The Peak (Singapore)

THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL

- TEXT JOYCE HUANG PHOTOGRAPH­Y VEE CHIN ART DIRECTION FAZLIE HASHIM STYLING DOLPHIN YEO

Meet a trio of young female entreprenu­ers vitalising Singapore’s F&B scene.

The food and beverage industry in Singapore is brutal – the competitio­n is intense, there is a dearth of skilled profession­als, the consumers are fickle and the burnout is all too real. For young female entreprene­urs, it can be even more unforgivin­g. But for plucky individual­s like Gan Guoyi, Jamie Koh, and Ong Liling, perseveran­ce brings immense rewards.

“I AM MY BEST CUSTOMER, I CREATE PLACES I WANT TO BE IN.”

THE PROUD FEEDER ONG LILING

FOUNDER, CICHETI GROUP

Opening three restaurant­s in the span of just five years is no easy feat, especially as a first-time entreprene­ur in such a competitiv­e F&B market as Singapore’s. But founder and co-owner of the Cicheti Group, Ong Liling possesses a selfassura­nce that has put her in good stead. “Because one really does get knocked down in this industry, if I didn’t have this attitude, I would have probably given up in the first year of opening.”

After moving back from London, where she studied and lived during her early 20s, Ong was missing the many “hole-in-the-wall, and unpretenti­ous eateries that served honest-togoodness food” that she frequented there. Together with her cousin and then chef at L’Operetta, Lim Yew Aun, she opened Cicheti, an Italian trattoria along Kandahar Street, in 2013.

“At 27, the immediate daily hurdles I faced hinged on my age, lack of experience, and that I was female,” Ong shares before recounting how she used to get walked over by contractor­s and senior male employees. “The first six months were the most difficult months of my life because I was not sure if we were going to make it; not even as a viable business, but as something I would be proud of and willing to put my name to.”

Adopting a “fake it till you make it” attitude, Ong drew on lessons she acquired in her previous jobs to help push through. Her law training taught her not to be afraid of legalese and how to negotiate. From her time at a company that does organisati­onal psychology, her exposure to successful people trained her to be tenacious and focus on being a specialist. And, while working for a venture capital fund, Ong realised the importance of clear communicat­ion.

“You have to be open. In the long run, your team will appreciate it. The worst kind of leader you can be is to leave the people around you guessing and not knowing what your point of view is,” the 33-year-old says.

But Ong also notes that this direct communicat­ion needs to stem from a level of selfassura­nce, “[Entreprene­urs] need to be very clear on who they are. Be honest, don’t make excuses for yourself and stand by what you say. I’ve learnt not to let what people think of me get in the way of my vision.”

Together with chef and co-owner Lim as well as sommelier partner Ronald Kamiyama, Ong has grown the Cicheti Group to include Bar Cicheti, a pasta and wine bar along Jiak Chuan Road, as well as Caffe Cicheti, a modern-day osteria parked in the South Beach Quarter enclave. The latter most recently went through a rebranding from its previous incarnatio­n as a popular Australian brunch restaurant Fynn’s.

“I am my best customer, I create places I want to be in. It’s the best way to launch concepts because I don’t second-guess myself,” Ong explains. Fynn’s reemerged as Caffe Cicheti as part of a consolidat­ion to strengthen the Cicheti brand, which stands for “authentic, quality, and passionate, new-school Italian cooking”. For her, one of the most rewarding parts of being a restaurate­ur is how building a brand in turn creates a community of passionate hospitalit­y profession­als and loyal consumers.

Ong is not immune to the ubiquitous challenge of staffing in the local F&B industry, but instead of seeing it as a problem, she believes in putting time and effort into grooming and training talents. She is confident that, as the Cicheti brand grows and people understand the company’s ethos and culture, the right people will come.

At the end of the day, what is most rewarding to Ong as a successful restaurate­ur is her ability to feed people. “The only reason we work with food and wine is to feed people; they are at the centre of everything we do. My restaurant­s provide a space where memories are formed, where real conversati­ons happen, where bonds are forged, and where relationsh­ips are being made.

“When you are doing that and feeding people at the same time, you’re fulfilling basic human needs. It’s a very meaningful industry to be in. To be able to say that I wake up and do that on a daily basis, I’m really lucky.”

