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A Life Dedicated to Healing, Heritage, and Natural Wisdom
A Life Dedicated to Healing, Heritage, and Natural Wisdom

Observer

time12-07-2025

  • Health
  • Observer

A Life Dedicated to Healing, Heritage, and Natural Wisdom

I heard of her death. But nobody can say for sure what caused it. Someone who adored her said she died with a broken heart, after losing her own daughter. I've always thought of her as my second mother. In those brief moments—hellos and texts that took weeks to reply—I was happy to imagine her somewhere, living her best life. Dr. MaryAnn James [Roberta] was far from fragile. I met her at over 60, yet she had so much life in her, it was like talking to someone my age. She was a fascinating person, and for years she worked in Oman's wellness world, partnering with one of Oman's most respected families to bring beautiful wellness programmes to the country. The first time I met her, she took me to a stunning desert resort. She promised it had one of the most magical spas the country would ever know. During that visit, we discussed many things—how Oman's seasons are how nature heals us. How the punishing summer makes way for the green Khareef, which renews the soul, and how Khareef is followed by winter. She believed that healing—be it physical, mental, or spiritual—comes from understanding and harnessing the interconnectedness of the mind, body, and spirit. Her approach was rooted in tradition yet presented with a modern awareness, emphasising natural therapies, herbal ingredients, and holistic wellness. She often referenced regional treasures such as frankincense, Oman's Rehan, and date fruits, highlighting her pride in local resources and her deep desire to promote indigenous knowledge. Her focus was on gentle, natural methods that not only healed but also inspired wonder about the traditions and ingredients of the region. She wanted her readers and clients to feel both informed and motivated to pursue healthier lifestyles—nurturing themselves with organic farming, face reflections, and natural therapies. She talked about science and myths, swapping between facts and legends with ease. Using stories from myths and legends, she brought them to life. She loved Oman. She had lived in Sweden and the UK, found peace in the Himalayas, but Oman—the desert—she loved it like an oryx staring into the endless land, still finding reasons to appreciate its quietness and calm. In the five years I knew her, she taught me more about Oman than my own friends. She teased me about the real location of Diana's Point and said fossils should be highlighted more in the Jabal Akhdar tourism plans. She genuinely believed that Oman was the best place in the world to heal because of its natural healing elements, like Rehan, frankincense, and date fruits, and she promoted their uses passionately. Dr Maryann She could switch topics easily, and her memories were as clear as if she were still young. She showed me Oman's biggest mushroom factory, told me about harvesting the best dates during the full moon. We spent nights in cold Jabal Akhdar talking about how to grow the wellness scene. One day, she picked me up in a golf cart and encouraged me to try playing—telling me I was a better shot than I thought. With her encouragement, I did something I would normally dismiss as boring. She built a wellness pyramid in Oman—such an old idea now, almost forgotten. But at its peak, she led some media inside a tunnel, into the heart of this pyramid. Inside, she told us to sit on a yoga mat, and under a faint light streaming from above, she showed us the magic of natural Botox—lifting and glowing with just her hands. It was intense and unforgettable; different from anything else. Her practice was about harmonising the body naturally, emphasising herbal remedies and harnessing the healing power of regional treasures like frankincense and Rehan, which she believed carried ancient secrets and profound benefits. She had a gift with words. Even in chaos, she was a calm force. I invited her to write as a lifestyle columnist for Oman Observer, where she shared her thoughts on the magic of Oman's humble herbs, holistic wellness, and secrets from a moonlit garden. Her writings reflected her deep care and dedication—her wish that everyone approached health with kindness, patience, and respect for nature's gifts. Now she's gone, keeping more secrets inside herself, only sharing what she chose. Her columns remain as her last gift—a window into her knowledge and kindness. I've always wondered about her. I like to think she's still alive somewhere—perhaps in the Himalayas, tending her herbs in a garden, as vibrant as ever. She was full of kindness and wisdom, showing us that the world has so much to give if only we listen, and if only we let it heal us naturally. I promised I would visit her someday. She promised she'd come to Oman soon. Neither happened. Many who loved her in Oman don't even know she has passed. So I am writing this tribute—because if anyone deserved to be remembered, it's her. I thought I knew her well, but I realise I didn't know everything. And if the world forgets Dr MaryAnn James Roberta, at least in my heart, she will stay alive. One day, I will find her quiet place in the Himalayas. I will look at those mountains she loved. I will visit the spots she recommended. But just as she lived a life filled with purpose and meaning, I hope mine will also be meaningful, extraordinary, and unforgettable.

Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women
Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women

The Age

time11-07-2025

  • The Age

Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women

Toxicology showed the lunch guests had been poisoned with death cap mushrooms that police quickly found were laced into homemade beef Wellingtons. Three guests, Don and Gail Patterson, plus Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson, died while Heather's husband, Ian, against all medical odds, survived. Although Erin Patterson ate the same meal, she did not suffer the same dangerous symptoms. Loading This was not a crime of impulse but one that was planned like a science experiment, finding the poisoned mushrooms, luring her victims to a deadly meal on the false claim she had cancer, a protracted cover-up and then performances in front of the media and the jury of a bewildered victim. As she stood in front of her house sobbing, she told reporters she loved her in-laws. Then there was an involuntary gesture – a finger to her eye and a quick glance to see if there were real tears. There were none. She repeated the action, seemingly overwhelmed in the witness box. Clearly, the jury didn't buy what she was selling. Her defence team is likely to appeal on the grounds the jury got it wrong. Good luck with that. The trial judge, Justice Christopher Beale, went out of his way to thank the jurors for their exemplary behaviour. 2. Roberta Williams Wife of gangster Carl Williams, she once tried to run him over outside a bottle shop after an argument. She was anything but the long-suffering wife. When Williams wanted to kill one of his many rivals, Jason Moran, Roberta was used as bait. She tried to pick a fight with Jason's wife, Trish, outside the school their children attended to lure Moran into an ambush. When he was finally killed – along with his friend, Pasquale Barbaro – in a van filled with kids, a listening device picked up Roberta's reaction. 'I'll be partying tonight.' But Roberta did have some sensible boundaries. When she complained about the workload of being a single parent while Carl was in jail (he was killed in custody in 2010), a family friend offered to babysit. It was Greg Domaszewicz, who was acquitted of murdering Moe toddler Jaidyn Leskie. Roberta declined the offer, adding, 'You are f-----g joking.' 3. Meshilin Marrogi Probably Victoria's only female crime boss. Her brother, George, king of the jail jungle, ran the Notorious Crime Family from behind bars, where he had spent nearly all his adult life, having first killed at the age of 17. Hundreds of his calls to his legal team were diverted to allow him to control his crime syndicate while in maximum security. The brains behind the gang was his sister, Meshilin, who controlled the drug trafficking and the finances. When she died, aged 30, in 2021 from COVID-19 complications, there was a procession of Rolls Royces used to ferry grieving friends and family to the funeral. But George's many enemies had no compassion, and long memories. In 2023, they broke into the family crypt and robbed her body of jewellery. Without Meshlin's guiding hand, the Notorious Crime Family collapsed. 4. Kath Pettingill Known as Granny Evil, she reared a snake pit of sons, some of whom found no crime was too low. She had 10 children including the notorious drug dealer, informer and multiple murderer, Dennis Bruce Allen. Two other sons, Victor Peirce and Trevor Pettingill, were charged and acquitted of the 1988 Walsh Street murders of constables Steven Tynan and Damian Eyre. Decades later, Peirce was ambushed in a gangland murder in Bay Street, Port Melbourne. Kath had an eye shot out in 1978. Police launched an investigation into the crime family, naturally calling it 'Operation Cyclops'. Aged 90, she lives out of the limelight at Venus Bay, lobbying for community projects including safer streets. 5. Wendy Peirce From a law-abiding family, she fell for Victor Peirce, placing her in the Allen/Pettingill/Peirce hell-hole of violence. The family wanted to shoot her in the foot to provide Victor grounds for a bail application so he could look after his injured wife. After Walsh Street, police persuaded her to change sides and become the star prosecution witness against the four men charged, including her husband. At first, she liked being in witness protection but as the months dragged into years, she saw her future. A new identity, no contact with her family and a life of looking over her shoulder. She made contact with the Pettingills and changed sides again, effectively sabotaging the case. The four walked free. Wendy was sentenced to 18 months with a minimum of nine for perjury. For years, I kept in contact with Wendy, first at her home in the outer east while Victor was doing time, and after he was murdered in 2001, near her home in Port Melbourne. She would speak of the most horrendous violence as if it were an everyday event. Such as the day she discovered Allen's wife, Sissy. 'Dennis opened the boot. Sissy was in there with her throat cut. It wasn't ear to ear, but she lay there just gurgling. He told someone to drive her somewhere and just leave her in a dump master. I got her dropped off at a railway station, so someone would find her and take her to hospital. That saved her life.' Loading In 2005, she admitted to me the truth about Walsh Street. 'Victor was the organiser.' While in witness protection, she insisted on browsing in an expensive South Yarra lingerie shop. Even though her guards had a fistful of dollars, she tried to shoplift certain garments until a Special Operations Group member threatened to take his Uzi machinegun out of his backpack and shoot her. Which meant the g-man said no to the g-string. 6. Nicola Gobbo The dreadful irony of the Gobbo saga is the barrister-turned-informer who spent so much time seeking to be a headline act now has been reduced to living in the shadows. What is lost in the Gobbo story is what could have been. She had the talent, the drive, the name (niece to the outstanding judge and governor, Sir James Gobbo), and the legal brain to become an elite barrister. Instead, her desire for centre stage, a weakness for bad men and a flawed moral compass led her to make disastrous decisions, first by getting too close to the crooks and then much too close to the cops. Loading If only those in her own profession had moved early to discipline her, the results may have been different. Instead, we have spent $300 million on inquiries, and some convictions (including against drug boss Tony Mokbel) remain in doubt. 7. Judy Moran Like Gobbo, Judy's fatal mistake was to believe her own publicity that she was some sort of crime matriarch. She was a more than competent shoplifter whose family life was destroyed by murder. The victim of repeated family violence, her husbands, Les Cole (1981) and Lewis Moran (2004), and sons, Mark Moran (2000) and Jason (2003), were killed in underworld murders. And she was a victim of savage domestic violence. But greed and an ego as big as the Hindenburg would be her undoing and just like the giant airship, she would crash and burn (or more accurately burn and crash). In 2009, she paid a hit-team to kill her brother-in-law, Des Moran, as he sat at his favourite Ascot Vale café.

Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women
Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women

Sydney Morning Herald

time11-07-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women

Toxicology showed the lunch guests had been poisoned with death cap mushrooms that police quickly found were laced into homemade beef Wellingtons. Three guests, Don and Gail Patterson, plus Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson, died while Heather's husband, Ian, against all medical odds, survived. Although Erin Patterson ate the same meal, she did not suffer the same dangerous symptoms. Loading This was not a crime of impulse but one that was planned like a science experiment, finding the poisoned mushrooms, luring her victims to a deadly meal on the false claim she had cancer, a protracted cover-up and then performances in front of the media and the jury of a bewildered victim. As she stood in front of her house sobbing, she told reporters she loved her in-laws. Then there was an involuntary gesture – a finger to her eye and a quick glance to see if there were real tears. There were none. She repeated the action, seemingly overwhelmed in the witness box. Clearly, the jury didn't buy what she was selling. Her defence team is likely to appeal on the grounds the jury got it wrong. Good luck with that. The trial judge, Justice Christopher Beale, went out of his way to thank the jurors for their exemplary behaviour. 2. Roberta Williams Wife of gangster Carl Williams, she once tried to run him over outside a bottle shop after an argument. She was anything but the long-suffering wife. When Williams wanted to kill one of his many rivals, Jason Moran, Roberta was used as bait. She tried to pick a fight with Jason's wife, Trish, outside the school their children attended to lure Moran into an ambush. When he was finally killed – along with his friend, Pasquale Barbaro – in a van filled with kids, a listening device picked up Roberta's reaction. 'I'll be partying tonight.' But Roberta did have some sensible boundaries. When she complained about the workload of being a single parent while Carl was in jail (he was killed in custody in 2010), a family friend offered to babysit. It was Greg Domaszewicz, who was acquitted of murdering Moe toddler Jaidyn Leskie. Roberta declined the offer, adding, 'You are f-----g joking.' 3. Meshilin Marrogi Probably Victoria's only female crime boss. Her brother, George, king of the jail jungle, ran the Notorious Crime Family from behind bars, where he had spent nearly all his adult life, having first killed at the age of 17. Hundreds of his calls to his legal team were diverted to allow him to control his crime syndicate while in maximum security. The brains behind the gang was his sister, Meshilin, who controlled the drug trafficking and the finances. When she died, aged 30, in 2021 from COVID-19 complications, there was a procession of Rolls Royces used to ferry grieving friends and family to the funeral. But George's many enemies had no compassion, and long memories. In 2023, they broke into the family crypt and robbed her body of jewellery. Without Meshlin's guiding hand, the Notorious Crime Family collapsed. 4. Kath Pettingill Known as Granny Evil, she reared a snake pit of sons, some of whom found no crime was too low. She had 10 children including the notorious drug dealer, informer and multiple murderer, Dennis Bruce Allen. Two other sons, Victor Peirce and Trevor Pettingill, were charged and acquitted of the 1988 Walsh Street murders of constables Steven Tynan and Damian Eyre. Decades later, Peirce was ambushed in a gangland murder in Bay Street, Port Melbourne. Kath had an eye shot out in 1978. Police launched an investigation into the crime family, naturally calling it 'Operation Cyclops'. Aged 90, she lives out of the limelight at Venus Bay, lobbying for community projects including safer streets. 5. Wendy Peirce From a law-abiding family, she fell for Victor Peirce, placing her in the Allen/Pettingill/Peirce hell-hole of violence. The family wanted to shoot her in the foot to provide Victor grounds for a bail application so he could look after his injured wife. After Walsh Street, police persuaded her to change sides and become the star prosecution witness against the four men charged, including her husband. At first, she liked being in witness protection but as the months dragged into years, she saw her future. A new identity, no contact with her family and a life of looking over her shoulder. She made contact with the Pettingills and changed sides again, effectively sabotaging the case. The four walked free. Wendy was sentenced to 18 months with a minimum of nine for perjury. For years, I kept in contact with Wendy, first at her home in the outer east while Victor was doing time, and after he was murdered in 2001, near her home in Port Melbourne. She would speak of the most horrendous violence as if it were an everyday event. Such as the day she discovered Allen's wife, Sissy. 'Dennis opened the boot. Sissy was in there with her throat cut. It wasn't ear to ear, but she lay there just gurgling. He told someone to drive her somewhere and just leave her in a dump master. I got her dropped off at a railway station, so someone would find her and take her to hospital. That saved her life.' Loading In 2005, she admitted to me the truth about Walsh Street. 'Victor was the organiser.' While in witness protection, she insisted on browsing in an expensive South Yarra lingerie shop. Even though her guards had a fistful of dollars, she tried to shoplift certain garments until a Special Operations Group member threatened to take his Uzi machinegun out of his backpack and shoot her. Which meant the g-man said no to the g-string. 6. Nicola Gobbo The dreadful irony of the Gobbo saga is the barrister-turned-informer who spent so much time seeking to be a headline act now has been reduced to living in the shadows. What is lost in the Gobbo story is what could have been. She had the talent, the drive, the name (niece to the outstanding judge and governor, Sir James Gobbo), and the legal brain to become an elite barrister. Instead, her desire for centre stage, a weakness for bad men and a flawed moral compass led her to make disastrous decisions, first by getting too close to the crooks and then much too close to the cops. Loading If only those in her own profession had moved early to discipline her, the results may have been different. Instead, we have spent $300 million on inquiries, and some convictions (including against drug boss Tony Mokbel) remain in doubt. 7. Judy Moran Like Gobbo, Judy's fatal mistake was to believe her own publicity that she was some sort of crime matriarch. She was a more than competent shoplifter whose family life was destroyed by murder. The victim of repeated family violence, her husbands, Les Cole (1981) and Lewis Moran (2004), and sons, Mark Moran (2000) and Jason (2003), were killed in underworld murders. And she was a victim of savage domestic violence. But greed and an ego as big as the Hindenburg would be her undoing and just like the giant airship, she would crash and burn (or more accurately burn and crash). In 2009, she paid a hit-team to kill her brother-in-law, Des Moran, as he sat at his favourite Ascot Vale café.

