Sunday, October 19, 2008

Killiney Kopitiam: A Tale about an Old Hainanese Gentleman


Kopi $1.10

I was told that if you wanted the best cup of Kopi from Killiney Kopitiam, you still had to go back to the original shop at Killiney Road where the coffee is brewed by an old Hainanese gentleman who has been making the Kopi there for the longest time. Now, I have always enjoyed the Kopi and Teh from Killiney Kopitiam, but never really blogged them because, well, they are everywhere and everyone knows about them already. But when I heard about the old man, I decided that I must pay the original kopitiam a visit.


"Ah Gong"

As it turns out, I was a little late. Four years too late as a matter of fact. The old man in question, affectionately known as "Ah Gong", retired in 2004. (Now who was it in the forum that told me about him?) Anyway, I was unfortunate not to have ever tasted the Kopi from this legendary "Barista" who had spent 54 years of his life brewing Kopi in the very same shop till he retired. Such was his dedication that he never had time to start a family and thus on retirement, he did what a Salmon would do and went back to Hainan island. Unfortunately, "Ah Gong" died last year at the age of 86 after having served close to a million cups of Kopi. (Assuming he makes 500 cups a day for 54 years with 2 weeks break each year)

You don't get people like "Ah Gong" anymore, so here's a little tribute to him for his contribution to our Singapore food Heritage. I am very sure that some of our readers will remember him fondly. Do write in and let us know yeah?


Kaya Toast

According to the Singapore Book of Records, this original shop at 67 Killiney Road is Singapore's oldest existing Hainanese Coffeeshop, having been around since 1919. The shop used to be known as Qiong Xin He and was a typical Hainanese Coffeeshop which served really good Kopi and Kaya Toast. It was only in 1993 that the shop was bought over by Mr Woon who then changed the name to Killiney Kopitiam and started expanding its operations. Fortunately, when Mr Woon took over Killiney Kopitiam, he managed to persuade "Ah Gong" and two other Hainanese men to continue serving the Kopi and Kaya toast.

Now, I used to think that franchising and expansion was a bad thing for our Singapore food heritage. There are some franchises out there which I feel have deviated too far from the original recipe. However, with Killiney, somehow they managed to still preserve a part of our heritage that would have otherwise been lost back in 1993. Now at least, I can still get a good cup of Kopi accompanied by Kaya Toast that is made to a certain standard at several locations around Singapore.

Whether it is a placebo effect or not, both Amagada and I felt that the Kopi C that day was about the best cup of Hainanese style Kopi compared to the rest of the other Killiney stores that we frequent. It was smooth, aromatic and very fragrant with only a slight tinge of bitterness and acidity. 4.75/5


French Toast

This issue about vanishing Heritage Hawkers is something that we should be concerned about. The good old hawkers of yesteryear who, like "Ah Gong" consider their jobs their life's calling are getting very rare. For many Heritage Hawkers their craft ends the moment they retire because for a lot of them, their kids have been educated and are not willing to carry on the family business. Over the next 10 years, we will be seeing hawkers from the post war "Baby Boomer" generation dissappear from our food scene. I think something has to be done to preserve some of these famous names.

Now, if we can draw upon what we learn from Killiney Kopitiam, it would seem apparent to me that one of the ways to preserve some of these Heritage Hawkers is for their businesses to be acquired with plans for expansion. Purists may baulk at the notion, but it is either we do that or we can just enjoy them in their current state for the next few years before they fade into history. I think for a lot of these hawkers in their 60's who do not have an heir apparent, an attractive retirement plan might be a good way of getting them to part with their skills. I feel that if they have been building up their "Brand" for the last 40 years, that this brand as value and this value can be repackaged into a sort of pension for the hawker so that he can still have some steady income, go into semi retirement and act as consultant to ensure that their recipes and skills are passed onto the next generation. This idea is not new and there are some other people who have already taken on the task of preserving our Heritage Hawker Brands, but this needs to be accelerated over the next 10 years in order to preserve some of these famous stalls. I must admit that not all of them work out well, but for those that do, like in the case of Killiney, it is a piece of tradition that has been preserved for posterity.