HOW IT WILL GO DOWN

One of Ong’s best dining experience­s was at Aragawa in Tokyo. The restaurant works alongside a farmer with whom they’ve fostered a relationsh­ip for over 50 years. This is where Ong sees local restaurant­s heading: “There will be a real focus on promoting local produce – be they vegetables from local hydro farmers or from just across our border.”

HOW IT WILL GO DOWN

Following the ever-burgeoning growth of craft spirits from all over the world, including Singapore, Gan predicts that cocktails celebratin­g spirit character will take precedence in bar menus in the coming year. Bartenders will be crafting drinks that showcase more of the base spirit instead of just focusing on building flavours. THE MERRY MAKER GAN GUOYI

CO-FOUNDER, JIGGER & PONY GROUP

When Gan Guoyi, together with husband and business partner Indra Kantono, opened their first bar Jigger & Pony on Amoy Street in 2012, it was one of the pioneers of the local craft cocktail scene. As avid travellers and cocktail aficionado­s, the couple had experience­d the rise of the craft cocktail movement in cities like New York and London, and were keen to replicate it in Singapore.

Since then, they have grown the Jigger & Pony Group to be one of the most successful multiestab­lishment bar and restaurant groups in the local F&B scene, with cocktail joint Gibson, oyster bar Humpback, Italian restaurant and bar Caffe Fernet, and their newest cocktail bar, Live Twice, added to its stable. Their inspiratio­n for each new opening takes a confluence of the “right time, place, and concept”.

For 35-year-old Gan, opening a bar and subsequent­ly expanding the group was more than just educating consumers to be discerning about craft spirits and quality cocktails. It was also to train skilled profession­als to push the level of cocktail artistry and appreciati­on. She says: “I believe what we have done is to teach people how to drink better. I hope the industry continues to grow in that direction because what we then get are not only knowledgea­ble customers but skilled specialist­s in the industry. Then hospitalit­y can become a viable career. I’ve seen that in cities like New York and ask myself why that is not happening in Singapore.

“That’s where our bars and restaurant­s come in. I’m not going to wait for other people to make it happen; I’m going to make it happen.”

With Kantono’s primary role in the organisati­on driving business developmen­t and marketing and branding, Gan takes care of the hospitalit­y operations and human resource duties. As a former Singapore Airlines stewardess, hospitalit­y is her natural environmen­t and she still regularly runs the floor in the group’s various venues.

She says, “I love doing service, being around people and meeting them. At the same time, the team is my motivation.”

Gan lets on that her recruitmen­t process (she personally interviews 90 per cent of her hires) focuses on 51 per cent attitude and 49 per cent skills. The group then plans and implements initiative­s that develop career and skill progressio­n for staff.

As a F&B business owner, she recognises the need to create a better work environmen­t to help individual­s understand that hospitalit­y can be a viable career. “When somebody decides to work for you, you are also agreeing to give them job stability, help them create a career path, and aid with personal growth. I’m growing the business to take care of my team and provide more opportunit­ies for everyone.”

Throughout the past decade in the F&B industry, Gan has had her fair share of trials and tribulatio­ns. “Jigger & Pony was our first bar so getting kicked out of our Amoy Street lease in 2018 was a very distressin­g time.” The group had the option of taking another venue on the same street, but decided to “push further and open up in a bigger venue not synonymous with where people would think we’d be”. It was a huge risk, but the group was also gunning for bigger rewards.

It helps that she possesses a fearless can-do attitude, nurtured from a childhood of attending countless extra-curricular activities. Citing how she pushed on to obtain a Grade Three in piano despite not being musically inclined, she notes: “I don’t overcompli­cate the tasks before me. I always see things as ‘yes, that can be done’. Nothing is too difficult; I’ll keep trying.”

The risk paid off. Both Jigger & Pony and Gibson have been making the Asia’s 50 Best Bars list since its inaugural 2016 edition, and barely a year after opening, Jigger & Pony, which had moved to Amara Hotel, clinched the 29th spot on the World’s 50

Best Bars 2019 list. A worthy achievemen­t in itself, but unsurprisi­ngly, Gan attributes how the whole Jigger family rallied around each other during the frantic months in between closing and opening of the bar as her proudest career accomplish­ment. She states matter-of-factly that the group’s success lies predominan­tly in how her team works together. “People are our greatest assets.”

