For decades, Mum’s Place was an institutional dining destination in Petaling Jaya, famous for its comforting, Peranakan-influenced Malaysian dishes. When the original founders, Christopher De Mello and Jennifer Tee, retired and closed the restaurant in December 2021, it left a massive hole in the local culinary scene.
But in January 2026, niece and nephew duo Nureen and Zareef Thajudeen, stepped up to resurrect the beloved brand. But instead of trying to replicate the massive scale of the original restaurant — which spanned 5 shop lots and employed 16 cooks — the new generation has completely scaled down, operating at a quarter of the original capacity and shrinking the menu from 120 dishes down to just 30.
Zareef and Nureen join us in the studio to discuss the immense pressure of cooking for a deeply nostalgic customer base. We also dissect the decision to shrink operations to maintain quality, the unit economics of a bootstrapped family revival, and the operational paradox of trying to scale "home-cooked meals" through a future central kitchen.

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