Saving Hong Kong’s ‘endangered’ dim sum

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  • Опубликовано: 25 янв 2025

Комментарии • 206

  • @bensumw
    @bensumw Год назад +89

    6:37 You can see just how proud the dim sum chef on the right is, his face is literally beaming with pride at the opportunity to have worked with his seniors and mentors over the decades.

    • @pawacoteng
      @pawacoteng Год назад

      Or happy is on TV (or youtube)

    • @schadenfreude6274
      @schadenfreude6274 Год назад +1

      Don't be so gullible. He is probably paid well to appear on RUclips. :)

  • @jamesg90
    @jamesg90 Год назад +181

    The efforts these restaurateurs go to, to preserve and pass on these dishes is admirable to say the least. It's unfortunate that so many people expect dim sum to be cheap when it's so labor intensive.

    • @minxili3317
      @minxili3317 Год назад +6

      If Man Yuen is smart they could advertise to foreigners and on social media saying they sell endangered dim sum to get tourists interested in his store. Then they would come and check out what it is. Plus they can give small descriptions and a little history lesson on why these dim sum are endangered. It can be both a restaurant and a museum lol This can even get young locals interested as well.

    • @ephraimshambane2713
      @ephraimshambane2713 Год назад

      66666

    • @TsLeng
      @TsLeng Год назад

      ​@@minxili3317tourists? 😂😂😂
      What kind of tourists?

    • @minxili3317
      @minxili3317 Год назад +4

      @@TsLeng The whole world has tourists. Are you living in a cave?

    • @TsLeng
      @TsLeng Год назад

      @@minxili3317 pretty sure the locals and mainlanders can support the business. What is so endangered about premium authentic food? Foreigners? The ones that take a look at chicken feet and run away?

  • @ToniaV
    @ToniaV Год назад +24

    I always admire people who work in a restaurant. Their dedication to their job is really touching. Bet their food is the best 😊

  • @dimsumyen4034
    @dimsumyen4034 Год назад +25

    Lived abroad for over 25 years. Finally resettled back in HK and have been on a yum cha journey trying to find the kind of old style dimsum I grew up with … have no luck with the real 灌湯餃though. Thanks to your video, now I know where to find them. Watching the chefs making these endangered dimsum brings back so many fond memories from my childhood. I will definitely go try out 鳳城 and 文苑 this week. As a HongKonger, I truly appreciate our beautiful (and delicious) tradition and am grateful to these dedicated chefs. 😋 ❤

    • @rachellaw6275
      @rachellaw6275 Год назад +2

      you can find 灌湯餃 in higher end dim sum places, try Lei Garden or Maxim Palace. In Singapore, the chef at Shangri-La (Shang Palace, michelin award restaurant) also makes 灌湯餃 as well as other rarer items like dried tangerine and salted clam paste. TBH I'll rather have a modern 灌湯餃 in soup, than a poorly made traditional one (this is a problem in Canada where a lot of HK chefs immigrated but not all of them have the same skills!)

  • @gunmixYT
    @gunmixYT Год назад +47

    This is such an insightful video and nostalgic growing up… I appreciate the chefs much more!

  • @lmnoplmnop
    @lmnoplmnop Год назад +3

    Some of these really bring back memories and I am not even that old.... it's sad to see so many classics disappear over the past 3 years

  • @crazymatsuki
    @crazymatsuki Год назад +30

    I love their passion for these dishes.

  • @Tconomics
    @Tconomics Год назад +16

    Shout out to the host for the seasoned review of flavours, the chefs were delighted to.

  • @bryanh5728
    @bryanh5728 Год назад +5

    This is an important part of HK's Culture and heritage...Pls keep it going, esp for our future generations 🎉😊

  • @dialindsey
    @dialindsey Год назад +12

    I love the dim sum master's explanation. Growing up, I've seen some of these OG items. I love the call out on "chemical" ingredients as short cut compared to the OG fermented/technic focused/time consuming sensitive items. So many don't know the difference. I love traditional Dim Sum!

  • @Irenechangbritt
    @Irenechangbritt Год назад +3

    Love this! I had forgotten about those soup dumplings that we used to eat in Toronto in the 1970’s. And malaigo! Thanks for the walk down memory lane.

