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CuisineSeafood
Executive ChefMarcus Leow
LocationSingapore, Singapore
Opinionated About Dining

At Gillman Barracks, The Naked Finn occupies a converted colonial building on the edge of Singapore's arts enclave and applies a sourcing-led philosophy to seafood that sits outside the city's mainstream chilli-crab circuit. Ranked #206 in the 2025 Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia list, it draws a loyal following for its discipline around ingredient quality and preparation restraint. Open Tuesday through Saturday for lunch and dinner.

The Naked Finn restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
About

Gillman Barracks and the Case for Restraint

Singapore's seafood tradition runs loud and sauce-heavy: wok hei, chilli crab, salted egg yolk, the theatrical crackle of a charcoal claypot. That tradition has deep roots and deserves respect — venues like Long Beach DEMPSEY, Mellben Seafood (Ang Mo Kio), and No Signboard Seafood each hold their own within it. But alongside that mainstream runs a quieter counter-argument: that the leading seafood in Southeast Asia needs less intervention, not more. The Naked Finn, positioned at 39 Malan Road within the Gillman Barracks arts precinct, is the clearest local expression of that argument.

Gillman Barracks itself shapes the experience before you cross the threshold. The former British military compound, redeveloped into a cluster of contemporary art galleries and select restaurants, carries a particular atmosphere — low-density, tree-lined, deliberately removed from the pace of the Central Business District or Orchard Road. Arriving here requires intention. There is no passing foot traffic, no serendipitous walk-in culture. The result is a dining room where the crowd has self-selected: people who looked the address up, made a reservation, and came specifically for what is on the plate.

Seafood as Cultural Argument

Across Asia, the premium seafood conversation has historically centred on Japanese sourcing logic: the Tsukiji and Toyosu markets as arbiters of quality, the kappo counter as the purist format, the aging and temperature control of fish as the measure of technical seriousness. Singapore, drawing on its position as a maritime trading hub between the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea, has its own claim to seafood excellence , but that claim has more often been made through cooking technique and seasoning than through raw-ingredient focus.

The Naked Finn occupies a distinct position in that context. Under chef Marcus Leow, the kitchen has consistently prioritised the sourcing question , where the fish comes from, how it was handled, and how little needs to be done to it , over the performance of complex saucing. This places the restaurant in a peer conversation that extends beyond Singapore. Globally, the restaurants that operate in this mode include places like Cañabota in Seville, where the intelligence is in the selection of fish from Atlantic and Mediterranean suppliers, and Jellyfish in Hamburg, which brings a similar Nordic-influenced restraint to North Sea and global seafood sourcing. Further south, Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and La Buca in Cesenatico represent the Italian version of the same principle: coastal proximity and handling discipline as the primary value proposition. Alici on the Amalfi Coast works the same territory with anchovy-centric sourcing, while Conchas de Piedra in Valle de Guadalupe applies Baja California's shellfish culture to a wine-country setting. La Zanzara in Codigoro and Le Cigalon in Thônex round out a broader European seafood tradition built on market provenance. The Naked Finn sits comfortably in that international cohort.

What the Awards Signal

Recognition from Opinionated About Dining (OAD) carries specific weight in this context. Unlike Michelin, which historically rewards technique, presentation, and service formality, OAD rankings are generated by a community of experienced diners whose evaluations tend to prize culinary seriousness over room quality or service polish. A ranking of #206 in Asia for 2025, with a trajectory from Highly Recommended in 2023 to #210 in 2024, indicates a restaurant that has built and maintained a committed following among informed eaters. It also places The Naked Finn in a competitive tier that is distinct from Singapore's fine-dining institutions, such as Les Amis, or the high-concept creative kitchens that dominate local press coverage.

The Google rating of 4.4 across 665 reviews adds a different layer of signal. High-volume positive feedback from a general dining public, combined with sustained OAD recognition from specialist diners, is a relatively unusual combination. It suggests a restaurant that has not retreated into a niche accessible only to specialists, but has maintained its standards while remaining broadly accessible and legible to a wider audience.

Singapore Seafood in Context

To understand why this approach registers as distinct in Singapore, it helps to understand what surrounds it. The dominant local seafood formats , the zi char restaurant, the seafood centre, the hawker stall , are built around collective eating, shared plates, and the primacy of sauce and wok technique. Sin Hoi Sai in Tiong Bahru represents that tradition well: a neighbourhood institution where the cooking is the point, not the provenance label on the fish. That format has genuine depth and deserves its place in any serious account of Singapore dining.

The Naked Finn does not position itself against that tradition so much as perpendicular to it. Where zi char seafood is social, loud, and sauce-forward, the Gillman Barracks setting enforces a different mode: quieter, more focused, more attentive to the individual piece of fish. Both approaches reflect aspects of what Singapore's geographic position makes possible , a city-state that can draw on both regional fishing cultures and global supply chains. The question the kitchen poses is what happens when you strip the preparation back and let the sourcing carry the weight.

Planning Your Visit

The Naked Finn operates Tuesday through Saturday, with lunch service from 12 to 3 pm and dinner from 6 to 10:30 pm. The restaurant is closed on Mondays and Sundays. The Gillman Barracks location requires deliberate navigation, whether by taxi, private hire, or car , it sits at 39 Malan Road, off Alexandra Road, and is not easily walkable from the nearest MRT stations. Reservations: Advance booking is strongly advised, particularly for dinner service, given the consistent OAD recognition. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate to the setting. Budget: Price range data is not published, but the combination of quality-sourced seafood and a specialist dining format places this above the zi char tier; factor accordingly.

For the wider Singapore dining picture, see our full Singapore restaurants guide. Planning beyond food: our Singapore hotels guide, our Singapore bars guide, our Singapore experiences guide, and our Singapore wineries guide cover the rest of the city's premium offer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What should I order at The Naked Finn?
The kitchen's throughline is ingredient-first seafood: the menu is built around what is well-sourced on a given day rather than a fixed signature list. The OAD recognition, anchored in the seafood programme developed by chef Marcus Leow, suggests that the preparation approach rewards attention to whatever the kitchen is currently emphasising. Given the restraint-led philosophy, dishes where the fish itself is the focus rather than a sauce-heavy preparation are likely to reflect the kitchen's strengths most directly.
Q: What is the defining idea at The Naked Finn?
The most precise answer is sourcing discipline applied to seafood in a city whose dominant seafood culture prioritises technique and sauce over provenance. The OAD ranking progression from Highly Recommended (2023) to #210 (2024) to #206 (2025) is the clearest external confirmation of that idea gaining sustained traction among serious diners across Asia. In structural terms, this is a restaurant where the intelligence sits upstream , in the buying decisions and handling protocols , rather than in the complexity of what happens on the stove.

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