Sunday, April 22, 2012

Mustafa Shopping Center - 24 Hours Non Stop 365 days a year



Pictures of Mustafa Centre, Singapore
This photo of Mustafa Centre is courtesy of TripAdvisor

                                                Selling Everything to Everyone


       Located at 145 Syed Alwi Road off Serangoon Road, I took my visitor from India, Sanjeev Kumar to Mustafa's to get a feel of how a Mega Shopping Center is like. 'It' is in fact 2 huge buildings spanning the entire stretch of Syed Alwi Road with shopping from Basement 2 to 2nd floor, so 4 floors in total.

       Owned by Mr. Mohammad Mustafa Shamsuddin, he was a trader who built his business following his father's death when he was just 17 years old. His original shop was at High Street where there are some remaining shops from the old days. The High Street was the place to go for shopping in the 50s and 60s. I was just born then, but I remember my parents brining me to Robinson's Department Store - the only major department store in Raffles Place when I was about 1 and a half years of age. High Street was the neighbouring shoopping place. Things were much simpler then. I will put up some photos of that time in future posts.

      Anyway, during this trip, we checked out the Gold Department (an entire Basement 1 is devoted to this). Many Indians who are working here like to buy gold, at $ 67.20 per gram, and $710 per 10 grams. Bangles, chains, bracelets, pendants, necklaces you name it, Mustafa has them. In addition, according to Sanjeev, the variety and craftsmanship of the gold products are far wider and superior to what many Indians can find at home. Price when converted to rupees is basically the same, however if the Indian family is working here, the earning capacity is far higher than in India, so it makes sense for them to cart some home to give to their families and loved ones.

     So, there is a pharmacy, travel agent, hotel, car showroom ( I heard but didn't see), restaurants, cafes, health food store (GNC), massive supermarket with (for example) 50 brands of perfumes, sports goods, Indian traditional wear (saris), electronics, children's section, electronics, cameras, PCs, laptops, TVs, household goods, you name it, there is some variant of it being sold at Mustafa.

     What I didn't like was the service (in your face take it or leave it), and the prices are practically the same prices one gets from downtown electronics, department stores, and supermarkets. It only offers the convenience and perhaps massive variety of household products and 24 hour shopping. Go during the morning (say 8 - 10 am) when the road is less bustling, car park lots by the roadside are plentiful and the small shops nearby are not blasting one Hindi hit after another.

     I will not fancy shopping there at 3 am in the morning. The area is located near a  notoriously  red light district. So the people milling around will not be the family and business types.



  

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Life is like playing Sudoku


     Living life is like playing a game of Sudoku. For those new to the game, it is all about filling out 9 squares with numbers ranging from 1 to 9 with no repetitions in any square or line, horizontal or vertical. Once you have 2 of the same numbers on any line (except diagonal), you have made a mistake.

     Its very easy to learn, but like most things in life, very difficult to master. I have been playing Sudoku for almost 10 years if I can recall. So after playing for alomost 10 years I thought I could do practically any Sudoku,having ,mastered the techniques of elimination, Gwendolin's thread in the forest, pairs and finally just counting numbers. I was wrong. So practice does make one very adept at the game, but like life, you get thrown a 'curve ball' and all of a sudden, you are stuck at a game and wondering what ever happened to your sense of logic, or even couting skills.

     So my conclusion for Sudoku ? Play the game, but sometimes, we get stumped and are thrown down unceremoniously to the basic beginner level every once in a while, just like Snakes and Ladders.




Friday, April 20, 2012

Siyeong jetty - having fresh catch of the day, barely cooked

This video was taken just a week ago at Siyeong jetty, when the fishermen have come in with their catch, most of the fish would be displayed at the jettyside and the people will go to the jetty and choose their catch of the day. Many would eat it sashimi style, that is, raw. The prawns and shellfish will be washed and cleaned, perhaps boiled, and then eaten with the vinegared sweet spicy sauce, or just with some soya bean sauce and wasabi (horse radish). In a previous post, my host Paul, my colleague Sean and myself had the sashimi fish Korean style. It was an unforgettable experience.

12 Apr 2012 Myeong Dong Street 10, Seoul


Myeong Dong Street 10 
Walking Street with hundreds of small shops 

A must visit place is Myeong Dong Street 10 in Seoul. We requested our host Paul to drop us there, and he obliged by sending us to Nam Demoon area, which is basically like a night market area or 'pasar malam' which sells everything from toursist souvenirs, to Korean ginseng, to KPop memorabilia to fake Tshirts, ties and bags. Not very classy but my colleague Sean and I had a decent time shopping. 

After buying our obligatory take home things such as ginseng, chocolates and KPop memorabilia, we had a lovely dinner along the roadside costing us a princely US$ 50. We thought we were ripped off but the next day our host told us that in Seoul, a simple dish cooked even in a small dining hall costs Won 10000 or US$ 10.00. As we had ordered 5 dishes, the bill rightfully came to US$ 50. In addition, we both enjoyed the Korean Soju or rice wine.


On weekends it gets really crowded with tourists and locals

As we were walking back to the taxi stand, I remembered that the Myeong Dong Street 10 was nearby and so we ended up at the more famous Orchard Road style street with all the brand names and small cosmetic shops selling many brands ranging from SK II, to the Korean OIPE skin care line. I was quite amazed that the Korean men, also take good care of their skin, as can be seen by their TV, KPop and movie stars. I was quite influenced by the apparent discipline in facial hygiene that before I returned, I bought several after shave lotions as well as a famous brand's, Kiehls'  dermotological skin mosituriser. 