  • @Pd69bq
    @Pd69bq Год назад +11

    imo yum cha restaurants and dai pai dongs are more endangered than giant pandas and deserve more attention and financial support from the government. they are places where people can come together to enjoy delicious food and socialize with friends and family and super important in our traditional culture that deserve to be preserved. I really really hope that the government can change their mind and take steps to support these private businesses

  • @alimfuzzy
    @alimfuzzy Год назад +20

    I still remember all you can eat yum cha for $15. They were the best.

    • @bobbymoss6160
      @bobbymoss6160 Год назад +2

      Where? I've heard that before.

    • @alimfuzzy
      @alimfuzzy Год назад +6

      @bobbymoss6160 In Sydney about 20 years ago. Silver spring.

  • @juanritanjaya6254
    @juanritanjaya6254 Год назад +9

    Awesome video about food and its history and connection to people memories. I’ll be sure to visit these places next time I’m in Hong Kong

  • @SkepticalChris
    @SkepticalChris Год назад +41

    Many of these dim sum dishes, especially Baked Sago Pudding, are well preserved in overseas Chinese communities founded by Hong Kongers, like in Vancouver, particularly Richmond BC, where there is a huge thriving Chinese community and these dishes are still prepared daily in huge quantities. In fact I had it just two weeks ago at a restaurant, and it was superbly prepared, with the top layer just caramelized perfectly to enhance the richness of the flavor and the red bean paste complimented it perfectly!

    • @clubjema
      @clubjema Год назад

      I live in Vancouver too! Do you have any dim sum recommendations??

    • @ChairmanMo
      @ChairmanMo Год назад +1

      The reason why a lot of the older dim sum dishes are dying in HK is because the rents are way too high. Thus restaurants are being priced out of making certain dishes and have to cut cost ruthlessly.

    • @jeannechen7669
      @jeannechen7669 Год назад

      I am from Vancouver and this is 100% true. I love the dim sum here!

    • @SundaysChild1966
      @SundaysChild1966 Год назад

      Ohhh same in Toronto and York Region. My fav is when the little cart comes around with the choices, as opposed to ordering off a menu.

  • @RUHappyATM
    @RUHappyATM 11 месяцев назад +2

    Wait.
    The reporter speaking in English, the chef replying in Cantonese.
    That's the duck talking to the chicken!
    LOL.

  • @ichigobagus
    @ichigobagus Год назад +1

    Yes..pls do more to help preserve our Culinary Heritage, especially for future generations 🎉😊

  • @jaker3151
    @jaker3151 Год назад +8

    Working in a kitchen with Hong Kong's heat and humidity is not an easy job.

  • @yeohliangim2939
    @yeohliangim2939 9 месяцев назад +1

    So nice dim sum so tempting real sifu😢😊😊

  • @deanweaver4469
    @deanweaver4469 Год назад +5

    Thanks for sharing this. 🤠 Minneapolis, Minnesota USA👋

  • @noxbobby7192
    @noxbobby7192 Год назад +8

    in sg, many tradtional or old school stuff are disappearing as well

  • @kagekun1198
    @kagekun1198 Год назад +7

    This is an important cause. Dim Sum is also dying out in Malaysia and it'll be not long before it'll cost so much only the rich can eat this delicious food.

    • @totot99
      @totot99 Год назад

      as a malaysia dim sum is expensive

  • @algernon5776
    @algernon5776 Год назад +14

    What a great vlog/peice of the history/future of dim sum in Hong Kong. If we lose our history, we lose a big peice of our future.

  • @wonhome2711
    @wonhome2711 Год назад +2

    Great topic!

  • @beowulf1312
    @beowulf1312 Год назад +9

    Very interesting show. Indeed, yum cha is dying out, not just some special dishes.

  • @rocko6439
    @rocko6439 Год назад +1

    There will always be customers who want the basic dim sum menu selections and there will be restaurants who will cater to these customers.

  • @t.h.1784
    @t.h.1784 Год назад +4

    I will be visiting HK soon, would like try out the restaurants Name and Addresses of the two restaurants please ?

