Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Tingkat - When you've too small a kitchen to cook (Or are too lazy!)

It's a strange thing - newer flats usually means smaller kitchens. Go see the showflats for some of the recent developments... their 2-3 bedroom flats have kitchens that are made for.. well, for show really. They are not designed for proper Chinese (or Western) cooking, even though it might have the swankiest kitchen electrical items. But anyone who's cooked knows that...

  1. You need space, lots of space, to prepare your ingredients.
  2. You need a well-ventilated kitchen area when you're cooking Asian food, particularly chilli, spicy or dishes that uses a lot of strong herbs.
  3. You don't want your neighbours cursing at you for making them hungry with the wafts of your excellent culinary dishes, or for stinking up their laundry with your twenty-spiced quadruple-cooked essence soup.
  4. You need space to keep your ingredients and utensils.
Viz kitchens are small. They're meant for breakfast cereals, microwave meals, instant noodles, coffee making. They're not meant for cooking 8 course meals for guests, and I'm sure people here struggle to cook their dinners in the limited kitchen space (how many pack and store your kitchen items elsewhere?).

So design-wise, our kitchens are not cooking-friendly. Which gives us 3 choices:

  1. Grin and bear it.. cook in that cramped space. Helps if you don't have to do the cooking (ie you have a live-in maid or a very obliging husband/wife!)
  2. Eat out.. Some people just find it more convenient to eat at the numerous hawker centres or restaurants and then come home.
  3. Tingkat!
Tingkat (I think) literally means 'tiered carrier'. It's a metal container comprising of multiple, stacked, round containers (usually about 3-4 levels) which is sealed at the top, and used to carry food around. In the old days, people would cook their food in the morning, and bring them to work in such tingkats.





Nowadays, it's a term used to mean "home-cooked food delivered to your door so you don't have to cook". Something like that.

It's not 'takeaway food' (eg pizza, KFC, McD), but rather, the tingkat services pride themselves in cooking food that would taste like they're home-cooked rather than 'cooked-in-a-big-pot-that-can-feed-the-entire-Queenstown-Remand-Prison-guests'. It's useful for busy people, for mothers-to-be (whose hubbies are out working), for lazy people (like, erm, us), for people who are sick of deciding daily where to eat for dinner (like, erm, us).

There's quite a few tingkat services in Singapore. They usually have the following characteristics:

  • They deliver dinners at about 3-4pm, which means if you get back at about 7pm, you'll need to microwave the food just to heat them up.
  • They do change their menus (usually) monthly, and you can try to request for certain dishes (eg no meat dishes etc).
  • Some have a 'trial' period of say 10 days, when you can try their meals for 10 days and if you don't like it, try another service or return to whatever you were doing to feed yourselves.
  • Some pride themselves as being 'msg-free' or they use 'less salt or oil' etc. The more upmarket ones will feature better or larger varieties, or more interesting selections.
  • You can usually cancel the food for the day (eg you have a dinner date) but that usually requires a day's notice (ie you can't spring a sudden dinner date or you'll find a tingkat at your doorstep).
  • You can order with or without rice, up to 4 dishes with or without soup etc. Costs about $5 per person ($10 per couple) to $15 per person for the more posh ones.
  • Some will provide the food in the metal tingkat containers, which you then wash and leave outside the next day for them to collect. Others will heat-seal the food in plastic, disposable, containers.
  • They have specific areas where they will serve.
The last point is a bit annoying for Viz Hollanders. When we decided upon going the tingkat route, we contacted all the tingkat services that were within the reasonable range (about $10-20 per couple). We found that (a) not a lot of them have heard of Viz Holland (b) many do not serve the Queensway area that we are at.

There's two tingkat services that can/do serve our estate - First Cuisine, and Four Seasons. We've tried both and preferred one over the other. Without biasing people, I'd suggest that you give it a go yourselves if you wish to do the tingkat thang.

So here's some links for you to try out:
http://www.fourseasonscatering.com.sg/
http://www.firstcuisine.com.sg/tingkat.asp
http://www.houseofcatering.com/tingkat.htm
http://www.kimskitchen.com.sg/tingkat.html
http://www.jessie.com.sg/
http://www.empirefood.com.sg/tingkat.htm
http://www.select.com.sg/tingkat.htm
http://www.neogarden.com.sg/
http://www.lexin.com.sg/tingkat.htm
http://www.tongchiang.com.sg/delivery.htm

As mentioned, Four Seasons and First Cuisine will cater to Viz Hollanders, while the rest either refused to, or were not contactable at the time we were looking for one. Worth asking them though, if you want to.

You can read other forums which have some recommendations.. there are largely in the motherhood forums like this one here, here, or a women's forum here.

If you find others that service Viz, please put it in the comments. We're always keen to try them out ourselves!

6 comments:

Sifu said...

Did you notice how low your kitchen counters are? I think they were designed for 5'2" maids! My back and neck aches after a night of cooking! When you're looking at apartments you may not think to even check this, but its definitely advisable to do some mime onion-chopping action on the counter before you decide to buy/rent the place! Thanks for the info on the tingkats, we are really curious to try it out!

Sifu said...

The one thing that I do love about our kitchens here are the built-in De Dietrich combo microwave/convection ovens. These things are as good for nuking last nights leftovers as the are for baking pies and roasting chicken. The best thing about them obviously is their space-saving advantage....anyones whos ever had to put their microwave on top of their fridge will certainly appreciate this.

vizard said...

Hahaha.. We still can't figure out how to use the Dietrich machine!!

And if anyone can figure out how to keep the counter top WHITE, please let me know! I've tried everything - bleach, those white sponges that will (supposedly) remove anything etc. Nothing works to remove the scratches or recover the whiteness.

Does anyone have rust on their supposedly stainless steel drainer (the one hanging over the kitchen sink)?

vizard said...

We tried First Cuisine for a month but didn't really like it because (a) their chicken tends to come chopped at the parts where there's lots of bone fragment (b) gets a bit boring after a while, with the same dishes. Switched over to Four Seasons and have been using them for the past few months.. So far so good, although i think we may want to take a break. If anyone finds other tingkats that can service Viz, please post here..

food solutions said...

Your photos are so alive and sharp it makes it very hard not to reach into the screen and try to gobble this up (no matter how futile the attempt. Looks yummy! large scale catering

Caterer said...

Getting confuse on buffet catering services, after a long research about best caterer in singapore i would suggest you my favorite Empire Food and caterers