With a mission to share Singapore with the world, the family-run Rainbow Lapis started as the retail arm of Cooking Art Industries, one of Singapore’s first professional culinary schools, founded in the early 1980s by Mrs. Esther-Kim Sim. Then, Cooking Art was known for its wide repertoire of culinary courses taught by wellknown professional teachers and chefs including Nicholas Lodge, who was one of Princess Diana’s wedding cake decorators, and the late Baba Jolly Wee. The mid 1990s saw Cooking Art evolve into becoming a manufacturer instead to meet the rising need for a first-rate local dessert supplier for Singapore’s hotel industry.
Rainbow Lapis was eventually established in the 1990s amidst Singapore’s historical struggles of the financial crisis and SARS. “In those days our main business was hit really badly as tourist numbers plummeted and we wouldn’t have been able to survive if we had stuck only with our food-service business model,” shares Claire Shen, managing director of Rainbow Lapis and daughter of founder Esther-Kim Sim. “We started participating in temporary week-long pop up stores and small kiosks at food events in the malls. We have come a very long way since then, and Rainbow Lapis is still continuously growing with its mission to preserve and celebrate Singapore’s heritage delicacies,” shares Claire.
A LABOUR OF LOVE
Thriving on their key values of service excellence, creativity and quality products, Rainbow Lapis’ beautiful range of handcrafted local kuehs, lapis, chiffon cakes, tartlets, cookies and snacks revolves around the company’s vision to share the authentic taste and experience of Singapore locally, and with the world. “Our products are handmade daily, in a 24-hour ISO22000-certified central kitchen, with the finest ingredients to ensure the freshness and quality of our offerings,” notes Claire.
Bu hikaye WINE&DINE dergisinin September - October 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye WINE&DINE dergisinin September - October 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
New Blood
The next-generation is breathing new life into the forgotten art of spice-mixing, peppering the traditional trade with renewed ideas and fresh perspectives.
Sharing Is Caring
Compared to its flagship at Serene Centre, Fat Belly Social at Boon Tat Street is a classier and bolder affair, in more than one sense.
Nutmeg's Role In Singapore's History
From tales of it being used to ward off the plague in mid-1300s Europe to one of the ingredients in dessert, we have all known, tasted, or at least heard of nutmeg. But not many know of the spice’s role in Singapore’s history.
New And Improved
The ever-profound chef-owner Kenjiro ‘Hatch’ Hashida finds more room, three to be exact, to express a Ha Ri philosophy at Hashida Singapore’s new location at Amoy Street.
Pairing Spice-Driven Cuisines With Wine
Pairing spice-driven cuisines with wine has long been a challenge but with a little imagination, it doesn’t have to be.
Let Land Grow Wild
Niew Tai-Ran has worn many hats: aeronautical engineering major, investment banker, avid surfer, and, for the last 14 years, winemaker. Discover how this Malaysia-born, Singapore-native is championing the “do-nothing farming” philosophy at his vineyard in Oregon.
The South Asian Misnomer
Incredibly diverse and varied than most know, Indian food is far more intriguing than butter chicken or thosai. Here is a crash course on the extensive cuisine from region to region, recognisable for the seemingly infinite ways of using spices.
Keepers Of The Spice Trade
From its glory days along trade routes to pantry staples all over the world, spices have become so commonplace that we’ve taken them for granted. For these three trailblazers, however, spice is their livelihood and motivation: Langit Collective working with indigenous rural farming communities in Malaysia; IDH’s Sustainable Spice Initiative; and chef Nak’s one-woman mission to share forgotten Khmer cuisine.
Sugar, Spice And Everything Nice
Like food, spices bring vibrancy and variety to alcoholic beverages. Surfacing in unexpected ways on the palate, find everything from cumin to tamarind, cloves to cardamom enriching these drinks.
Building Blocks From The Archipelago
For the smorgasbord of dishes found in Indonesian cuisine, it is a little known secret that the modest bumbu, in all its variants, is the bedrock of such flavourful fare.