    • @teaspoonful973
      @teaspoonful973 Год назад

      Also looking for this!

    • @hkpfalldie
      @hkpfalldie Год назад +3

      The first one is Fung Shing Restaurant, 62-68 Java Road, North Point, Hong Kong Island

  • @puppyandkittygames
    @puppyandkittygames 3 месяца назад

    It's true we don't see a lot of the OG dim sum anymore. I hope more restaurants bring back the OG dim sum we grew up eating!

  • @gp2779
    @gp2779 Год назад +1

    Meanwhile Dimsum is thriving here in Malaysia. Dai Baos are so common you can get them in food trucks. We also adapted halal dim sum for the majority of Malaysia’s Muslim population.

    • @yungtrashlord
      @yungtrashlord Год назад +3

      that is true, a lot of these dim sum still existed here in malaysia
      however, some dim sum like the pork liver siu mai and sago pudding are essentially unheard of

  • @rackoflam
    @rackoflam Год назад +3

    oh I never had tapioca pudding for dim sum. Looks delicious. Don't go away 🙁

  • @DanBurgaud
    @DanBurgaud Год назад

    One thing I notice about the locals: they order a single dimsum dish then read newspapers until lunch time.
    That was one way to ruin the business.

  • @f.p.5235
    @f.p.5235 Год назад +2

    No worry, it is in Canada.

  • @minxili3317
    @minxili3317 Год назад +18

    If Man Yuen is smart they could advertise to foreigners and on social media saying they sell endangered dim sum to get tourists interested in his store. Then they would come and check out what it is. Plus they can give small descriptions and a little history lesson on why these dim sum are endangered. It can be both a restaurant and a museum lol This can even get young locals interested as well.

    • @randomcow505
      @randomcow505 Год назад +2

      my man, look at the comments, thats exactly what they have done

    • @phifrom5
      @phifrom5 Год назад

      it's working, im a foreigner who's going to check out man yuen next time I end up in HK

  • @youtubehub8190
    @youtubehub8190 Год назад +3

    7:29 there's hair on the right side in the filling

    • @Soxial_credits
      @Soxial_credits 8 месяцев назад +1

      No wonder they a school and not a restaurant💀

  • @kenl6774
    @kenl6774 Год назад

    I thought 鳳城酒家 had closed permanently? Only one of the locations closed?

  • @theleeclan00
    @theleeclan00 5 месяцев назад

    At this point, authentic dimsum is endangered, can we imagine how much has already been lost, decades and maybe centuries ago? Not only food but other things in general. How nice would it be if they are willing to take the time and let people shoot their traditional arts, to preserve these historical moments now that we have the technology to do so. There’s only a few decades left before the previous generations are gone

  • @EzekielDeLaCroix
    @EzekielDeLaCroix Год назад +2

    Oh no. I have to pay a 100USD to eat dim sum now since it's going through the phase of becoming expensive after being a poor person's food.

  • @chorlauheung4920
    @chorlauheung4920 Год назад +4

    Baked sago pudding looks like creme brulee or Portuguese egg tarts.

  • @Lh-wwert
    @Lh-wwert Год назад

    I remember the umbrella!!! I used to order jelly just because of it! Wow, time flies!

  • @plusfuture
    @plusfuture Год назад

    Give the names of the restaurants…

  • @dashoverton1963
    @dashoverton1963 Год назад +2

    It’s still common elsewhere. 🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @heizecherie6518
      @heizecherie6518 Год назад

      yup but in 2-5 yrs you'll see it disappearing one by one.

    • @gp2779
      @gp2779 Год назад

      @@heizecherie6518it’s thriving here in Malaysia lol

  • @jasonng9415
    @jasonng9415 Год назад +2

    Who else spotted the long hair in the dumpling filling at 7:30 🤣

    • @skimidot92
      @skimidot92 Год назад

      Where exactly? I looked again and again and there isn´t.

  • @Spirit451
    @Spirit451 Год назад +1

    Dim sum from elsewhere just looks nothing like the one in Hong Kong.