Immigrants, flying sheep and Brigitte Bardot: Britain through the lens of Picture Post
Immigrants, flying sheep and Brigitte Bardot: Britain through the lens of Picture Post

The Guardian

time03-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Immigrants, flying sheep and Brigitte Bardot: Britain through the lens of Picture Post

Photograph: Haywood Magee/Picture Post/This was taken the year Holiday first toured Europe and released a self-titled album Photograph:Roberta was once a Spitfire pilot, prisoner-of-war, racing motorist, husband and father of two. She transitioned following hormone treatment and surgery Photograph: Maurice Ambler/Picture Post/The Aldershot tattooist – then the only woman employed in her trade – engraves a butterfly on to a customer's leg Photograph: Haywood Magee/Picture Post/One Snowdonian sheep takes the plunge while others look down in anticipation Photograph: Grace Robertson/Picture Post/The Butlins staffer draws the attention of male holiday makers Photograph: Grace Robertson/Picture Post/Stripped to the waist, the man enjoys a beer while displaying the tattoos on his chest and arms Photograph: Bill Brandt/Picture Post/Each boy holds his toy gun at the ready Photograph:The French actor, dressed in a corset and bridal veil, smokes a cigarette while she flicks through a photospread of herself in San Tropez, France Photograph: Photo by John Chillingworth/Picture Post/Dunlop helped transport newly manufactured aircraft from the factory to the aerodrome during the second world war Photograph: Leonard McCombe/Picture Post/South African nursery nurse Patricia Farrier talks to a man after moving to England – she had never been to a non-apartheid country before Photograph: Alex Dellow/Picture Post/Arriving for work as usual, Mrs Marsh works among the broken glass of a tailor's shop after an air raid on the East End of London Photograph: Hardy/Picture Post/The man sits in front of a poster at the event which is being held at Chorlton-on-Medlock town hall in Manchester Photograph: John Deakin/Picture Post/

Pizzapalooza – go on an artisanal pizza tour in Singapore
Pizzapalooza – go on an artisanal pizza tour in Singapore

