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Lin Heung Tea House in Hong Kong. Hong Kong cuisine is mainly influenced by Cantonese cuisine, European cuisines (especially British cuisine) and non-Cantonese Chinese cuisines (especially Hakka, Teochew, Hokkien and Shanghainese), as well as Japanese, Korean and Southeast Asian cuisines, due to Hong Kong's past as a British colony and a long history of being an international port of commerce.
The interior of a Cha chaan teng restaurant in Mongkok, Hong Kong. Café de Coral – Hong Kong fast food company; Cha chaan teng – Type of Cantonese restaurant; Fairwood – Hong Kong fast food chain; Maxim's Catering – Hong Kong food company
This article contains the latest list of Michelin-starred restaurants in Hong Kong and Macau in 2021 through 2023. The 2009 edition was the first edition of the Michelin Guide to Hong Kong and Macau to be published, [ 1 ] making Hong Kong and Macau the second and third Asian territory to receive a Michelin guide, after Tokyo , Japan in 2008.
In June 2009, Hong Kong retail design store G.O.D. collaborated with Starbucks and created a store with a "Bing Sutt Corner" at their store on Duddell Street. It is a concept that fuses the retro Hong Kong teahouse style with the contemporary look of a coffeehouse. [20] [21] A menu posted outside a cha chaan teng in Tsuen Wan, advertising ...
Hong Kong food writers (9 P) H. Hot pot (16 P) N. Hong Kong noodles (1 C) R. Restaurants in Hong Kong (5 C, 36 P) Pages in category "Hong Kong cuisine"
According to a senior editor from the Hong Kong Chronicles Institute, predecessors to floating restaurants were once fishermen's barges from the Guangzhou and Pearl River areas. [5] They had stages built into them for people to host banquets, sing and dance. During the 1920s and 30s, Hong Kong fishermen from Aberdeen began operating similar barges.
The Hong Kong Tourism Board website featured street food as 'must-eat food'. While for the overseas media, the CNN travel has opened a column especially for Hong Kong street snack. [ 20 ] According to Reuters' article, Hong Kong street food gourmets was ranked the first in the top 10 street-food cities by online travel advisor Cheapflights.com ...
The best known Hong Kong street foods are curry fish balls, soya-braised cuttlefish, stinky tofu, curry pig skins, pig-blood jelly, red bean, green bean sweet soup, siu mai, etc. [45] [46] However, after the 1990s, due to food safety regulations, traffic laws and the like, hawkers started to disappear. They were then replaced by licensed food ...