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Tam Jai International Company Ltd. (譚仔國際有限公司) (also known as "Tam Jai") is a fast casual restaurant chain based in Hong Kong. They specialize in Yunnan-style rice noodles, and trade under the names Tam Jai Sam Gor Mixian (譚仔三哥米線, "Tam's Three Brother's Noodles") and Tam Jai Yunnan Mixian (譚仔雲南米線, "Tam's Yunnan Noodles").
Kau Kee Restaurant (Chinese: 九記牛腩) is a noodle restaurant in Hong Kong. Its speciality is beef brisket soup with noodles. [ 1 ] On his website, the television food personality Andrew Zimmern has noted, "If I had only one meal in all of Hong Kong, it would be at Kau Kee."
Mak Man Kee Noodle Shop (Chinese: 麥文記麵家), on Kowloon peninsula is a traditional Guangdong restaurant specialising in wonton noodle. It is located in Parkes Street, near Jordan MTR station in Hong Kong. It is considered a "must-stop spot" for the wonton noodle by The Essential Kowloon, [1] and was awarded a star in the Michelin Guide ...
He ran the restaurant himself and retired again in 1996. The business was succeeded by his second son Mak Chi-ming, the current proprietor. [3] In recent years, Mak's Noodle has established outlets at Olympian City, China Hong Kong City, Causeway Bay and Jordan, and one restaurant in Macau. Their first Singapore outlet opened on Orchard Road in ...
1. Sharing tables with strangers. On my first night, I settled into a cozy beef-noodle restaurant and was mid-slurp when a middle-aged man sat across from me at my table.
A bowl of thin noodles with sour wheat gluten and fish curd at a restaurant in Sham Shui Po A menu in a cart noodle restaurant in Wan Chai. Cart Noodles (traditional Chinese: 車仔麵; simplified Chinese: 车仔面) is a noodle dish which became popular in Hong Kong and Macau in the 1950s through independent street vendors operating on roadsides and in public housing estates in low-income ...
It is commonly found in yum cha restaurants in Guangdong, Hong Kong, and overseas, as well as in cha chaan tengs. Chow fun, or stir-fried hor fun noodles, is any number of different individual preparations (and could be compared to the number of pizza varieties in United States cuisine). [1]
Wonton noodles were given their name, húntún (Chinese: 餛飩; Jyutping: wan4 tan1), in the Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE). [2] The dish is popular in Southern China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam and Thailand. [3] [4] The dish usually consists of egg noodles served in a hot broth, garnished with leafy vegetables and wonton ...