Straits Times

time07-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Straits Times

Pizzapalooza – go on an artisanal pizza tour in Singapore

(Clockwise from left) Roberta's Bee Sting pizza, the Tamaki pizza from Pizza Studio Tamaki Singapore, and J-Dog pizza from Blue Label Pizza & Wine. PHOTOS: ROBERTA'S, PIZZA STUDIO TAMAKI SINGAPORE, BLUE LABEL PIZZA & WINE SINGAPORE – Thin crust, thick crust, crunchy crust, thin and crunchy crust. Classic toppings, luxe toppings, out-there toppings. Classic Neapolitan, contemporary Neapolitan, Tokyo-Neapolitan, New York, San Francisco sourdough. There is an artisanal pizza for every palate in Singapore. In recent years, big brands from overseas have opened here , many using the city as a springboard to proliferate in Asia. Home-grown brands have not been slouching either – they have upped their game by focusing on their dough and coming up with pies topped with South-east Asian flavours. Before there were artisanal pies, pizza came from big American chains. Then, in December 2010, Osteria and Pizzeria Mozza opened at Marina Bay Sands. American chef Nancy Silverton brought in her artisanal pizza and ushered in the golden age of artisanal pizza here. Today, her pizza can be had at Osteria Mozza at Hilton Singapore Orchard. She founded La Brea Bakery in Los Angeles in the late 1980s, and brings a bread baker's sensibility to her pizza dough. Her pie has a distinct puffy rim and is different from a Neapolitan pizza in that it is an even golden brown, not spotted with char. The crumb is airy; and the pizza is not wet and not supposed to flop over when diners pick up a slice. Diners and purveyors started bandying about terms like hydration, which refers to the percentage of water in the dough relative to the weight of flour; cornicione, the puffy rim of a pizza; and starter, preferment and sourdough, which some pizza-makers use alongside or instead of commercial yeast. In 2024, more heavy hitters began to open in Singapore. There was Il Clay Supper Club by Naples-born Ciro Sorrentino, who owns pizza restaurants in Italy and Vietnam; L'Antica Pizzeria Da Michele, a brand from Naples with a history that goes back more than 150 years; Italian chef Massimo Bottura's Torno Subito in Dempsey; Fortuna, a buzzy brand from Sydney; and Beyond The Dough, with Japanese pizzaiolo Eddie Murakami slinging pies in the Tokyo-Neapolitan style. So far, in 2025, there have been Vincenzo Capuano Singapore, serving the social media star's contemporary Neapolitan pizza; and Pizza Studio Tamaki, whose founder Tsubasa Tamaki pioneered the Tokyo-Napoli style. Chef Antonio Miscellaneo, 52, of La Bottega Enoteca, says: 'I did think that at some point, pizza would reach the level that we have in Europe. But I didn't think it would ramp up so fast.' Chef Travis Masiero, 45, who owns Blue Label Pizza & Wine, says: 'I'm always interested in others coming into the market. Now, we are seeing the invasion of Neapolitan and Japanese pizza. The more, the merrier.' But chef Miscellaneo has some sobering words for those wanting to enter the arena. He says: 'Whoever wants to open a pizza place here must do something different. They must have a passion for pizza or they are bringing in a different style of pizza. If you are doing more of the same, it's a lottery.' Newpolitan La Bottega Enoteca Where: 346 Joo Chiat Road Open: 11.30am to 3pm (Fridays to Sundays), 5.30 to 10.30pm (Sundays to Thursdays), 5.30 to 11pm (Fridays and Saturdays) Info: WhatsApp 9071-8400 or go to Chef Antonio Miscellaneo and his wife Jasmine (in a 2021 photo) at La Bottega Enoteca with his Newpolitan pizza. PHOTO: ST FILE For a spell, the best pizza in Singapore came out of an oven parked on the balcony of a condominium in East Coast. That was when former software engineer Antonio Miscellaneo was running his private-dining business, Casa Nostra, and turning out pizzas in his Newpolitan style. It started in 2018, and word spread fast among the foodie set, who begged and stalked him for reservations. Now, they simply make a booking at his restaurant, La Bottega Enoteca, which opened in 2021. There is also a more casual pizza and pasta restaurant, Casa Vostra, at Raffles City. The 52-year-old calls his pizza Newpolitan style. Where a classic Neapolitan pizza might have a hydration level that ranges from 55 to 65 per cent, and the dough is made and used the same day, his dough has a hydration level of 70 to 80 per cent and is fermented for 48 hours. He says: 'The dough is lighter and more digestible because the process of long fermentation creates enzyme activity. When you eat a pizza and you feel thirsty after and can't sleep, that's because the fermentation wasn't done in the right way.' Even the cooking method is different. The two electric Moretti ovens in the restaurant are set to two different temperatures: 450 deg C and 250 deg C. The Newpolitan pizzas go into the hotter oven for about 90 seconds and are then placed in the cooler one for 60 seconds. 'This makes sure all our pizzas are fully cooked,' he says. 