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Xiabu Xiabu Catering Management Co., Ltd. [1] or Xiabu Xiabu (Chinese: 呷哺呷哺; pinyin: Xiābǔ Xiābǔ) is a fast food hot pot restaurant chain in China. [2] Its headquarters is in Daxing District , Beijing .
After the opening of Shanghai port in 1843, sixteen different catering schools opened in Shanghai. [1] Anhui cuisine was the first to gain popularity in Shanghai, followed by Suxi cuisine, Cantonese cuisine, Huaiyang cuisine, and Beijing cuisine. In the 1930s, Suxi cuisine was prevalent in almost half of Shanghai's restaurants.
The first restaurant opened in 1990 [3] and in 2011, the company had over 300 locations in China. [4] As of 2013 it had 479 restaurants. It sells bowls of rice with meats such as beef and pork. [5] In 2014, China Daily ranked Kungfu as No. 8 in its list of Top 10 Fast-food restaurants in China. [6] Restaurant Interior in Shanghai
The 2017 edition was the first edition of the Michelin Guide for Shanghai.The 2022 edition awarded Tai'an Table a Green Star which is launched in 2020 worldwide to honor restaurants that are committed to more sustainable and eco-friendly gastronomy.
Ultraviolet by Paul Pairet is a single-table restaurant in Shanghai, China, opened in May 2012 by French chef Paul Pairet and the VOL Group.In October 2014, Ultraviolet became one of the restaurant members of Les Grandes Tables du Monde, [1] [2] the first restaurant in this organization from China. [3]
A wagas restaurant at Lize Sky Mall, Fengtai District, Beijing, China. Wagas (Chinese: 沃歌斯; pinyin: Wògēsī) is a Western cuisine restaurant chain in China, headquartered in Jing'an District, Shanghai. [1] In 2022, it had 250 restaurants. [2]
The history of western-style fast food in China dates back to 1906, when "Yili's Fast Food Shop" (义利快餐厅) was established in Beijing as the country's very first fast food restaurant in the Far East of the Asia-Pacific region. [2]
It was Shanghai's "closest approach to a modern American skyscraper". [11] It commands possibly the best view of the Bund and Huangpu. [12] Originally called "The Broadway Mansions", it was renamed "Shanghai Mansions" by the Shanghai Municipal Council in 1951, but reverted to its original name after China opened up again to the West. The ...