For those who get pleasure from barbecue, you’ve in all probability heard of The Social Outcast—a reputation that’s additionally made large waves within the halal meals scene.
Based by Aminurrashid Hasnordin (higher referred to as Chef Mint), a former lecturer, and his spouse Noelle Chua, who beforehand labored in finance, the model began as a modest hawker stall six years in the past and has since grown right into a cult favorite.
The duo proudly declare to have pioneered the elevation of halal delicacies in Singapore, difficult standard expectations of what halal eating could be.
From the bottom up
The thought to begin up The Social Outcast got here when Chef Mint took a sabbatical from his five-year profession at SMRT Institute—like many who’ve skilled a mid-life reckoning, he walked away from job safety to pursue his true ardour: cooking.
Chef Mint’s curiosity in cooking started as a younger sous chef to his grandmother. At household dinners, he would assist chop substances and study to estimate the precise quantities for every dish. Earlier than getting into the company world, he additionally labored numerous F&B jobs and even bartended part-time.

Along with Noelle’s assist, the duo opened their first stall in 2019 in a Tampines espresso store. Whereas Chef Mint manned the kitchen, Noelle took cost of customer support, advertising and marketing, and funds, dealing with the enterprise facet of the model.
On the stall, burgers had been the star of their menu.
Why burgers? Properly, in accordance with Chef Mint, they had been simpler to grasp for these with out formal culinary coaching.
However they didn’t wish to serve simply any burger; the duo aimed to raise their choices and stand out from the competitors—therefore, they launched gourmand American-style creations as their flagship providing.
Suppose smoked dried chipotle and guacamole beef burgers, and 400-day grain-fed Australian wagyu burgers. Geared up with an oven imported from Spain, The Social Outcast grilled their buns and patties over hickory and charcoal, infusing every chew with a wealthy, smoky depth.
Nonetheless, bringing this idea to a hawker stall didn’t come low cost, therefore, most of their choices got here with a better price ticket as in comparison with different typical hawker stall meals. Regardless of this, the enterprise persistently attracted crowds and infrequently bought out throughout weekend preparations.
Demand ultimately led them to increase into a bigger house in Simpang Bedok Market a 12 months later, the place Chef Mint started pushing the boundaries of his self-taught culinary abilities, significantly in barbecued meats.

Drawing inspiration from his travels, he additionally blends native flavours from Indonesia, Africa, and Japan, reinterpreting conventional recipes along with his personal inventive twist.
At its Bedok hawker stall, The Social Otucast rolled out a extra experimental menu, that includes dishes akin to smoked oxtail and burnt kimchi risotto, in addition to tom yum porridge.
Regular progress & a sudden closure
Since then, the enterprise has seen regular progress, prompting the duo to transition from hawker stalls to a extra upscale eating expertise.
Their subsequent transfer took them to the Singapore Turf Membership’s Grandstand, the place they launched an expanded menu that was refreshed each 5 to 6 months.
Nonetheless, after the federal government introduced plans to reclaim the Turf Membership land, The Social Outcast needed to relocate as soon as once more. In Could 2023, they launched their most bold idea but: a hidden omakase-style speakeasy tucked behind Madman & Co—a Mexican grocer that additionally they opened on the identical time.

This was when Chef Mint and Noelle really doubled down on halal advantageous eating.
As a substitute of providing a set menu, diners are invited to select from themed experiences, akin to wagyu or woodfire, whereas the crew curates the meal primarily based on the chosen theme.

After two years at Katong, although—Chef Mint and Noelle abruptly introduced the restaurant’s closure in Could 2025.
In line with the duo, the instability of the present F&B scene and the more and more harsh setting for particular person operators made companies like theirs unsustainable.
Chef Mint identified that the variety of F&B closures has been rising through the years, with a mean of 307 closures per 30 days this 12 months, up from 254 per 30 days in 2024 and round 230 a month in 2023 and 2022.
Pushing on
Operating a premium F&B enterprise in Singapore isn’t any straightforward feat. Labour, specifically, stays one of many greatest ache factors.
To rent a international workers member on an S Go, employers will need to have employed 9 native workers. Chef Mint feels that that is an unsustainable ratio for a lot of companies, particularly within the service sector, as few Singaporeans are eager on working within the business long-term.
Rental prices have additionally been a persistent bane, including additional stress to an already demanding business.
Given these urgent points, Chef Mint will not be optimistic in regards to the market within the coming years. He doesn’t foresee returning to the standard brick-and-mortar enterprise mannequin.
“It was once 10, 15, 20 years [for an F&B establishment to last]. As we speak, the turnover is three, 5 years.”
However that doesn’t imply Chef Mint and Noelle are slowing down. As a substitute, they’ve shifted gears as soon as once more, adapting to Singapore’s more and more troublesome F&B panorama.

Recognising a gentle urge for food for personalised eating experiences, the duo has moved into internet hosting experiential pop-ups—showing at main occasions like Sentosa GrillFest, the HSBC Ladies’s World Championship, and LIV Golf.
At one seaside occasion, Chef Mint even smoked a complete lamb in a conventional Hawaiian Imu pit, wrapped in banana leaves and slow-cooked in sand.
These pop-ups, as he shared in a radio interview with ONE FM 91.3, are much more manageable than operating a full-fledged restaurant.
The duo’s subsequent pop-up is an experiential eating collection on July 12, an occasion that’s already bought out two earlier runs and is presently nonetheless open for bookings.
It appears demand for The Social Outcast continues to be going robust, and maybe all of it boils all the way down to their easy but efficient philosophy:
To serve “good meals that occurs to be halal—not simply halal meals.”
- Discover out extra about The Social Outcast right here.
- Learn different articles we’ve written on Singaporean startups right here.
Featured Picture Credit score: The Social Outcast