➺ What inspired your love for table setting?
I was working on the events team at Amnesty International when the first lockdown happened in 2020 and I got furloughed.
With my newly found free time, I did a pastry-making course and was cooking and baking quite a lot, which is when I started posting on Instagram. Slowly that developed into hosting dinner parties on the weekends with my flatmates. Each time it would be based on a country that I travelled to, whether that was Mexico or India or Italy. I’d cook the food from the pace I'd been to, and set the table.
My plan pre-covid was to start doing Malaysian supper clubs to host people and connect over conversations, with all the funds going to charity. I love to introduce people to my culture and I really wanted to create a community to share the food from my country with loved ones.
I started posting pictures of the tables I was creating and built up my own tableware collection from there. It took a bit of time to define my style but after a year or two I was able to start working with some amazing brands.
➺ You make hosting look effortless - do share your secrets!
People think I am very organised, but actually I am quite chaotic sometimes! It takes time to figure out what your style is. Put it all out on the table and play around with it a little. One essential thing to have is a plain white linen. You can create layers and build colour with menus, crockery, candles or napkins. I love to include seasonal flowers too. When it’s May I'm excited about peonies, or Dahlia in September – those are my favourite.
Creating beautiful table settings and sharing my food helps keep me connected to my heritage. Food brings everyone together. In Malaysia you would never have your own dishes, you just share everything, family style. Five or six different things, all sat in the middle of the table.
That's how I do it in my supper clubs as well. It's important to bring people together over food, to connect, have conversations and try a little bit of everything. You get to experience things differently when you’re with people of other cultures.