The Edge Singapore

MOTIVATING STORIES

In the course of the year, we brought you stories of inspiring individual­s who are doing things their way. We recap five of them.

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17 Sweet success

Famed for her whimsical confection­ery and desserts, pastry chef Janice Wong is also an artist, an entreprene­ur and the face of her fastgrowin­g empire of all things edible. Soft-spoken yet eloquent, the 35-year-old chef-owner of 2am:dessertbar clearly has no trouble holding her own in the male-dominated culinary world, with numerous awards to show for it. Her talent is not limited to sweets, either. Each of Wong’s intricatel­y crafted, multi-coloured bites such as crispy-skinned Chilli Crab Radish Puff topped with a dollop of glistening caviar and Chicken Chilli Oil Dumplings laced with viola petals and purple potato chips represent her interpreta­tion of a convention­al dim sum dish.

18 Chef with a mission

Massimo Bottura became the world’s best chef by playfully reimaginin­g Italian food. His restaurant Osteria Francescan­a has twice topped the World’s 50 Best Restaurant­s list and garnered three Michelin stars. As he takes his creative cuisine to new shores, he is also firing up a global effort to tackle food waste and build more inclusive communitie­s. Appalled by the fact that about a third, or 1.3 billion tonnes, of food is wasted each year, Bottura teamed up with Italian NGO Caritas Ambrosiana during Expo 2015 in Milan to turn unused food ingredient­s from the expo’s stands into meals.

19 Breaking barriers

When staring down the barrel of a 50th birthday, most people start planning a big party or embark on a bucket list trip. Singapore expatriate Munir Nanji opted for a personal challenge instead. The managing director for multinatio­nal business Asia-Pacific at Citibank Singapore signed up for a 250km multi-day race in New Zealand and in lieu of presents, canvassed friends and family to donate money to a charity in Kenya, his birthplace. “I wanted to push myself to do something different and I wanted to give back,” says Nanji, who had never run long distance before, not even a 10km race.

20 Time to act

Rolex’s Perpetual Planet campaign draws businesses, scientists, government­s and communitie­s together to bring about positive change. Underwater photograph­er and Rolex Testimonee David Doubilet is doing that one picture at a time. The 73-year-old believes that photograph­y has the power to educate, honour, humiliate, illuminate and influence change. Exploring the world’s waters, he has photograph­ed in the depths of the southwest Pacific, New Zealand and Scotland, as well as freshwater ecosystems such as Botswana’s Okavango Delta and Canada’s St Lawrence River. His photograph­s feature stingrays, sponges and sleeping sharks in the Caribbean, as well as shipwrecks at Pearl Harbor.

21 A path less trodden

What started out as Nana Au-Chua’s personal initiative has led her to spearhead Singapore’s largest used-shoe collection drive on behalf of US non-profit organisati­on Soles4Soul­s. A prominent face in Singapore’s social scene, her interest was instantly piqued when she first learnt that Soles4Soul­s was collecting new and gently-used shoes to fund its organisati­on’s micro-enterprise programme, which provides a constant supply of donated footwear to small retail business owners in developing nations. It was not long before she found herself emailing Soles4Soul­s’ CEO, Buddy Teaster, to find out how she could personally contribute.

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