'When you eat a pizza that still has moisture inside, it will feel doughy and heavy. Our method drives the moisture out of the pizza.' The flour he uses for the dough is from Molino Casillo in Puglia, and includes the wheat germ. It comes to Singapore vacuum-packed with those enzymes still preserved, he adds. They work to break down proteins and starches, making the dough more digestible. The Newpolitan pies are priced from $45 for a Burrata one, and he also offers diners the option of getting a whole pizza with two different flavours, so they can try more. Chef Miscellaneo calls his restaurant the 'Disneyland of pizza' because he offers different styles. There is also the Roman-style Double Crunch, made with a wetter dough and crisp the way Romans like it. These are priced from $24 for a Caprese sandwich with burrata, pesto, Sicilian Datterino tomatoes and Parmigiano Reggiano cheese. There is also La Foccacia di Recco (from $52), an unleavened flatbread he likens to Italian prata, and he will be introducing Padellino, a type of pan pizza he likens to ciabatta. These are topped after the pizza comes out of the oven, and he is looking at gourmet toppings such as gambero rosso or red prawns, carpaccio and vitello tonnato (veal with tuna sauce). Naturally leavened Chooby Pizza Where: 127 Owen Road Open: 6 to 10pm (Wednesdays to Fridays, by reservations only) Info: Call 8923-9814 or go to Spiced Coconut Chicken pizza from Chooby Pizza. PHOTO: CHOOBY PIZZA No commercial yeast goes into the dough at Chooby Pizza. Owner Mason Lim, 33, has developed a way to turn out consistently good pizza dough since he started the business in 2020. That was when Singapore was at a standstill because of the Covid-19 pandemic. He had just got a Roccbox oven from Gozney, a British brand, and decided to sell pizza for takeout, since there was no dining-in at restaurants. His pizzas have what he describes as a soft and flavourful dough, lightly crisp and a 'nice char on the crust'. The hydration level is between 72.5 and 75 per cent, and he uses finely milled Type 00 flour from Naples and a starter made with that flour and water. The dough is fermented for six to eight hours at room temperature. It is c ooked for two to 2½ minutes at 420 to 450 deg C. He says: 'I focus very much on the pizza doug h and hope that diners agree Chooby stands out for this. Dealing with live yeast and bacteria without using any commercial yeast is tricky as there are many factors that will affect the fermentation activity. 'Even when using the same type of flour with the same recipe, the dough will turn out different from day to day, and it does take some experience and knowledge to be able to manage it to achieve the desired result.' Prices start at $16 for a Margherita, that classic pie topped with San Marzano tomatoes, fior di latte and pecorino cheeses, basil and olive oil. This, together with Spiced Coconut Chicken ($18.50), topped with tom kha sauce, chicken thigh, mushroom, onion, coriander and chilli oil, are the bestsellers. The focus on the crust has paid off. He says: 'I've noticed more diners finishing the entire pizza without ditching the crust.' Sourdough pan pizza Goldenroy Sourdough Pizza Where: 125 Desker Road Open: Noon to 10pm (Tuesdays to Sundays), closed on Mondays Info: Pepperoni pizza from Goldenroy. PHOTO: GOLDENROY While working on his doctorate in chemistry at Stanford University, Goldenroy owner Roy Chan, 38, would head from Palo Alto to San Francisco in search of good food. He was drawn to Golden Boy Pizza, which always had a long queue. So enamoured was he of the thick and fluffy crust with a very crispy base that he developed his own pizza dough, starting in 2013, his first year in California. He uses a sourdough starter that is more than 100 years old and came from a bakery in the Bay Area. 'This special starter imparts a fragrant richness to the dough that I don't get with the other sourdough starters I've tried,' he says. Goldenroy started in 2020, and he sold his pizzas at East Village mall for takeout. Now, he has a 38-seat restaurant in Desker Road. Some 90 per cent of his business is takeout, although he says the pies are best when served right out of the oven. The square 25cm x 25cm pizzas are good for two people. Among the bestsellers are pies topped with seafood, including Kryptonite ($29), with clams and garlic; and Spongebob's Revenge ($34), with browned butter, scallops and onions. The flour is an unbleached variety from the US, and he ferments the dough, which has 60 per cent hydration, for 48 hours. The pizzas are cooked in a pan with olive oil in an electric oven at 250 deg C 'until the crust is golden'. He says: 'When fresh out of the oven, it has a very crispy bottom. It is an American-style pizza meant to be eaten straight from the box with your hands, not with fork and knife. 'Our pizzas are hand-stretched and baked in a pan of olive oil. This style is highly popular in the US, but in Singapore, we're the only ones serving it.' New Haven-New York hybrid Blue Label Pizza & Wine Where: 28 Ann Siang Road and 03-02 Mandarin Gallery, 333A Orchard Road Open: Noon to 11pm daily Info: Blue Label Pizza & Wine's The Travis Supreme pizza. PHOTO: BLUE LABEL PIZZA & WINE What chef and restaurateur Travis Masiero was trying to create with Blue Label was a pizza dough that lived in his mind. The 45-year-old American, who also owns Luke's Oyster Bar & Chop House in Gemmill Lane and Nixta in Amoy Street, says: 'I wanted to find the ideal combination of a crust that had the flavour and chew of a long fermented New York pizza dough with the crispness and 'charability' of a New Haven-style pizza, topped with high-quality, inventive ingredients.' He opened Blue Label in Ann Siang Road in 2017, and a second outlet at Mandarin Gallery in 2019. The pies are priced from $35, and options include The Travis Supreme ($39), topped with ground beef, sesame on the crust and cheddar-bacon melt; J-Dog ($42), topped with pork sausage, bacon, pepperoni, capers, jalapeno and red sauce; and Wish I Was A Baller ($42), topped with sliced steak, French's mustard, bechamel sauce, roasted onions, mushrooms and provolone cheese. He says: 'We make a hybrid style of pizza that is more gourmet and cheffy. We have our fans, people who appreciate this style.' The dough, made using a sourdough starter, has a hydration level of 64 per cent and is fermented for 72 hours. Blue Label uses an electric oven from Bakers Pride Oven Company in the US, popular in New York for making pizza. The pies are cooked at 325 deg C for six to eight minutes. 