  • @camlee2341
    @camlee2341 Год назад +7

    pay them 50k to 100k a year..you will never be short of dim sum chefs

    • @justinderrick8785
      @justinderrick8785 Год назад

      subsidize by the government not the customers ;)

    • @nigellei8591
      @nigellei8591 Год назад +3

      Dim Sum head chefs do make 100k USD a year, at lease here in seattle usa.

  • @edwinlowe2692
    @edwinlowe2692 9 месяцев назад

    Wonderful video

  • @Kagrenackle
    @Kagrenackle Год назад +3

    I love sago custard pudding so I hope it doesn't go extinct.

    • @Trund27
      @Trund27 Год назад

      It looks delicious. Would love to try it.

  • @trueseeker262
    @trueseeker262 7 месяцев назад

    Dim chef like a sushi chef without the money.

  • @Tummymunster
    @Tummymunster Год назад +4

    Why is she speaking canto to one guy but english to another when the other person is speaking canto?

    • @WarrenKLiu
      @WarrenKLiu Год назад +3

      Probably because the chef understood English so easier for audiences to listen than read subtitles. There are many who don’t speak English in HK and unfortunately many western expat give wrong impression of HK English proliferation because the only HK they know are Central, Wan Chai, Happy Valley, Mid Levels and Repulse Bay and they think that’s HK.

  • @albertcadgame8314
    @albertcadgame8314 5 месяцев назад

    Dim Sum has been around for a looooonnnngggggggg looooooonnnnnngggggg time.
    It will be around for the next 100-300 years, so the video title is misleading "Saving HK 'endangered' dim sum"
    Drooling already after watching the dim sum - yummy !

  • @gracehlung
    @gracehlung Год назад +3

    baked sago pudding!!! love it so much

    • @lmc2664
      @lmc2664 Год назад

      💯! I had totally forgot this delicious dessert until I watched this video.

  • @cynthiachengmintz672
    @cynthiachengmintz672 Год назад

    Not sure if this was a Toronto thing, but anyone remember char siu chaan bao?

  • @crystalc8992
    @crystalc8992 Год назад

    They don’t wanna teach the youngsters and then worried about losing the tradition 😂

  • @WilliamCheung-h2c
    @WilliamCheung-h2c 5 месяцев назад

    Yum Cha is not exclusively for weekend, it all day, everyday.

  • @Iheartseattle1
    @Iheartseattle1 Год назад

    Does anybody know what the dessert on the plate next to the black sesame rolls are?

    • @13thirteen87
      @13thirteen87 11 месяцев назад

      砵仔糕 / Red Bean Pudding & 椰汁馬豆糕 / Split Peas Coconut Pudding。

  • @tidusfantasy
    @tidusfantasy Год назад +3

    I dont see why she has to speak english when the interviewee is speaking cantonese. The 2 ways cantonese interview during the first segment is perfectly fine, why changed it for the 2nd interview? It's so inconsistent, and kinda annoying also. One moment i was reading subtitles, one moment i was listening. It's not like its a one off thing, but a full conversation... SCMP, pls just stick to one language during an interview

    • @nigellei8591
      @nigellei8591 Год назад

      the interview wasn't done on the same day, and the interviewers were encourage to speak as much English as possible because this channel's target audience is toward the English speakers.

  • @BunnieBunBun
    @BunnieBunBun Год назад

    where is this restaurant in Hong Kong?

  • @Spacemonkeymojo
    @Spacemonkeymojo Год назад +2

    So weird the host talks to the old guy in Canto then the younger guy in English...

  • @SecretCollage
    @SecretCollage Год назад

    Love this reporting!

  • @kevint1160
    @kevint1160 7 месяцев назад

    Dim sum is not Hong Kong's. It is a CHINESE dish. It is everywhere. It does not need saving.

  • @mikamariya1733
    @mikamariya1733 Год назад

    Sago is from Papua, Indonesia. We call them Sagu.

