'Cha chaan teng' is a type of
Chinese tea restaurant commonly found in
Hong Kong, known for its eclectic and affordable menus which include many dishes from
Hong Kong cuisine and localised
Hong Kong-style Western cuisine. This type of restaurant is also popular in
Macau.
Name and description
''Cha chaan teng'' provides
tea (usually weak tea) called "clear tea" (清茶 cing1 caa4), to customers as soon as they are seated. Some patrons use the hot tea to wash their
utensils. The name, literally "tea restaurant", serves to distinguish itself from the Western restaurants that provide water to customers instead of tea. The "tea" in the name refers to the inexpensive
black tea, not the traditional
Chinese tea served in traditional
Dim sum restaurants and
teahouses (茶樓 caa4 lau4). Moreover, some ''cha chaan tengs'' prefer the use of the word "café" in their names.
The "tea" may also refer to those tea drinks, such as the
Hong Kong-styled milk tea and cold lemon tea, which are very popular in ''cha chaan tengs''. The older generations in Hong Kong use ''yum sai cha'' (飲西茶 lit. "drinking Western tea"), when dining in these restaurants in contrast with ''
yum cha''.
Some restaurants operate in
chains such as Sun Chiu Kee (新釗記) and Tsui Wah (翠華).
Menus

Two menus, one on the board and another on glass, in a ''bing sut'' in
Sheung Shui. No rice plates can be seen on the menus.

