Over the past half a year, Mouss Kamal, the owner of coffee and brunch spot Penny University, has overseen a five-month renovation of the cafe’s Wisma Geylang Serai outlet. As a partner in the wildly popular but now defunct Fluff Bakery at North Bridge Road – which used to supply Penny University with baked goods – the 49-year-old also had to deal with the closure of Fluff last September.
“It has been tough for a couple of years now and we just can’t keep afloat anymore,” the bakery posted on social media at the time.
Out of that closure, something new is rising out of the metaphorical oven, though. Together with Fluff’s founder and baker, Nursyazanna Syaira Mohammad Suhimi, 39, and her husband Ashraf Alami, 45, Mouss has launched Big Mouth Bakehouse within the premises of Penny University’s Wisma Geylang Serai store.
Some of the items sold at Big Mouth Bakehouse. (Photo: Big Mouth Bakehouse)
The homey 20-seater cafe soft-opened in late December for two days to test its menu – a combination of focaccia sandwiches and sweet and savoury bakes like flatbreads, scones and waffles, alongside Penny University’s signature coffee – and officially debuted earlier this week.
“Now it’s really a true collab between Penny and the Fluff founders, in the sense that we coexist in the same space and run the menu and service together. Previously, we were simply supplying [goods] to each other,” shared Mouss.
He called the decision to close Fluff and reopen it as Big Mouth Bakehouse the result of a “combination of rising unsustainable business costs and the need to reinvent ourselves”.
When we asked him to clarify industry rumours that Fluff closed to escape its debts, Mouss explained: “We closed down and opened as Big Mouth because, yeah, of course there were some issues with the business before. And we felt the need to reinvent. But Fluff is not running away or writing off bad debts. Most of the suppliers we’re working with for Big Mouth are the people we’ve been working with for more than 10 years. They’re still supportive of us, and we’re clearing the outstanding with them; still servicing the payment arrangements.
“Sometimes when other businesses close down, they go through liquidation and that doesn’t work out the best for all parties because there isn’t enough money to pay everyone. We didn’t want to go down that route, so we thought about how best to turn it around. And we felt the best way was to come up with a new concept that’s more current. Hopefully, when things pick up, we can clear what was outstanding in the past.”
Ashraf Alami (left) and Nursyazanna Syaira outside the now-closed Fluff Bakery store at North Bridge Road. (Photo: Fluff Bakery)
Not reusing the Fluff name was intentional, he added, because “it’s an entirely different concept”.
“The menu has evolved in so many ways. And we have dine-in now. It’s a new beginning, new ideas, with a new partner set-up too.”
At Big Mouth, everything is made fresh daily and served as part of a rotating menu. Mouss said Syaira came up with the name because “all the bakers, including herself, are very chatty and there's always a lively energy while they work in the kitchen. So it's more like a name that describes the team”.
Fresh bakes at Big Mouth. (Photo: Big Mouth Bakehouse)
While it’s early days yet and customer patterns are still under study, he noted that some of the star items include the focaccia sandwiches (like a Thai Beef Salad version for S$12.50), the Honey Butter Brioche Toast (S$5.50), and the Matilda chocolate cake (S$8).
For drinks, he recommended the Muddy Espresso (S$6.50) and the Espresso with Milk made “using really good Colombia coffee” (S$4). Non-coffee drinkers can partake of specialty drinks too, like the Lychee Oolong Tea with Sea Salt Foam (S$8) and the Jamu Cooler (S$7.50), starring homemade jamu sorbet and perendjak tea from Indonesia.
Still, Fluff fans craving a taste of their favourite treats shouldn’t get their hopes up just yet. Said Mouss: “For now, no cupcakes.”
Big Mouth Bakehouse is at #01-06 Wisma Geylang Serai, 1 Engku Aman Turn, S408528. Open Tue to Sun from 9am to 6pm. More info via Instagram.
This story was originally published in 8Days.
For more 8Days stories, visit https://www.8days.sg/
Continue reading...
“It has been tough for a couple of years now and we just can’t keep afloat anymore,” the bakery posted on social media at the time.
Out of that closure, something new is rising out of the metaphorical oven, though. Together with Fluff’s founder and baker, Nursyazanna Syaira Mohammad Suhimi, 39, and her husband Ashraf Alami, 45, Mouss has launched Big Mouth Bakehouse within the premises of Penny University’s Wisma Geylang Serai store.
Some of the items sold at Big Mouth Bakehouse. (Photo: Big Mouth Bakehouse)
The homey 20-seater cafe soft-opened in late December for two days to test its menu – a combination of focaccia sandwiches and sweet and savoury bakes like flatbreads, scones and waffles, alongside Penny University’s signature coffee – and officially debuted earlier this week.
“Now it’s really a true collab between Penny and the Fluff founders, in the sense that we coexist in the same space and run the menu and service together. Previously, we were simply supplying [goods] to each other,” shared Mouss.
He called the decision to close Fluff and reopen it as Big Mouth Bakehouse the result of a “combination of rising unsustainable business costs and the need to reinvent ourselves”.
When we asked him to clarify industry rumours that Fluff closed to escape its debts, Mouss explained: “We closed down and opened as Big Mouth because, yeah, of course there were some issues with the business before. And we felt the need to reinvent. But Fluff is not running away or writing off bad debts. Most of the suppliers we’re working with for Big Mouth are the people we’ve been working with for more than 10 years. They’re still supportive of us, and we’re clearing the outstanding with them; still servicing the payment arrangements.
“Sometimes when other businesses close down, they go through liquidation and that doesn’t work out the best for all parties because there isn’t enough money to pay everyone. We didn’t want to go down that route, so we thought about how best to turn it around. And we felt the best way was to come up with a new concept that’s more current. Hopefully, when things pick up, we can clear what was outstanding in the past.”
Ashraf Alami (left) and Nursyazanna Syaira outside the now-closed Fluff Bakery store at North Bridge Road. (Photo: Fluff Bakery)
Not reusing the Fluff name was intentional, he added, because “it’s an entirely different concept”.
“The menu has evolved in so many ways. And we have dine-in now. It’s a new beginning, new ideas, with a new partner set-up too.”
At Big Mouth, everything is made fresh daily and served as part of a rotating menu. Mouss said Syaira came up with the name because “all the bakers, including herself, are very chatty and there's always a lively energy while they work in the kitchen. So it's more like a name that describes the team”.
Fresh bakes at Big Mouth. (Photo: Big Mouth Bakehouse)
While it’s early days yet and customer patterns are still under study, he noted that some of the star items include the focaccia sandwiches (like a Thai Beef Salad version for S$12.50), the Honey Butter Brioche Toast (S$5.50), and the Matilda chocolate cake (S$8).
For drinks, he recommended the Muddy Espresso (S$6.50) and the Espresso with Milk made “using really good Colombia coffee” (S$4). Non-coffee drinkers can partake of specialty drinks too, like the Lychee Oolong Tea with Sea Salt Foam (S$8) and the Jamu Cooler (S$7.50), starring homemade jamu sorbet and perendjak tea from Indonesia.
Still, Fluff fans craving a taste of their favourite treats shouldn’t get their hopes up just yet. Said Mouss: “For now, no cupcakes.”
Big Mouth Bakehouse is at #01-06 Wisma Geylang Serai, 1 Engku Aman Turn, S408528. Open Tue to Sun from 9am to 6pm. More info via Instagram.
This story was originally published in 8Days.
For more 8Days stories, visit https://www.8days.sg/
Continue reading...