'We want to create pizzas that are flavourful and craveable,' chef Masiero says. 'I don't have a pizza background, so for me, it's about flavour. I'm not restrained by any pizza dogma.' New York Neapolitan Roberta's Where: B1-45/46 The Shoppes at Marina Bay Sands, 2 Bayfront Avenue ; 01-04 Mandai Wildlife Reserve, 80 Mandai Lake Road Open: MBS – 11.30am to 11pm (weekdays), 11am to 11pm (weekends); Mandai – 11am to 10pm daily Info: Roberta's Bee Sting pizza. PHOTO: ROBERTA'S To make Roberta's pizza in Singapore taste like Roberta's pizza in Brooklyn, chef and co-owner Carlo Mirarchi had to make some changes to the dough, mostly to address the high humidity here. Speaking to The Straits Times at Roberta's new 103-seat restaurant at Mandai Wildlife Reserve, the 44-year-old says: 'If you come here with a hardcore mindset, you're going to have issues.' He made changes to the hydration level an d the f lour ratio, and made oven temperature tweaks too. Roberta's style of pizza, he adds, is close to the classic Neapolitan style. The hydration ranges from 65 to 72 per cent, and the dough is fermented for 72 hours. He uses a sourdough starter that is more than a decade old. The pies are baked for about two minutes at about 425 deg C, in a wood-fired Pavesi oven from Modena that is fuelled by pecan, apple and redwood. He says of the texture: 'It is relatively airy, with a slight chew and some crispness. There is a much greater undercarriage. When you hold it up, it doesn't flop over.' That last bit, he adds, assumes diners dive in the minute the pizza lands on their table. Roberta's, which opened its first restaurant in Brooklyn in 2008, gained traction for its wood-fired pizza. It opened its first Singapore restaurant at Marina Bay Sands in 2022, and is on a tear in 2025. Aside from the Mandai restaurant, which opened on April 30, it has also opened R Slice, offering takeaway pizza by the slice at Paragon mall. Its pies are priced from $26 for a Margherita, and bestsellers in Singapore include the Bee Sting ($30), topped with tomato, mozzarella, basil, spicy Calabrese salami, chilli and honey. At Mandai, there is Speckenwolf ($30), topped with mozzarella, prosciutto, mushrooms, red onions and oregano. Chef Mirarchi says of diners here: 'People are highly critical, but not in a bad way. They are not passive consumers.' Neapolitan with a twist Fortuna Where: 7 Craig Road Open: Noon to 3pm, 5.30 to 9.30pm (Sundays to Thursdays); noon to 3pm, 5.30 to 11pm (Fridays and Saturdays) Info: A selection of pizzas from Fortuna. PHOTO: FORTUNA At Fortuna, that buzzy, perpetually packed Italian restaurant in Tanjong Pagar, some of its pizzas come extra crisp. That is because the base is fried 'gently', says founder Egon Marzaioli, 32, and then baked. The toppings go on after the bases come out of the oven. He says of the extra step: 'That gives it an extra crisp snap without losing that airy softness inside. It's a balance of texture that elevates every bite.' These pizzas are priced from $35 for Sundays At Angela with San Marzano tomatoes, anchovies, breadcrumbs, lemon zest and oregano; to $45 for King Mazzara, topped with stracciata cheese, red prawns, semi-dried tomatoes, pesto and lemon zest. The brand, which chef Marzaioli started with two friends in Sydney in 2021, came to Singapore in 2024. Fortuna's classic pizza selection is priced from $24, for a small pizza yielding four slices of Queen Margherita. It also has a list of special pies, including Singapore Tribute (from $35), topped with San Marzano tomatoes, chilli crab sauce, crabmeat, lemon zest, parsley, fior di latte cheese and chilli oil. The dough, says the Naples-born chef, is made with flour from Molino Casillo, with 75 per cent hydration. It is fermented for 50 hours and cooked for 60 to 90 seconds at 430 to 480 deg C in a Valoriani oven from Tuscany. He says: 'The wood fire imparts a unique smoky flavour and perfect charring, creating a crust that's crisp yet tender – a hallmark of authentic, high-quality pizza.' Wagon wheel pizza L'Antica Pizzeria Da Michele Where: 01-08 Mercure Icon Singapore City Centre, 8 Club Street Open: Noon to 3pm, 6 to 11pm (Mondays to Saturdays); noon to 3pm, 6 to 10pm (Sundays) Info: Call 9823-5724 or go to Da Michele's wagon wheel pizzas. PHOTO: L'ANTICA PIZZERIA DA MICHELE The pizzas at L'Antica Pizzeria Da Michele cannot be contained by the plates they are served on. Clocking in at 35 to 40cm, they are as big as their nickname, pizza a ruota di carro' or wagon wheel pizza. It comes from stretching the dough really thin, and there is a practical reason for this. Mr Marcello Mazzotta, 38, director and co-owner of Da Michele in Singapore, says: 'This style is a nod to the old-school pizzaioli in Naples, who would stretch the dough to be as big as possible to show generosity and feed hungry customers at an affordable price. 