1939The first pot
Ming Kee begins as a humble street cart, ladling out Cantonese porridge to workers before sunrise. The recipe — rice, patience, and a rolling boil — hasn't changed since.
Est. 1939 — West Coast Market Square, Clementi
For over 85 years, Ming Kee has simmered Cantonese porridge — what many call congee — the slow way, fresh-boiled every dawn until each grain surrenders into velvet.
Our story · 故事
Ming Kee begins as a humble street cart, ladling out Cantonese porridge to workers before sunrise. The recipe — rice, patience, and a rolling boil — hasn't changed since.
Now settled at West Coast Market Square hawker centre, the stall draws queues from across the island — regulars, families, and the occasional public figure — most bowls still around $3.50.
We cook a fixed number of pots each morning. When the porridge runs out, we close. It's the only way to promise every bowl is at its best.
The craft · 手藝
Rice goes into the pot in the small hours and is simmered for hours until every grain breaks down — no shortcuts, no blender.
True Cantonese sang gwan juk: your ingredients — liver, meatballs, cuttlefish, century egg — are rolled into the boiling base only when you order.
Spring onion, crisp youtiao, a thread of sesame oil and white pepper. Simple things, done exactly right, thousands of mornings in a row.
“Reasonable price, very friendly — and the porridge arrives fast, still rolling from the boil.” — Google Reviews
As seen in Mothership · Bestfoodysg · Youmakemehungry · Singapore Best Foods 2024 award-winner
Visit us · 到訪