7 Maxwell Road
#02-100/103 Amoy Street Food Centre
Singapore 069111

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Friday:
10:30am - 03:00pm

Saturday:
10:30am - 03:00pm

Sunday:
10:30am - 03:00pm

Monday:
10:30am - 03:00pm

Tuesday:
10:30am - 03:00pm

Wednesday:
10:30am - 03:00pm

Thursday:
Closed

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Reviews

From the Burpple community

Piao Ji now only opens on Friday to Sundays 11am to 3pm.

Came down on a Sunday to eat this, and the queue is damn long, the queue stretched till about 30m away, total waiting time was above 90mins.

The fish soup was great, the fish was fresh and the soup was robust and flavourful. Tasted like alot of fried onions was added to the soup to make it so flavourful.

But the experience of queueing 90 mins for this, made me question myself over and over again.

Will I return, most probably not.

One of the few stalls that always attracting long queue in this hawker centre, which most people familiar with. People always comparing this stall with another fish soup stall as well.

Piao Ji is operating by older folks here, which is why they have reduce their operating days to just a few days. Do follow their Facebook page closely on their updates on when they open.

Today was lucky as they open for the weekend, and I manage to came early in the morning as they just opened. So the queue wasn’t long and I manage to grab my order pretty fast.

Their fish & prawn soup is sight oily as compared to another stall, but I do like the taste actually. Freshly fish and prawn provided and I like that they have peeled the prawn half.

2 Likes

Like their closest competitor a few stalls away, this renowned decades-old stall attracts long queues during peak lunch periods.
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Unlike their competitor however, their rendition features mackerel fish which is bone-in, requiring careful consumption. Fresh and thick sliced, the fish is tender with meaty sweet savoury flavour.
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The soft rice porridge holds grainy sweet flavour, but their broth is more decadent with the addition of pork lard cubes, resulting in a savoury salty sweet flavour.
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Between these 2 stalls, my preference is for their competitor's version; though this is certainly a note-worthy rendition.
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Fish Soup
Piao Ji Fish Porridge
@ Amoy Street Food Centre, 7 Maxwell Road #02-100
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More details:
https://ivanteh-runningman.blogspot.com/2023/03/best-of-singapore-hawkers-fish-soup.html

2 Likes

Fish is fresh, since queues are long, always order the larger portions...😁

1 Like

A visit to Amoy Street FC will usually mean a bowl of sliced batang fish soup from Han Kee for me. Unfortunately for me, Han Kee was closed for an unscheduled rest day during my recent visit. I was super gian for sliced fish soup and decided to have Piao JI, which is the other popular fish soup stores at Amoy Street FC.

Whereas Han Kee focuses on batang fish, you get a little more variety at Piao Ji in terms of the fish (batang or pomfret fish) and seafood (prawns).

Piao Ji serves their sliced fish bone-in which some diners (like my mum loves). I have osteoichthyophobia or a fear of fish bones and this annoys me all the time. The fish though is fresh and tasty.

Piao Ji will appeal to those who prefer their soup "heavier" because they use a fair bit of fried shallot and fried pork lard crackling. Yes, it makes the soup more savoury but it also makes the soup more greasy.

As for me, I personally prefer a clean and lighter soup which is easier on the tummy so if I have a choice, it will be Han Kee!

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