GEORGE CHEN

  • About
  • Blog
  • Speaking
  • Teaching
  • Research
  • Photography
  • Food
  • Contact
1983yumchaHK-1.jpg

Yum Cha in Happy Valley

June 26, 2021 by George Chen in Hong Kong, Happy Valley
1983yumchaHK-3.jpg
1983yumchaHK-5.jpg
1983yumchaHK-2.jpg
1983yumchaHK-4.jpg
1983yumchaHK-9.jpg
1983yumchaHK-7.jpg
1983yumchaHK-6.jpg
1983yumchaHK-8.jpg

Happy Saturday! This is probably the most famous yum cha (飲茶) and dim sum place in Happy Valley. The restaurant is named 壹玖捌叁, or 1983, which is the year of birth of the founder and boss, Mr. Cheng.

It’s a popular place for family gatherings on weekends and its signature dim sum include the “colorful xiaolongbao dumplings”, “roasted pork pastry”, and “fried taro pastry”. Prices may be above the average in this (already expensive) neighbourhood but the food portion is reasonably big too.

At dinner time, the restaurant focuses on Canton and Shanghainese cuisine, apart from its passion for creative “Hong Kong fusion” cuisine, led by Chef Tang, who has more than 50 years experience in culinary business.

Boss Cheng also has a wide collection of wine, which he has imported from all over the world and shares one thing in common: the year of production, 1983 of course.

Address: Hong Kong Cuisine (壹玖捌叁 1983), Elegance Court, Tsoi Tak St, Happy Valley

June 26, 2021 /George Chen
Happy Valley, Hong Kong, 香港, 跑馬地, WhatGeorgeEats, dim sum, yum cha
Hong Kong, Happy Valley
DoughBrosHV2021-1.jpg

The Most Popular Pizza in Happy Valley

June 20, 2021 by George Chen in Hong Kong, Happy Valley
DoughBrosHV2021-2.jpg
DoughBrosHV2021-3.jpg
DoughBrosHV2021-4.jpg

Located not far off the Happy Valley Racecourse, Dough Bros may be a tiny take-out pizza shop with just a few stools, but their artisanal sourdough pizza and freshly-filled doughnuts (heads up, nutella fanatics!) are certainly worth the wait.

Well, if you don’t like to wait, definitely try to avoid peak hours for lunch and dinner.

Known by the local as “the most famous pizza shop in Happy Valley”, Dough Bros has expanded beyond Happy Valley to set up new branches in Kennedy Town, Soho/Central, Wan Chai, and Quarry Bay.

Dough Bros is also well known for its wide range of choices for beer, including some difficult to find ones imported from all over the world to Hong Kong. For June, Spicy Pizza is the “pizza of the month” if you are a fan of Mexican spicy flavour.

Address: Dough Bros, G, 38-42 Yik Yam St, Happy Valley

June 20, 2021 /George Chen
Hong Kong, Happy Valley, 跑馬地, 香港, WhatGeorgeEats, pizza, donut
Hong Kong, Happy Valley
ShanghaiwontonCwB-1.jpg

Shanghai Wonton in Causeway Bay

June 20, 2021 by George Chen in Hong Kong, Shanghai, China
ShanghaiwontonCwB-2.jpg
ShanghaiwontonCwB-3.jpg

My friends often ask me where to eat good Shanghainese food. The answer is … the Shanghai Hongkong Noodle Restaurant in Causeway Bay. It’s been here for more than half a century and the first-generation founder/boss is a poor migrant to Hong Kong from Shanghai after the war time.

My favourite here is the Shanghai-style “little wonton”, and I will also order fried dumplings if I’m a bit more hungry. Soy milk is the popular drink here, brewed by the restaurant on its own everyday. Of course, the best takeaway is always the Shanghai-style “rice wrap” (秶飯), which has two flavors, sweet (pork) or salty (vegetables).