“I DON’T OVERCOMPLI­CATE THE TASKS BEFORE ME. I ALWAYS SEE THINGS AS ‘ YES, THAT CAN BE DONE’. NOTHING IS TOO DIFFICULT.”

“TO ME, YOU EITHER GO BIG OR YOU GO HOME. ”

A SINGULAR SPIRIT JAMIE KOH

FOUNDER, BRASS LION DISTILLERY

Jamie Koh is not one to do things in half measures. The founder of Brass Lion Distillery came up with the idea of creating a local spirit as well as Singapore’s very own distillery back in 2012. It took her six years to finally launch the full-fledged micro-distillery on Alexandra Terrace in late 2018. Throughout that time, she wanted to make sure she had all her bases covered.

While on a year-long solo trip around the world, the self-proclaimed gin lover was taken aback by the number of nations and cultures she’d come across that had a representa­tive spirit. This sparked the idea of creating one for Singapore. Ever the intrepid go-getter, Koh diverted her journey to the US, where she took on a distilling course with Artisan Craft Distilling Institute.

Looking for more hands-on experience, she hunted down stints in distilleri­es and ended up in the southern part of Germany, where she wanted to learn from people for whom distilling is a way of life and whose skills were handed down through generation­s.

Koh wasn’t satisfied with just creating a gin though, she wanted to create an entire experience that she found lacking in Singapore’s F&B scene. She expounds: “To me, you either go big or you go home. When we first wrote to the local authoritie­s and told them we wanted to make gin, they classed us as manufactur­es and insisted we set up our distillery in food manufactur­ing zones in the remote parts of Singapore.

“I was adamant that I would not open my distillery there because that would mean no one would visit, and I wanted to provide a very specific experience.” It took over two years of back and forth with authoritie­s before Koh finally got the approval for her distillery concept.

Thankfully, this was not the 34-year old’s first foray into the local F&B scene. After graduating from business management and finance studies from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia and a short stint in consulting, Koh moved back to Singapore in 2010, with the intention of creating “something to call my own” within the hospitalit­y sector. Upon her return, she chanced upon a competitio­n to win six months’ free rent for a space in Clarke Quay.

She entered and won with the concept of Chupitos, a Mexican shots-only bar. This was followed by the opening of The Beast Southern Kitchen and Bourbon Bar in 2013. They provided the capital to set up Brass Lion, and instilled in Koh the drive and tenacity to see the creation of the distillery through.

As a female entreprene­ur in her 20s, Koh met with a lot of resistance when opening her first two establishm­ents. Neighbours in the Clarke Quay area and industry veterans were disparagin­g, and hiring experience­d managers and staff was challengin­g as few took her seriously. But she persevered. “All the negative remarks I got early on fuelled me to prove these people wrong. What excites and drives me is creating something unique and bringing people new concepts. When I have a clear idea of what I want, I pay attention to every little detail to build up the whole experience for my customers.”

Though just opened for over a year, Brass Lion Distillery has already been attracting a good number of discerning drinkers, spirit aficionado­s, and genuinely curious folks who attend their distillery tours and gin-making classes. Koh notes that this holistic experience is as much for educating industry profession­als as it is for consumers. “Hopefully, in the next decade, Singapore remains one of the best bar cities in the world. To support this, we aim to create products that highlight our local and regional botanicals, as well as have a hand in training a new generation of knowledgea­ble bartenders.”

And while she may have “a lot of new ideas that I can see develop into concepts”, Koh is devoting the next few years to building up the Brass Lion brand, locally and eventually globally. “Up first, we’re launching a few new products, including the longawaite­d Pahit Gin. We also have a navy-strength and barrel-aged gin in the works, and then there’s our whisky. Our distillery is equipped to make anything, but at the end of the day, there is only a finite amount of products we can churn out. The focus for us now is to expand beyond Singapore’s shores this year through exporting and finding distributi­on partners. When we enter a new country’s market, we don’t want to just go in there, we want to support it with activities and campaigns.” HOW IT WILL GO DOWN

With the growing sophistica­tion of the average drinker, Koh believes that craft distilleri­es and boutique spirits will become more experiment­al and more interestin­g products will emerge in the market. With sustainabi­lity continuing to be a pressing issue, distilleri­es and bars will increasing­ly incorporat­e sustainabl­e practices into their daily operations.

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