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It is known in Hong Kong as sai chaan (西餐, 'Western cuisine'), and outside of Hong Kong as Hong Kong-style Western cuisine or Canto-Western cuisine. Restaurants that offer this style of cuisine are usually cha chaan teng ( 茶餐廳 , Hong Kong-style diners) at the popular end, and sai chaan teng ( 西餐廳 , 'Western restaurants') at the ...
Hong Kong food writers (9 P) H. Hot pot (16 P) N. Hong Kong noodles (1 C) R. ... Pages in category "Hong Kong cuisine" The following 124 pages are in this category ...
The original dish was based on French cuisine, namely the casserole. One of the first restaurants to serve this dish is Tai Ping Koon Restaurant, which served the dish when it was founded in 1860, and then moved to Hong Kong in 1938. Since then, many other restaurants in Hong Kong began to serve baked pork chop rice and it has become a staple ...
Martin (traditional Chinese: 馬田; simplified Chinese: 马田) is a Hong Kong YouTuber, television personality, and author.He created the YouTube cooking channel Dim Cook Guide (traditional Chinese: 點 Cook Guide; simplified Chinese: 点 Cook Guide) on 21 February 2014, growing it to be ranked third by number of subscribers for Hong Kong YouTube channels in 2021.
Shrimp toast or prawn toast (Chinese: 蝦多士; Cantonese Yale: haa dō si) is a Cantonese dim sum dish from Hong Kong. It is made from small triangles of bread, coated with a paste made from minced shrimp and cooked by baking or deep frying. It is a common appetizer in Western Chinese cuisine.
Poon choi also represents Hong Kong's food culture and creativity. Although it is a traditional cuisine of Hong Kong walled villages the ingredients have changed over the past decades and become more diversified to suit peoples' varying palates and tastes. [8] Nowadays, Poon Choi stores are being launched in the urban districts.
A siu laap shop in Hong Kong. After meetings held between the Food Hygiene Select Committee, the Markets and Abattoirs Select Committee and the Street Traders Select Committee on the topic of "Sale of Cooked Food, Siu Mei, and Lo Mei in Public Markets" in 1978, siu mei shops officially entered into Hong Kong public markets. [3]
Singapore-style noodles (Chinese: 星洲炒米; pinyin: xīngzhōu chǎomǐ; Jyutping: sing1 zau1 caau2 mai5) is a dish of stir-fried cooked rice vermicelli, curry powder, vegetables, scrambled eggs and meat, most commonly char siu pork, and/or prawn or chicken.