Fresh Bread with Butter and Kaya

Here's a little something from the regular customers of the kopitiam which you might want to try. Rather than ordering the usual Kaya Toast, get there first thing in the morning and try their fresh bread with butter and their fragrant Kaya which incidentally is still hand made with freshly squeezed coconut milk. You will have to get there early in the morning because by the afternoon these traditional bread would have already become a little stale. If you think about it, the real reason for us to toast bread or make french toast is because stale bread doesn't taste good. But freshly sliced bread is super soft and you can really savour the taste of the butter and Kaya while you enjoy nibbling on the soft texture of the bread. 4.25/5

Conclusion

Great Kopi and Kaya Toast and a legacy of an old Hainanese man preserved for future generations to enjoy.

67 Killiney Road
Singapore 239525
Tel: 6734 9648 / 6734 3910
Mon, Wed to Sat - 6am to 11pm
Tues, Sun & PH - 6am to 6 pm





What to do next?

Check out the other stalls where you can get a great cup of kopi
See where else you can get traditional Hainanese food
Remember to vote for the dialect group you are in!

30 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah gong has gone to better place. At least now the place above us has better coffee for breakfast!

Fen said...

My goodness, it is always nice to read about hertiage hawkers and being a Hainanese, I am ashamed of myself of not knowing much about Hainanese food.

Frankly speaking, I didn't know the roots of Kilney stretches to Hainan Island... Thank you for the coverage and I guessed I will put more thoughts whenever I visit Kilney...

Fen said...

My goodness, it is always nice to read about hertiage hawkers and being a Hainanese, I am ashamed of myself of not knowing much about Hainanese food.

Frankly speaking, I didn't know the roots of Kilney stretches to Hainan Island... Thank you for the coverage and I guessed I will put more thoughts whenever I visit Kilney...

eunice said...

Yum yum! I still prefer this kind of traditional toast! Agree. Not every "Killiney" is as good as this original shop.

Anonymous said...

yep. i absolutely love the original killiney. not as thinly sliced as yakun's but the bread is still very well toasted, spread with their own pandan kaya.
im always going back with 2 bottles of the kaya on each of my visits!

tj han said...

The bread stales easily as there are no additives.

Staling is essentially the loss of water in the bread to the atmosphere, and subsequent retrogradation where the starch's amylopectin, instead of being all messed up and thus trapping water molecules and being fluffy, rearranges in a closely packed pattern and squeezes out the water. So bread turns hard.

Er, out of point comment I guess, coincidentally I had my notes and textbook open at the page on polysaccharides lol.

His Food Blog said...

Definitely the flagship outlet to go for kaya toast and kopi (and mind you I am not even a coffee drinker). I definitely prefer Killiney to Ya Kun - thick toast bread as compared to crispy thin bread.

On a side note, Warong M. Nasir just next to them serves a WICKED Beef Rendang!

danny kwok said...

hmm, suddenly I am trying hard to think how kaya taste like now!

Anonymous said...

My mum and dad go there every morning for breakkie (they're early retirees), and the servers know them so well they don't even need to ask what their order is. i hope that when i get to that age i can do the exact same thing that they do. tradition is an awesome thing. :0)

Aurelia

liverpool1965 said...

my fav kopi stall! the teh's good too, prefer them over ya kun! :)

should try the sambal kang kong at their Circular Road branch!

Anonymous said...

Aurelia : You don't need to know your customers 'SO WELL' that you can remember what they like especially when all you serve is bread and kopi. As a matter of fact, my kopitiam downstairs, most of the stall also know what i order every time and they only see me once every week. So you see, they don't need to know your parent 'SOOOOO WELLLLL' to know what your parents want. Especially all they have is roti, teh, kopi?

Veron said...

Are the Killiney Kopitiam branches - there's one at Marina Square - directly affiliated with this one? The logo looks the same, but the coffee doesn't taste as good as Ya Kun's. (But that's just my opinion of course.)

Ken Mun said...