'It became a symbol of authentic, traditional and humble Neapolitan pizza-making.' The brand has a history that goes back to 1870 in Naples and is run by the Condurro family. The style is classic Neapolitan and, for decades, it served only two kinds of pizza – Marinara, topped with tomato sauce, garlic and oregano; and Margherita, topped with tomato sauce, Pecorino Romano and fior di latte cheeses, and fresh basil. The brand was famously featured in the 2010 movie Eat Pray Love, starring American actress Julia Roberts. Today, there are more than 50 Da Michele restaurants in the US, Britain, Spain, Switzerland, Germany, the United Arab Emirates and Japan, among other countries. The 120-seat one in Singapore opened in 2024 and was the first in Asia Pacific. A Da Michele will open in Bangkok later in 2025 at Siam Paragon mall. Mr Mazzotta says the dough is made with Caputo flour from Italy, with fresh brewer's yeast and 60 to 65 per cent hydration. It is fermented for 24 to 48 hours and cooked in a Stefano Ferrara oven at 480 to 500 deg C for 45 seconds. Pies are priced from $22 for a Marinara to $42 for a Burrata & Capocollo, topped with fior di latte cheese, black olives, sundried tomatoes, pecorino cheese, burrata and capocollo or dried cured pork neck. He adds: 'The uniqueness of the pizzas comes not from complexity but from purity, discipline and tradition. Every step and ingredient is essential to preserving the Neapolitan pizza heritage, and this minimalist approach is what makes our pizza world-renowned. 'We don't do experimentation and our chefs are trained to keep every pizza consistent.' Contemporary Neapolitan Vincenzo Capuano Singapore Where: 01-12 The Pier at Robertson, 80 Mohamed Sultan Road Open: Noon to 3pm, 6 to 11pm daily Info: One of the newest players in the artisanal pizza scene here is firmly rooted in Naples, but pizzaiolo Vincenzo Capuano's pies have a contemporary edge to them. The 35-year-old founder of the brand followed in his father and grandfather's footsteps. But where they relied on instinct and feel, he goes with precision. His pizza dough is made with a special blend of flour from Caputo called Nuvola Super, named for the cloud-like texture he wants to achieve. Chef Vincenzo Capuano with his Provola e Pepe pizza. ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI He uses a preferment, a mix of flour, water and yeast that sits for 24 hours before being used, and an almost soupy dough with 80 per cent hydration. That ferments for 36 hours. The pizzas are cooked for about 120 seconds in a gas-powered oven that goes up to 480 deg C. The result, when done right, is a very puffy cornicione or rim, and diners can cut into the pizza with a pair of gold scissors placed on every table, to admire the air pockets in the dough. Chef Capuano has more than 30 restaurants – in Italy, the Netherlands, Germany and Kosovo. The 150-seat restaurant in Robertson Quay opened in May. Pizza options include Provola e Pepe ($28), topped with smoked provolone, pepper, hand-crushed tomatoes, roasted cherry tomatoes, basil and extra virgin olive oil; Don Vincenzo ($30), its crust stuffed with ricotta cheese, and the pie topped with yellow cherry tomatoes, buffalo mozzarella, pecorino flakes, pepper, crumbled almonds and basil; and Bellaria ($32), topped with Datterino tomatoes, buffalo mozzarella, Parma ham and pesto. He says: 'My pizza comes from a family tradition, refined through years of study. The dough is light and digestible, and the contemporary style bridges respect for Naples with the desire to innovate.' Tokyo-Napoli style Pizza Studio Tamaki (opens on June 10) Where: 38 Tanjong Pagar Road Open: 11am to 3pm, 5 to 11pm ( weekdays); 11am to 3pm, 5pm to midnight (weekends ) Info: @ on Instagram Pizza Studio Tamaki founder Tsubasa Tamaki with his pizza dough. ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI Singapore fans of Tokyo's Pizza Studio Tamaki need not fly to the Japanese capital for its Tokyo-Napoli-style pizza. J.A.P Dining Concepts, which runs Okinawan steakhouse Yappari Steak at VivoCity and Northpoint City, has partnered chef Tsubasa Tamaki to open Pizza Studio Tamaki (PST) in Singapore. The 45-year-old, originally from Okinawa, trained with master pizzaiolo Susumu Kakinuma at Savoy, the pioneer of artisanal pizza in Japan. Chef Tamaki went on to launch Pizza Strada in Tokyo in 2011, but parted ways with his investors because their visions were not aligned. He started PST in 2017. He has two restaurants in Tokyo, one in Okinawa and another in Bangkok. The 72- seat Singapore one opens in Tanjong Pagar on June 10. Chef Tamaki came up with his light dough at Savoy because, he says, he wanted diners to be able to eat more than one pizza each. It is made with a special blend of flour, using Canadian and American wheat, that a Japanese mill makes for him. It is a little brown because he keeps some of the bran on the grain for nutrition. The dough has a hydration level of about 60 per cent and is fermented for over 30 hours. The pizzas cook in a Stefano Ferrara oven, which goes up to 500 deg C. It is wood-fired, powered by oak, cherry and beech. Tomato-based pies are in there for 70 seconds, while white-sauce pies get 60 seconds. PST's pizza have a special touch – the pizzaiolo throws Okinawan salt on the floor of the oven before sliding the pie in, to season the crust. Arrabbiata pizza at Pizza Studio Tamaki Singapore. PHOTO: PIZZA STUDIO TAMAKI SINGAPORE Options include Marinara ($24), topped with tomato sauce, garlic, oregano and basil; and Special Bianca ($39), topped with burrata, buffalo mozzarella and mascarpone cheese, and truffle oil. Other signatures include Bismarck ($32), topped with mozzarella, mushrooms, pork sausage, pecorino romano cheese and a Japanese egg. The chef's favourite is Arrabbiata ($30), topped with tomato sauce, mozzarella, cherry tomatoes, nduja sauce, garlic, parsley and black pepper. Tan Hsueh Yun is senior food correspondent at The Straits Times. She covers all aspects of the food and beverage scene in Singapore. Check out ST's Food Guide for the latest foodie recommendations in Singapore.

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