Hard-to-find Indonesian snacks sold at this Sin Ming Drive stall

How Taiwanese inside developer Jason Sim, 54, and his family Haryenny, 40, who hails from the Indonesian capital of Bandung, met is a love story for the age.

In 2012, Jason came across a picture of Haryenny, also known as Yenny, while browsing Instagram. She was a friend of a friend and he thought she looked” not bad”, so he sent her a DM ( direct message ). They started chatting online and when much, Jason was on a plane to join Yenny and her family.

What was it that attracted her to him? ” I do n’t know. I chatted with him because he was a sister’s friend”, Yenny told 8days. sg&nbsp, awkwardly. ” It did n’t occur to me that he could be a scammer”.

” She did remind me that I looked fair and felt I was quite honest. I think it’s fate”, Jason chimed in. &nbsp,

After dating longer- range for six weeks, they tied the knot in 2013 and Yenny relocated to Singapore. They do not have children.

The special couple recently opened a food stall in an industrial advanced in Sin Ming selling common Indonesian city meals. Called Indonie, the two- week- old stall offers “hard- to- find goodies” like Bandung- style&nbsp, bakso&nbsp, rigour ( translated as fried sausage ), pisang taste ( fried banana spring move ) and risoles casserole ( meat and veggie croquette ). You will see the pair reimagined as adorable characters on the stall’s signboard.