Yum cha ("drinking tea") is an integral part of Macau's culinary culture.
It's a Cantonese term that refers to the custom of eating small servings of different foods, mainly Dim sum, while sipping Chinese tea.
Teahouses are a popular morning meeting place where the elderly spend a good part of the morning, after early morning exercise of Tai chi or a walk. High Tech people and blue collar workers alike stop here on their way to work and whole families gather to chat and eat dim sum and drink Chinese tea, especially on weekend mornings.
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Touch your heart and please your palette
Dim Sum and Chinese tea "go together like a horse and carriage"...
Literally meaning "pick what your heart chooses", Dim Sum is a light meal that consists of various types of steamed buns, dumplings and rice-rolls, containing a range of beef, chicken, pork, prawns and vegetarian options...
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Teahouses were and are places where disputes could be settled harmoniously over tea, as most people are more comfortable here than in a court of law...
Visitors will enjoy a visit to a teahouse or a dim sum restaurant. In many of them, the waiters do not even speak English, but there is always someone around who can help...
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What are the best places in Macau for "Yum cha style" food ?
Casa de Cha Long Wa opposite the "Red Market", Casa de Cha Tai Long Fong near Hotel East Asia, Long Kei on Largo Senado, Fung Shing Chu Kei Noodle Expert near the "Three Lamps Square", Good Fortune Noodle near Lisboa Hotel and Imperial House Dim Sum at 'The Venetian".
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You may also want to read about...
The Macanese Cuisine
The Portuguese Cuisine
The Cantonese Cuisine
Szechuan (Sichuan) cuisine
Peking/Beijing (Mandarin) cuisine
Chiuchow (Teochew) cuisine
Shanghai cuisine