  • @shaduck06
    @shaduck06 Год назад

    is this an ad

  • @SolomonNwokenkwo
    @SolomonNwokenkwo 11 месяцев назад

    Would want to visit Korea

  • @heizecherie6518
    @heizecherie6518 Год назад

    This is a big real problem. the problem is that learning dimsum is not accesable and very limited info over the net,. I myself is very lucky to be able to learn dimsum with a professional chef with almost 50 yrs of expérience. The more i deep dive learning dimsum the harder and complicated it gets. The problem here is that it is not a high paying job and so much work. They should let the younger apprentice learn asap. ain't nobody got time for 3 yrs just doing basic work.

  • @irenelee2277
    @irenelee2277 5 месяцев назад

    how did tim sum become dim sum and pao become bao?

    • @lwh7301
      @lwh7301 5 месяцев назад

      It's DEEM SUM and BAO in Cantonese.

    • @irenelee2277
      @irenelee2277 5 месяцев назад

      @@lwh7301 listen to the voice of the chef ; Heis speaking cantonese and he pronouced it tim sum' Sadly pao is now bao all over the world'

    • @lwh7301
      @lwh7301 5 месяцев назад

      @@irenelee2277 I don't have to listen to the chef. I know how those words are pronounced. No Cantonese speaker says TIM SUM and PAO.

    • @irenelee2277
      @irenelee2277 5 месяцев назад

      @@lwh7301 dim and bao do not exist in the cantonese dialect

    • @lwh7301
      @lwh7301 5 месяцев назад

      @@irenelee2277 It's DEEM, not DIM. Your knowledge of Cantonese doesn't exist.

  • @TheSmokey1523
    @TheSmokey1523 Год назад

    Malay cake and black sesame rolls ❤

  • @boxscorewatcher413
    @boxscorewatcher413 Год назад +1

    Dim Sum is life

  • @Zagaara
    @Zagaara Год назад

    I never saw rainbow jelly anymore....in SEA here, still had them till the late 80s and never saw them anymore..

    • @skimidot92
      @skimidot92 Год назад

      Indonesian here. Idk if it is the same, but here you can find "rainbow jelly" with the same appearance with the one in the video.

  • @nulnoh219
    @nulnoh219 Год назад

    Still alive in Shen Zhen tho. They all went north.

  • @OrganizedSpreadSheets
    @OrganizedSpreadSheets 11 месяцев назад

    Kissinger 8:07

  • @qvaerensveritatem9064
    @qvaerensveritatem9064 Год назад

    so heartwarming.

  • @franciscajourney
    @franciscajourney Год назад +1

    I love dimsum 😋

  • @babyomegaplusultra6978
    @babyomegaplusultra6978 Год назад +1

    I love Dimsum 🥟🥠🥡🥮🍥

  • @thedude6810
    @thedude6810 Год назад

    that jelly dish is from my childhood

  • @lean_sumek
    @lean_sumek Год назад

    بهترين أرزوها⁦🙏🏾⁩⁦🙏🏿⁩⁦🙏🏼⁩⁦🤲🏻⁩🤲⁦🤲🏿⁩

  • @hizokaairos
    @hizokaairos Год назад

    here in cebu dimsum is our go to meal😁

  • @___beyondhorizon4664
    @___beyondhorizon4664 11 месяцев назад

    I look a teaching job in Guangzhou during 2009-2013 party because of dim sum 😅
    The chef at 5.3 is so skinny, you can see his collar bones through his Vneck shirt 😢 why so skinny when hes working at a restaurant 😢

  • @Baobao1999x
    @Baobao1999x Год назад

    No offense meant. But most should first know how to respect customers. Most restaurants in HK have rude servers. So others especially foreigners are hesitant to eat.

  • @Ddaedalus
    @Ddaedalus Год назад +1

    Host barely took a bite out of the liver. The look of disgust on her face was very disrespectful to the owner. Maybe find a host who’s not from Australia & not a picky eater next time…

    • @hkpfalldie
      @hkpfalldie Год назад

      And get a host knows how to hold chopsticks

    • @vimel923
      @vimel923 21 день назад

      What are you talking about? She makes the same face after she takes a bite of all the food and is pondering the flavor profile. Is she supposed to cheer for liver after she took a bite? She wasn’t disrespectful at all.

