Bukit Merah View Carrot Cake: The Last Bastion of Tradition!

I never thought I would still be able to eat a REAL Chai Tau Kway (Carrot Cake) in our day and age. There are of course more and more hawkers who are trying to differentiate themselves by steaming their own carrot cakes instead of buying them from the suppliers. But most of these hawkers make their carrot cake from rice flour. What I mean by REAL Chai Tau Kway is when they actually mill the rice themselves to make the Chai Tau Kway.
Automated Stone Mill
This 60 year old stall in Bukit Merah View Food Centre is probably the last of its kind in Singapore. In the good old days (I am told, 'cos the good old days was before I was born), stone mills were a commoner sight. They were used for milling all types of grains from soybeans to make soybean milk, to peanuts to make peanut paste and of course broken rice to make carrot cake. Then of course the factories came into the scene and most of the work of milling was subsequently outsourced.
Broken Rice to be milled to make carrot cake
While we were filming for Buzzing Cashier last year for the episode on Carrot Cake, I had the chance to chat with Chef William Soh of Copthorne King's Hotel. Chef William was the principal chef resposible for helping transform the Carrot Cake stall in Pasir Ris. He taught the stall holders how to steam their own carrot cake. It turns out that he was the ideal man for the job because his family were carrot cake sellers. Chef William was telling me all about how they used to mill broken rice to make carrot cake. I never thought that I would ever get the chance to eat this type of carrot cake at the time!
This stall is run by three brothers. One brother takes the morning shift, one takes the evening shift and the youngest one makes the carrot cake. What they do is to mill the broken rice down to a watery solution. Then hot water is added which cooks the starch, turning it into a paste. Carrots and radishes are then added, poured into a round tray and steamed for four hours! That is quite a lot of work and I am amazed that the brothers are still doing it! Best of all one plate of Chai Tau Kway is still only $2.50!
Ok so how does homemade carrot cake taste like? Well, I think the texture is very good. It is soft but not mushy. I must admit that tastewise it is almost the same as some of the other carrot cake stalls since most of the taste comes from the fish sauce, eggs and chai poh anyway.
The stall owners told me that the original Carrot Cake was black not white, which came as quite a surprise to me. Again in the good old days, the typical carrot cake came in big chunks fried simply in sweet black sauce. There was no chye poh or eggs even. Over the last fifty years it slowly evolved to the black and white versions that we have today.
Their style of carrot cake is crispy and chunky as you can see from the photos. Since you make so much effort to make the carrot cake, it would really be a waste to chop it into tiny pieces where you can't appreciate the texture. Both white and black were excellent but if I were to choose one, I would go for their black version. Actually it is hard to pick, so if I would bother to go all the way there, I would probably order both and tarpau the leftover! So for me the Black edges the White 4.6/5 to 4.5/5.
Carrot Cake was traditionally wrapped in these leaves!
I salute the brothers for their passion in keeping our carrot cake tradition going! They even go to the extent of getting these leaves to pack their carrot cake! As I said, the good old days were before my time, so I don't remember seeing these as a kid. But I am sure some of our more matured readers would remember this leaf! I was told that their carrot cake would taste even better if it was packed home and eaten a few hours later, and the best way is to simply microwave it. The youngest brother who makes the carrot cake is proud of the fact that their carrot cake retains its texture even overnight unlike the factory made ones.
Second brother - morning shift
Conclusion
What can I say? If you are a foodie like me, wouldn't you head down to this stall to see what REAL carrot cake tastes like?
Bukit Merah View Carrot Cake
Bukit Merah View FC
Blk 115 Bukit Merah View
#01-279
7am to 2pm, 6pm to 1am daily
Thanks to chaozhouzi for recommending this stall!


17 comments:
Wow, quite near my place, can try tml.
This sounds so good that I was thinking of getting over there tomorrow too.
It is definitely one of the better carrot cakes around. I've eaten this many times. I using go to this FC for the mutton soup.
My fellow makan kakis feel that there is a difference between the two brothers (i.e. morning and evening shifts). Perhaps you should try both to see which do you prefer.
Tried it just now, can taste the rice inside. I'm too used to the normal carrot cake so i don't really like it. Also the flavour is not evenly distributed. :(
One of my favorite carrot cake stall is Ke Shuan Xing Fried Carrot Cake @ North Bridge Road FC. From S$1.50 onward, very nice.
hmmmm....
soundman, shall we attack this place tomorrow ? haha, i bet u going there in morning....
sigh,i cannot only try it at night
bukit merah view FC has a lot of nice stalls, the western food stall there and economy rice stall there are cheap and good .....
now that golden city auntie has retired, i dont think there are many good CTKs left
the lorong one Toa payoh one is still quite good though
thanks to leslie for listing the timings, they close at 1am, good for people like me.
just wanted to say tt it was the rice mill which brought back memories for me. my grandma had one of those in her home (in kedah, m'sia) and she'd mill rice to make kueh to sell. i remember watching her do it as a youngster. i need to go and ask her what's become of that old stone mill.
Went there for lunch this afternoon and my black chai tau kway order was done by a lady, not one of the brothers. Kudos for their efforts to mill the rice to make the chai tau kway but any rice flavor was not noticeable, maybe because of this black version. The black sauce was not evenly fried, some portion sweeter than other, some tiny deeper fried bits were quite shiok but overall, nothing much to shout about. Maybe one of the brothers could do it better.
I noticed the better prepared CTK is when the cook controls the fire and varied the intensity during the cooking process. This I did not see at BM View.
My all time favorite is still Ang Mo Kio 107 Carrot Cake at Blk 107 Ang Mo Kio Avenue 4 #01-164 Lim-Kopi Food Court S560107
Oh, forgotten to say that i actually ordered the white version.
Just tried it for lunch today. Ordered both black & white and agree that the black is better. Lots of egg but not enough Chye Por.... but I guess that's just a personal preference. Packed it home, but there was no leaf.
Hi Leslie, I think you should try the black carrot cake at Serangoon North ave 1, the kopitiam opposite the police post. It's fried by an old man and its the only one me and my gf think is the best, you should give it a try.
samuel@ www.samuelgoh.com
S'pore Cai Tao Kuey got 2 diff types, sweet sauce and salty sauce... I always love to order the sweet one whenever I'm in S'pore :)
Evening Shift 7.5 Flavors evenly distributed
Morning Shift 7.0 Flavors sometimes not evenly distributed.
Current standard (regardless of shift) seems to be better than the "famous" Redhill Market Carrot Cake (stall name never start with "Redhill")
youtube.com/market2garden
My rating for the previous post is for white version.
As long as the white version is reasonably good / quite nice, I don't bother to try the black version EVEN some claim that it is better.
Only try the black version from the same stall unless white version is quite bad.
Hey guys, could i just clarify something? I am quite a night owl so when i heard that it stays open till 1am i was really happy. However, i have been there twice and both times i went at 11plus pm and it was closed. So does the evening shift really stay open till 1am? Thanks!
That's what they told me! But your comments are valuable for people who might want to visit!
The last time I went, time reaching 10pm, they mentioned they are closing soon, I reckon its not 1am anymore, will update soon abt the actual time for stall closing once I pass by the stall again.
i just went today at around 6pm. a disappointment though. the flavours are not evenly distributed. sauce is sauce, kueh is kueh, salt is salt and chai poh is chai poh. do not blend at all. i would prefer the one at redhill market.
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