The first plate is already gone.
Another takes its place without ceremony.
Again.
The carrot cake arrives in the same shape it always does. Squares pressed close together, egg spread thin across the surface, darker where heat has held longer. Nothing looks adjusted for this plate in particular.
Behind it, the pan is wiped quickly, then oiled again. The motion is familiar enough to disappear. The next scoop lands where the last one did.
No variation needed.
Plates pass through the same small area of counter space. They pause briefly, long enough for steam to rise and settle, then move on. One replaces another. The difference between them is minimal, almost theoretical.
Someone reaches for a spoon. Someone else adjusts a chair. The dish remains unchanged until it isn’t — until the first bite breaks the surface and turns this plate into a different moment altogether.
One of many.
It’s carrot cake from Bedok Interchange Hawker Centre. It looks the way it looked earlier, and the way it will look later. The consistency is not a flaw. It’s the reason it fits so easily into the day.