  • @comchadelalora
    @comchadelalora Год назад

    Dim sum in danger. USA just sent its best boys onboard its bets war ships (and not rusted) near hong kong shores. Strategically to protect dim sum.

  • @RUHappyATM
    @RUHappyATM 11 месяцев назад

    I like Dim Sum, and I'm not even Cantonese.

  • @lean_sumek
    @lean_sumek Год назад

    yεma wo akwaaba😚☺️🤗🤗🤗

  • @wip1664
    @wip1664 Год назад

    Dim sum was perfected in the '80's.
    What happened?

  • @jasonreviews
    @jasonreviews Год назад

    my yeye made dim sum. My dad made dim sum. guess what happened to me. I chose different career.

  • @Nrylw-w6t
    @Nrylw-w6t Год назад

    Everyone wants to be the village chief

  • @nuomitang30
    @nuomitang30 Год назад +1

    Because they are dim sum, they dimsumper.

  • @rocketman3770
    @rocketman3770 Год назад +1

    Hair to the right @7:30

  • @sactownism
    @sactownism 25 дней назад

    Who uses chopsticks like she does?...

  • @faimak848
    @faimak848 Год назад

    high cost, but low profit made from some kind of dim sum.

  • @Michael20
    @Michael20 Год назад +9

    Why is the lady speaking English while the owner is speaking Chinese at the 10 minute mark? Very odd choice for a video

    • @screenapple1660
      @screenapple1660 Год назад

      Travel to India... Indians can't even get a job without taking ESL. Same as other countries.

    • @nigellei8591
      @nigellei8591 Год назад

      maybe the owner understands english but don't speak it,

  • @legambaz
    @legambaz Год назад

    You need to work on your pronunciation of the Tim Sum in proper Cantonese

  • @lean_sumek
    @lean_sumek Год назад

    لَذيذ😊🥰🤣

  • @erwinlimawan3158
    @erwinlimawan3158 Год назад

    Can someone who understands the native language explain griffin skin? I'm pretty sure that's not what they're actually referencing with the stripes on the cake.

    • @RovingKegs
      @RovingKegs Год назад +2

      Your guess was correct! The chef is referring to the striped pattern on the skin of the cake. It has been translated to 'griffin skin' here for simplicity, but the chef actually calls it 'Qilin' skin

    • @erwinlimawan3158
      @erwinlimawan3158 Год назад

      @@RovingKegs That's what I figured! Then they'd have to spend more time explaining what a Qilin is.

    • @hkpfalldie
      @hkpfalldie Год назад +2

      The boss said 麒麟面,麒麟is a mythical animal having snake skin / fish scale like skin, 面 means surface

  • @JJ82IOE
    @JJ82IOE Год назад

    60yrs experience?? Or one year repeated 60 times 😂

  • @lwh7301
    @lwh7301 5 месяцев назад

    Why was she speaking English to someone who speaks Cantonese?

  • @ShuiKiCheung-v5z
    @ShuiKiCheung-v5z Год назад

    點心其實可以增加家庭感情因為點心通常在早上吃所以父親通常早上帶母親孩子一齊飲早茶?Dim Sum in fact able to increase family emotional because of dim sum usually eat it on morning therefore father usually brings mother and children all together to drink morning tea?

  • @johnjosephmoore7248
    @johnjosephmoore7248 Год назад

    0:08

  • @aldenteh9412
    @aldenteh9412 Год назад +5

    Don't worry, Dim Sum is still preserved and local favourite in Malaysia. 🇲🇾

  • @chilam2512
    @chilam2512 Год назад +1

    They want a janitor for 3 three years, then take another 3 years to learn making dim sum before you will get pay as a beginner dim sum chef. Now you see why the young generation not interest in this profession. Then if someone willing to spend 5-6+ years to get a small wages that person is better off learning Japanese or French crusine for better paid and not to mention much less labor intensive.

  • @iandroo888
    @iandroo888 Год назад

    Oof anyone see that hair at 7:30

  • @Hkchinese888
    @Hkchinese888 Год назад +5

    Pork Chop talks about Dim Sum

    • @zacksmith5963
      @zacksmith5963 Год назад

      I don't think anyone asked you cow 💩