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Singapore, Singapore

Lian He Ben Ji Claypot

CuisineStreet Food
Executive ChefValentin Loison
LocationSingapore, Singapore
Michelin

Lian He Ben Ji Claypot operates from a hawker stall on the second floor of Chinatown Complex, where claypot rice cooked over charcoal has earned consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025. The format is elemental: raw ingredients, live fire, and patience. At the $ price tier, it sits among Singapore's most decorated budget eating experiences.

Lian He Ben Ji Claypot restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
About

Chinatown Complex and the Hawker Stall That Earns Its Stars

Chinatown Complex on Smith Street is one of Singapore's most concentrated hawker environments — a two-storey maze of stalls where the cooking is loud, the seating is communal, and the queue is the only real indicator of quality that matters. The second floor is where serious eaters tend to gravitate, and it is here that Lian He Ben Ji Claypot has held its position for years, cooking over charcoal in a city where gas burners have largely replaced the older method. The approach has not changed to suit convenience, and that stubbornness is precisely the point. Singapore's hawker culture rests on this kind of commitment: stalls that cook one thing, the same way, across decades.

Chinatown Complex itself warrants context. As one of Singapore's oldest and largest hawker centres, it sits inside a neighbourhood that has absorbed waves of modernisation without fully surrendering its character. The ground floor retail levels give way to an upper-floor food hall where fluorescent lighting, folding stools, and the smell of charcoal and soy define the experience more honestly than any designed dining room could. Finding the stall at #02-198/199 requires a degree of patience — the complex's internal layout is not immediately legible , but regulars navigate it without hesitation.

Claypot Rice as a Technical Tradition

Claypot rice occupies a specific lane in Singaporean and Malaysian Chinese cooking. The clay vessel is not incidental; it distributes heat differently from metal, creating a bottom layer of lightly scorched rice , the socarrat equivalent in this context , while the ingredients above steam and absorb. Charcoal amplifies this effect in ways that gas cannot replicate: the heat comes in cycles rather than in a constant stream, and the flavour the fuel imparts, however subtle, is discernible to anyone who has eaten both versions side by side.

The Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded here in both 2024 and 2025, is the relevant credential. The Bib Gourmand category specifically recognises cooking that delivers quality at a price accessible to most diners , distinct from the starred tier, and arguably a more useful signal in the hawker context, where the cooking has never been about luxury ingredients or elaborate technique. Across Singapore's Bib Gourmand list, street food stalls sit alongside casual restaurants, and the assessment criteria remain consistent: the cooking must justify the recognition on merit, not on sentiment or heritage alone. Two consecutive years of recognition at Lian He Ben Ji Claypot indicates the standard has held.

For regional comparison, Singapore's Bib Gourmand hawker tier shares a competitive logic with street food recognised elsewhere in Southeast Asia , from the charcoal-fired preparations at 888 Hokkien Mee in George Town to the single-dish discipline of A Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket. The principle is consistent: one dish, repeated without shortcut, over a long operating life.

Where It Sits in Singapore's Hawker Recognition Tier

Singapore's Michelin Guide has been more willing than most to recognise hawker cooking at the highest levels , Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle holds a full star, and the Bib Gourmand list runs deep with stalls and kopitiam counters. Lian He Ben Ji Claypot occupies the Bib Gourmand bracket rather than the starred tier, which is an accurate reflection of its format: this is a hawker stall serving a working dish, not a refined tasting counter. The $ price range reinforces that placement. At the opposite end of Singapore's dining spectrum sit venues like Zén ($$$$, European Contemporary) and Born ($$$$, Creative Cuisine), where the comparison to a Chinatown Complex claypot stall is not ironic , it is simply an illustration of how wide Singapore's credentialed dining range actually runs.

Within the hawker tier itself, the comparison set includes 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles, 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee, and Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle , all operating within a broadly similar price bracket and all working within the same logic of disciplined single-focus cooking. A Noodle Story represents the slightly more structured end of this tier, where the hawker format has been refined toward a more deliberate presentation. Lian He Ben Ji Claypot makes no such concession: it remains a stall, in a hawker centre, doing what it has always done.

The Google rating of 3.9 from 878 reviews reflects a reality common to high-volume hawker stalls: the queue, the wait times, and the no-frills setting generate friction for visitors expecting a more managed experience, and that friction shows up in aggregate scores. The Michelin assessors, who are evaluating the cooking specifically, arrive at a different conclusion. These two signals are not in contradiction; they are measuring different things.

Planning Your Visit

Lian He Ben Ji Claypot is located at 335 Smith St, #02-198/199, Chinatown Complex, Singapore 050335. The stall sits on the second floor of the complex, accessible from the main escalators. Chinatown MRT (NE and DT lines) places you within a short walk. Reservations: Not available; this is a walk-in hawker stall, and queuing is standard practice, particularly during lunch and early evening. Arriving before peak meal times reduces waiting. Budget: $ , this is among the most accessible price points in Singapore's recognised dining scene. Dress: No code; hawker centre dress norms apply.

For broader planning across Singapore's dining, drinking, and hospitality options, see our full Singapore restaurants guide, our full Singapore hotels guide, our full Singapore bars guide, our full Singapore wineries guide, and our full Singapore experiences guide.

For street food context across the wider region, Ah Boy Koay Teow Th'ng, Air Itam Duck Rice, Air Itam Sister Curry Mee, Ali Nasi Lemak Daun Pisang, Anuwat in Phang Nga, and Banana Boy in Hong Kong offer useful reference points for how single-dish hawker cooking is practised across the region.

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