A mouthwatering and uplifting debut about legacy, tradition,
and striking out on your own, set in family-run restaurants between Malaysia
and Hong Kong.
Every morning before sunrise, Lim Ah Hock opens the shutters
of his small kitchen on Carpenter Street, lights an incense stick and prepares
the best laksa soup in all of Kuching. According to Lim family legend, the
laksa’s secret ingredient - their ancestral broth - was gifted to them by a
deity, who promised the family prosperity as long as the broth is passed down
through the generations.
But Ah Hock is aging, and the broth’s quality is fading. His
only son, Wei Ming, has no interest in the family business, having spent eight
years in Hong Kong trying to prove himself as a chef. Now, he’s struggling with
gambling debts, embroiled in a love triangle, and the restaurant he’s been left
to run has lost its Global Restaurants Guild star.
Invited home to Malaysia for his father’s 60th birthday, Wei
Ming sees a chance to escape his troubles. But when old conflicts resurface and
a local businessman threatens to destroy the family legacy, father and son are
forced to ask themselves what truly matters.
About the Author
Janet Tay is a Tin House Winter Workshop alum, and her short
stories and journalistic pieces on literature, food and parenting have appeared
in various collections and magazines. The first act of her full-length play
Reunion was longlisted for The Windsor Fringe Kenneth Branagh Award for New
Drama Writing. She lives in Kuala Lumpur with her husband and son. Early
Mornings at the Laksa Cafe is her debut novel.