Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2015, they expanded their business into opening Dacha, an Eastern European restaurant in Central, Hong Kong. [1] The menu of the restaurant includes such dishes as vegetarian borsht, chicken Kiev, herring under a fur coat, home-made kielbasa, cabbage rolls, blini with caviar, medovik made of buckwheat honey, etc.
Black Sheep Restaurants is a Hong Kong–based hospitality group. [1] [2] [3] Founded by Syed Asim Hussain in 2012, the group operates over two dozen restaurants in the city. [4] [5] [6] Black Sheep's portfolio includes restaurants serving Punjabi, Cantonese, Sichuanese, Indian, Mexican, and Italian cuisines. [7]
Pocatello is home to Idaho Museum of Natural History, Museum of Clean, Bannock County Historical Complex, and the Fort Hall Replica and Museum. Idaho State University's L.E. and Thelma E. Stephens Performing Arts Center is the largest such complex in Pocatello and hosts dance, theater, music, and other entertainment events.
Tim Ho Wan (Chinese: 添好運) is a Hong Kong dim sum restaurant chain originating from Hong Kong. Known for being "the world's cheapest Michelin-star restaurant", the chain has since expanded and now has franchises in 12 countries. [3] [4] In November 2024, the company was acquired by Jollibee Foods Corporation of the Philippines. [5]
The exterior of Forum Restaurant in 2006. 8½ Otto e Mezzo – restaurant in Hong Kong; Amber – The Landmark Mandarin Oriental's modern French restaurant; Amigo – restaurant in Hong Kong, China
Forum Restaurant (Chinese: 富臨飯店) is a Cantonese restaurant officially established in 1977. It is located at Sino Plaza , Causeway Bay, Hong Kong since 2014. Run by Hong Kong's international chef and ambassador of Chinese cuisine, Yeung Koon-yat ( 楊貫一 ), it is known for its expensive abalone dishes.
Fook Kee was an instant success, catering to the elites of Hong Kong and it was renamed as Fook Lam Moon in 1953, endowed with the meaning of "good fortune arriving at your door". Alongside Hong Kong's economic growth and evolution of the culinary industry, the first Fook Lam Moon Restaurant was opened in 1972 in Wanchai, Hong Kong.
Founded in December 1972 [1] in the Tsuen Wan district of Hong Kong, its current headquarters are located in North Point. Since that time, the company has grown to 98 outlets all over Hong Kong (94 fast food, 2 cafes and 2 specialty restaurants) and 13 locations in Mainland China including major cities such as Shenzhen, Guangzhou and Beijing. [2]