Shops selling the latest KPop offerings, CDs,DVDs, Posters, Mugs, you name it

So, coming to the end of a very nice work cum relaxing visit to S.Korea, my impression of the country is that watch our world, S. Korea culture and products are coming soon to a store near you !   They are already world famous brand names in our countries such as LG, Samsung, Kia, Hyundai, Sangyeong. This is only the tip ot the iceberg. Wait 5 more years and sea what other things they will dominate in.

My guess it will be in the music, drama soapies, and a cheap travel destination.


Monday, April 16, 2012

Korean style Sashimi ; Woogong Port


There are literally about a hundred stalls all selling the freshest live seafood, the fish are kept alive barely in tanks with pumped -in oxygen

Fresh from a recent trip to Korea last week, our host Paul, was kind enough to bring us to have lunch at Siheon City's famous Woogong Port, where on weekdays, there are hundreds of small stalls selling live seafood. 'No big deal' - I thought. I was wrong. The multitude of shops all sell the live fish and shellfish, just caught that morning and displayed for immediate eating. Yes, immediate eating. Sashimi sraight off from the tank !! Welcome to Sashimi Korean style.



After taking our orders, the stallholders get to work expertly slicing off the skin and bones

Korea was a Japanese colony for many years, and one of the popular eating habits which they copied form the Japanese was the fine art of eating raw and fresh fish. Hence 'wher" (Korean for sashimi) is extremely popular in the seaside towns such as Siheon. In fact, the very first day we arrived, Paul brought us to eat the fresh seafood from the restaurant and one dish in particular was the barely alive octopus. The legs were still moving on the plate while we ate them !

                           The task is done in a matter of minutes under these expert hands

Anyway, after the skilled hands of the stallholders finished, the meat was placed on a bed of radish and we were instructed to go to the nearby sitdown restaurant to enjoy our meal. It was in my opinion, one of the most tasty sashimi I have ever eaten in my life. There was little need for the light soya sauce or even the wasabi, the meat was so tender and fresh that it tasted like some very fine sponge with no sea smell or flavour.


        Stalllady boss instructs us to bring the sashimi to the sitdown restaurant nearby

The whole cost of 3 fish ?  Plus a hot and sour steamboat soup when we couldn't stomach any more fresh food ?   An unbelieveably low price of US$ 30.00 in total. Just US$ 10.00 per person. A meal in any of the fine restaurants in Seoul would set us back around US$ 300 or US$ 100 each person easily.


Its time for the freshest sashimi on the planet.

After 4 trips and many dinners, lunches on tour, in ski resorts, I can finally say that I have tasted the BEST Korean dish (apart from the Korean BBQ, BiBimBap, Ginseng Chicken soup, Fried Chicken and countless of nice things) so far.

I am looking forward to more trips to Korea in the near future, for work,play and for exquisite dining.

Seize the Day. 

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Train - Save me San Francisco



Really cool video from Youtube from one of the coolest bands around. The look on his face at 3 : 20 says it all.


Cest la Vie !  Thats Life !

Saturday, April 14, 2012

The Cars I have driven over the last 20 years (1996 - 2005)

Side view of the Toyota Harrier 


        In 1994, I started my first business with 2 friends from University. Times were hard, and we worked long hours, and we made do with little then. My eldest boy Noel was born in 1994, and my business was slowly but surely growing. In 1996, I decided that as a small businessman, I could finally afford a Mercedes, do after doing my sums and looking around in the newspapapers, found, a 190E (2 litre) Special which was selling for about S$ 90,000 (if I recall correctly). The car was about 2 years old. 

    It was white, and was the baby of the E class series then.  I had a young child, another kid on the way, and things were looking good. That was in 1996. In June 1997, I remember, I went to Germany for the Worldwide Sales training of my then principal, and they asked something about the 'Asian economic 'flu'. ASEAN was riding on a strong economic wave, and people were making alot of money from the stock market and also property, so we said, "No problem, its only some problem in Thailand". Little did we know that 6 months from June in Jan 2008, was the start of the Asian Financial Crisis.

      After a good 10 - 15 years of solid economic growth (1982 - 1997), S.E. Asia was touted as the 'darling' of investors worldwide, and modernity had come to all the cities. People were flush with cash and took excess credit to buy things that they never had. Countries did the same things too borrowing more than they could afford to finance their infrastructures and coffers. We all know what happened next, Asian currencies went spiralling and bouncing up and down from the Financial Crisis.

     I drove the Merc through all of it, thick and thin. It was fairly reliable, servicing costs were reasonable, and I made several trips with the family and friends to Malacca. In 1997, my second boy Andrew was born. So the Merc was a reliable workhorse for me. After 2000 (4 years after I bought it), it showed signs of age, and servicing became more common. I had an unforgettable battery failure in 1999 at Orchard Link (going on to Orchard Road), where the 2 lanes became only 1 lane, after my car battery died on me. It may have caused me the most unforgettable stress in a long while, as my car breakdown had caused a massive traffic jam, and many drivers drove by and gave me glaring looks !!

      I finally sold the car in 2002, after I realised that the old car (8 years) was costing me a lot in terms of service. Every 2 months there was some problem or other, so it was time for a change. 

      That would be my Nissan Sunny. Ever dependable and really a workhorse.      

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