This restaurant is one of the unspoken secrets for the local and it’s open for 7/24/365. It was once featured in American newspaper USA Today, which described the hardworking entrepreneurial spirit as the “Spirit of Hong Kong”.

June 20, 2021 /George Chen
Hong Kong, Shanghai, WhatGeorgeEats, wonton, noodle, Causeway Bay
Hong Kong, Shanghai, China
ShanghaiBrightnessIcecream2021.jpg

Ice Cream, A US-China Story

June 20, 2021 by George Chen in Hong Kong, Shanghai, China

This is the most classic ice cream with a very long history in China since the early 1900s, also related to American influence, culture, and technology at that time.

American politicians and businessmen came to Shanghai for their “adventures” in the early days and they had homesick, including missing Western-style ice cream in the summertime. In 1913, an American dairy factory was established in Shanghai and it quickly entered ice cream business to primarily serve the foreign and local elite communities in Shanghai.

At the very beginning, the original brand of its ice cream was called “Beauty” (美女), and the brand was renamed as “Brightness” (光明) in 1950 following the Communist Party’s victory of the Civil War. Make sense? A bright new era just started for China. That’s the new meaning.

The late famous Chinese writer Eileen Chang (張愛玲) was one of many fans for “Beauty” ice cream, quite a luxury for the local in the old era of Shanghai. Today the new “Brightness” brand is already a household name in Shanghai and occupies a dominating share in the domestic ice cream market in China.

Former Chinese President Jiang Zemin (江澤民) was a factory manager for Yiming Foodstuff (益民食品), parent company of “Brightness” dairy and ice cream products before Jiang started his political career and became the Mayor of Shanghai.

You can now order “Brightness” ice cream online, directly shipped from Shanghai to Hong Kong, thanks to highly efficient logistics and e-commerce technology nowadays of course.

June 20, 2021 /George Chen
WhatGeorgeEats, Shanghai, Hong Kong, ice cream
Hong Kong, Shanghai, China
tuenmunredseason1.jpg

Roasted Goose in Tuen Mun

June 18, 2021 by George Chen in Hong Kong
tuenmunredseason2.jpg
tuenmunredseason3.jpg
tuenmunredseason4.jpg

People say Hong Kong is small. Yes and no. It depends on how far you want to go in Hong Kong.

Today I went to Tuen Mun (屯門).

Tuen Mun or Castle Peak is a satellite town near the mouth of Tuen Mun River and Castle Peak Bay in the New Territories (新界), Hong Kong. It was one of the earliest settlements in what is now Hong Kong and can be dated to the Neolithic period. For those who spend most of your time for living and work on Hong Kong Island, it’s quite a rare experience to go this far. It may be much easier to go across the border to Shenzhen from Tuen Mun than you drive from the city centre to Tuen Mun.

Hong Kong has 18 districts and you have to acknowledge that every district has its own treasures of food. For Tuen Mun, Hong Kong-style BBQ is quite thing, for example, a local restaurant in Tuen Mun like Red Seasons (季季紅) .

Red Seasons is a Michelin Guide-recommended roasted goose restaurant in Tuen Mun. The restaurant is also well known for its BBQ pork, roasted in old-fashioned stone stove, which is now already a very rare experience in Hong Kong, hence it is also featured by “Discover Hong Kong”, the official website of Hong Kong Tourism Board.

Given the remote location of Tuen Mun, food prices here are apparently cheaper than in Central. Half of the goose is for less than HK$300 and you can choose 1/4 size too.

When you go to Tuen Mun and because Tuen Mun is part of the New Territories (NT), you may see local taxis there are in green color rather than in red, like those you can grab on Hong Kong Island. That’s also quite interesting and may be worth a snapshot.

Btw, do you know Hong Kong also has taxis in blue color? Guess where you can find them?

June 18, 2021 /George Chen
WhatGeorgeEats, Hong Kong, 香港, New Territories, 新界
Hong Kong
  • Newer
  • Older

© Copyright by George Chen