HK-style French toast

A typical breakfast, including a cup of silk-sock milk tea
''Cha chaan teng'' serves a wide range of food, from
steak to
wonton noodles to
curry to
sandwiches. Both
fast food and
à-la-carte dishes are available. A big ''cha chaan teng'' often consists of three cooking places: a "water bar" (水吧) which makes drinks,
toast/sandwiches and
instant noodles, a "noodle stall" which prepares
Chiuchow-style noodles (including wonton noodles), and a kitchen for producing rice plates and other more expensive dishes. The invention of drinks like ''
yuanyang'' (鴛鴦) and Iced coffee with Lemon (凍檸啡) is often credited culturally to this style of restaurant.
A typical menu includes:
★
Noodles
★
★
Wonton noodles
★
★
Noodles with
fishball and
beefball
★
★ Instant noodles with canned or preserved foodstuff, e.g.
ham,
pork luncheon meat, and
preserved
vegetables.
★
★
Vermicelli
★
★
Udon
★
Pasta
★
★
Macaroni
★
★
Spaghetti
(Pasta offered are often served with soup, though not being
al dente very often; also the spaghetti might be offered
stir-fried.)
★
Rice plates (usually referred to as 碟頭飯 dip6 tau2 faan6), as the varieties offered by different ''cha chaan teng'' are more or less the same.)
★
★ Rice with fried tofu and
BBQ pork tenderloin (豆腐火腩飯)
★
★ Rice with assorted meats (雜扒飯), usually ham,
sausage,
tenderloin-like beef
★
★ Rice with ham and chicken
fillet (火腿雞扒飯), usually served with tomato sauce. (See
note 1)
★
★ Rice with creamed corn and deep-fried filet of
garoupa (粟米石斑飯)
★
Bread and
cake
★
★ "Freshly baked" (either provided by a supplier or baked on the premises)
★
★
★
Egg tart, a tasty baked egg custard.
★
★
★
Pineapple bun (See
note 2) or ''bor law yau'' (菠蘿油), a steaming hot sweet bun stuffed with a slice of butter.
★
★
★ Bread with
cream filling, topped with shredded
coconut
★
★
★
French toast - The local version is typically stuffed with peanut butter and deep-fried until golden.
★
★
★ Butter and jam on toast (油占多)
★
★
★ Sandwiches
★
★
★
★ With preserved foodstuffs
★
★
★
★ With fresh meat and vegetables e.g. Sandwich with tomato slices and beef
★ Drinks (See
notes 3-6)
★
★
Hong Kong-style milk tea or lemon tea
★
★
Coffee
★
★
★ Straight (black coffee) (齋啡) (also known as 飛砂走奶 lit. fly sand run milk, 飛砂 means sugar-free, 走奶 means milk-free)
★
★
★ With milk
★
★
★ With lemon slices (檸啡)
★
★
Yuanyang
★
★ "Chinese-style
Lemonade" (檸水) (not really lemonade, but water mixed with
sweet syrup and served with lemon slices)
★
★ With lemon (e.g lemon coke 檸樂, lemon
7-up 檸七, lemon
Ribena 檸賓)
★
★
Horlicks
★
★
Ovaltine
★
★
Milo
Note 1: Common sauces available: tomato sauce (茄汁),
black pepper sauce (黑椒汁), cream sauce (白汁), curry sauce (咖哩汁). However, the naming of
sauce in a ''cha chaan teng'' can sometimes be misleading. Do not expect tomato sauce to be similar to that in tomato pasta. The predominating ingredient in the sauces is, not uncommonly, just
starch.
Note 2: "
Pineapple bun" does not contain pineapple or any of its derivatives. It acquires the name from the
caramelised crispy topping, an outcome of baked syrup mingled with
eggs. It is often served with a slice of
butter. A "pineapple bun" served in this way is called ''Boh law yau'' (菠蘿油 lit. "Pineapple oil" where "oil" stands for the butter). ''Boh law yau'' often goes with drinks as a set meal and is popular among the male working class.
Note 3: Most ''cha chaan teng''s charge an extra $1 or $2 for iced drinks, except soft drinks.
Note 4: Very rarely do any ''cha chaan teng'' offer
espresso and its derivatives (e.g.
latte,
cappuccino) are unheard of. Instead, they boil coffee in
stainless steel kettles. The taste can be intense (or bitter, if the beans used are of marginal quality) when drunk straight. One might consider it espresso-like but it does not offer much of an
aftertaste. In addition,
crema is not seen.
Note 5: Iced coffee is sweetened with syrup unless specified to the waiter.
Note 6: Most ''Cha chaan teng''s use canned
evaporated milk, but the customer can require
condensed milk be used. Fresh
milk is rarely used.
Note 7: When ordering a set, it usually accompanies a choice of tea or coffee on the menu. The actual choices offered are tea, coffee, Horlicks, Ovaltine, and Milo.
Table manners
Customers usually select their seats freely in a ''cha chaan teng'', but in a crowded restaurant they have to share a table with strangers. During peak hours, waiters in a ''cha chaan teng'' will seat their customers, "packing" as many customers into the restaurant as possible. This
practice of sharing table is called ''dap toi'' (搭檯 daap3 toi2) in Cantonese. For example, they will seat two groups of three customers at a six-seat table, to avoid having a pair of customers sitting with a group of three people, leaving one seat vacant. Sometimes already-seated customers have to move to accommodate the business.
In most ''cha chaan tengs'', customers call out their orders to a
waiter, who will jot down the prices of the ordered food (sometimes also the names of the food in local short forms; for instance, lemon tea is recorded as "0T", see
simplifications on written Chinese in Hong Kong for details) on a piece of card/paper provided to every group of customers. After the meal, customers present the card/paper at the cash register to pay the bill.
Set meals
A feature of ''cha chaan tengs'' are the set meals. There are various sets throughout the day for breakfast, lunch, afternoon tea and dinner. The lunch and dinner sets usually include a soup and a drink. Generally there is an additional
HK$2 charge for cold drinks. Sometimes an additional HK$1 is charged for toasted bread.
Other sets include:
★ "Nutritious set" - It comes with milk and other nutritional food
★ "Constant set" - Provided all day long, hence the name
★ "Fast set" - Immediately served
★ "Special set"
Variations
Other kinds of local restaurant related to ''cha chaan teng'' in Hong Kong include ''chaan sut'' (餐室 lit. "meal chamber"), ''bing sut'' (冰室 lit. "ice chamber"), and ''bing teng'' (冰廳 lit. "ice dining room"), which a provide lighter and a limited selection of food than ''cha chaan teng''.
In the old days, these eateries only sold different types of "ice", sandwiches and pasta but ''no'' rice plates. However, some of the restaurants bearing these titles today ignore the tradition, and provide all kinds of rice plates and even wonton noodles. Original ''chaan suts'', ''bing suts'' and ''bing tengs'', which can be regarded as the prototype of ''cha chaan tengs'', are now scarce in Hong Kong.
In Media
★ The similarities between the different set meals were made fun of by ''
My life as McDull'', a
McDull movie.
★ An important part of
Hong Kong culture, ''cha chaan teng'' is featured in many Hong Kong movies and TV dramas, including the popular
sitcom ''
Virtues of Harmony''. The
TVB-made
soap opera tells the story of a family who runs a ''cha chaan teng'', usually boasting the
egg tart and "silk-stocking milk tea" produced by them.
Stephen Chow also played a ''cha chaan teng'' waiter in the 1998-comedy ''Lucky Guy'' (行運一條龍).
★ Some beverage producers use the words ''cha chaan teng'' to name their products, such as "cha chaan teng milk tea" and "cha chaan teng lemon tea".
See also
★
Dai pai dong
★
Cantonese restaurant
★
Macanese cuisine
External links
★
A comprehensive gallery of the ''cha chaan tengs'' found in Hong Kong
Gallery