Ah..finally..I have been waiting for ieat to blog on this. I remembered the last time i requested for this he was quite reluctant to do so. I usually run from YCK to Somerset so ill have this for breakfast + recovery. I don't visit any other Killiney outlets except for this one..not even the original Ya Kun at China Square.

For me i much prefer the bread at Killiney, soft yet crunchy. And the eggs are always perfect when i order them.

Ken Mun said...

To Veron: I am not sure if it is a franchise or owned by Killiney but its all under the Killiney brand name. I cant judge the standard of the outlets but the last "outlet" i went was the Lucky Plaza one run by mainland chinese. Needless to say, I did not go back there again.

fatme said...

Have tried few of their branches,I can get better coffee from coffee shops.The original killiney,years ago use to go quite regularly,some 4-5 years it was not worth my trip there.The original killiney does make quite good coffee but compare to yrs back it's not the same.But with your ratings I give another try soon

Alicia said...

This post brings back memories. My parents used to bring me to killiney kopitiam every sunday after church.

Back as a child, I was always intrigued by all the old men serving. Each had a distinct look and character and I had a nickname for everyone of them. The old kopitiam had so much character and I was hooked on bread and kaya plus french toast even before all the franchises started sprouting up.

P. Chong said...

KenMun, its a franchise. You can see the franchise application form at their website...http://www.killiney-kopitiam.com/business.html

I know the former owner who sold it to Woon (who btw, can sometimes be seen at the shop with his Bentley outside...I was told by a Forex Dealer friend that Woon made his money before he bought the shop).

I have been eating there since the late 1980s...for a period almost daily for breakfast...during the reign of the former owner. And the Killiney shop is the one which does it for me. The others don't cut it. One aspect that Ya Kun is better is consistency...even the Shanghai outlet tastes the same...so by ISO standards, the quality is higher.

And yes, agree Warong M. Naris is a killer. Great beef rendang, but also the other dishes are great.

Ciao

Pete
http://shiokhochiak.blogspot.com

m.Ru said...

totally agree that the original killiney is the best! :)
speaking about kaya toast.. have you tried blk 78 moh guan terrace? a small coffee shop selling fishball noodles and their bread is good too!

Anonymous said...

hi, when will they stop selling their fresh bread? I mean what time will they not serve the untoasted bread anymore? It's too early for me to go there but I really want to try!

breadlover

ieat said...

I guess you can order it at anytime, but if you go in the afternoon, then it might not be as soft as it is in the morning.

xiao bao said...

Thanks ieat, this store i just went yesterday.

Anonymous said...

Kopi tiam are a dime a dozen in the 1970s and earlier. They are EVERYWHERE. I am 100% sure they all served better toast and coffee.

The kopi kia (coffee assistants) all wear white Shanghai undershirt and blue-stripe draw-string pyjamas pants. That's their signature uniform.

Boiled water are kept in metal containers. The kopi kia loved to flip over the square metal cover to make loud banging noise. They would bang their metal pot, they would bang the strainer, they would bang anything in sight. It was part of their repertoire.

Spittoons were provided.

You just need to ask your parents instead of reading about it.

All the current kopi tiams are poor copies.

Anonymous said...

Just to add, coffee should be drank from the saucer and takeaway should be served in recycled condensed milk tin cans.

steven said...

reminded me the time when i had 1st had it with my girl in 2004. frankly speaking.. until now i still can't find any place selling better kaya toast than them.

MingMing said...

Thanks i just went to eat yesterday with my friends

yalor said...

Boiled water are kept in metal containers. The kopi kia loved to flip over the square metal cover to make loud banging noise. They would bang their metal pot, they would bang the strainer, they would bang anything in sight. It was part of their repertoire.

Anonymous said...

hi, when will they stop selling their fresh bread? I mean what time will they not serve the untoasted bread anymore? It's too early for me to go there but I really want to try!

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ieat said...

Boss says it is always avaialble, but best before 11am.

min~* said...

my aunt has been working here since forever! she toasts those yummy breads! :)

Anonymous said...

I thought this was very informative post, omg made me so hungry!!!

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