Published on ShanghaiDaily.com (http://www.shanghaidaily.com/)
http://www.shanghaidaily.com/art/2006/01/04/233922/Traditional snacks return.htm
Customers walk out of the Wang Jia Sha flagship restaurant on Nanjing Road W. yesterday. The city's famous dim sum restaurant reopened after six months of renovations over the weekend and began selling traditional Shanghai snacks. — Zhang Suoqing
Traditional snacks return
Created: 2006-01-04 CST, Updated: 2006-01-04 CST
One of the city's oldest dim sum restaurants began selling traditional Shanghai snacks that have disappeared from the city for many years when it reopened on Sunday.
The Wang Jia Sha flagship restaurant on Nanjing Road W. reopened on January 1 after closing for decorations in July.
In addition to offering a better environment, the restaurant, which has a history of more than 60 years, has hired a master chef to make traditional snacks from Shanghai and neighboring cities.
"Many traditional snacks, though they haven't been seen in the city for years, are still available in cities like Suzhou, Wuxi and Nanjing," said the cafe's General Manager Cai Lixin.
The restaurant offers more than 10 traditional snacks, which went out of favor with the arrival of western restaurants and fast food in the 1990s, according to Cai.
It will gradually add more traditional snacks to its menu in the future, he added.
After the Spring Festival which falls on January 29, the restaurant plans to offer about 100 snacks from regions south of the Yangtze River.
Laohujiaozhua, meaning tiger's claw, is one of the traditional forms of dim sum now available at the eatery. Shaped like a tiger's claw, the snack is made of flour and baked in an oven until it is crisp and golden.
Cai said he has tried to improve on some of the famous snacks. He added beef to a type of fried noodles, and put crab meat into a type of spring roll that traditionally contains Brussels sprouts and pork.
The restaurant has also hired a master chef from Wuxi in Jiangsu Province. The master will braise and fry red bean cakes in front of customers.
"We plan to open a chain store in each district and some communities" around the city, Cai said.
The Wang Jia Sha flagship restaurant on Nanjing Road W. reopened on January 1 after closing for decorations in July.
In addition to offering a better environment, the restaurant, which has a history of more than 60 years, has hired a master chef to make traditional snacks from Shanghai and neighboring cities.
"Many traditional snacks, though they haven't been seen in the city for years, are still available in cities like Suzhou, Wuxi and Nanjing," said the cafe's General Manager Cai Lixin.
The restaurant offers more than 10 traditional snacks, which went out of favor with the arrival of western restaurants and fast food in the 1990s, according to Cai.
It will gradually add more traditional snacks to its menu in the future, he added.
After the Spring Festival which falls on January 29, the restaurant plans to offer about 100 snacks from regions south of the Yangtze River.
Laohujiaozhua, meaning tiger's claw, is one of the traditional forms of dim sum now available at the eatery. Shaped like a tiger's claw, the snack is made of flour and baked in an oven until it is crisp and golden.
Cai said he has tried to improve on some of the famous snacks. He added beef to a type of fried noodles, and put crab meat into a type of spring roll that traditionally contains Brussels sprouts and pork.
The restaurant has also hired a master chef from Wuxi in Jiangsu Province. The master will braise and fry red bean cakes in front of customers.
"We plan to open a chain store in each district and some communities" around the city, Cai said.
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