth's said at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore on May 31: "China seeks to become a hegemonic power in Asia. No doubt. It hopes to dominate and control too many parts of this vibrant and vital region. Through its massive military build-up and growing willingness to use military force to achieve its goals…China has demonstrated that it wants to fundamentally alter the region's status quo." It remains to be seen whether USS America-a U.S. amphibious assault ship equipped with F-35B stealth fighter jets-will depart the South Pacific for the western Pacific to reinforce the U.S. naval presence in the region following the Nimitz's departure. Related Articles How Iran Could Retaliate Against US. Three Possible OptionsU.S. Tanker Aircraft Head to Middle East as Threat of Iran War RisesNuclear Bomb Map Shows Impact of US Weapons on IranIran Warns U.S. of "Painful Responses" Over Israel's Attacks 2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.