Hello! Hong Kong Tours | Colorful MTR stations

From it’s vibrant people, awe-mazing skyscrapers and even the public transportation, Hong Kong is a city full of colors. When you are in a Hello! Hong Kong tours, you will notice that each MTR station has different colors. Red for Central, Yellow for Tsim Sha Tsui, and the color goes on. Did you ever wonder why the colors are different for each station?

Aside from the obvious reason that colors help differentiate each station, The main reason is, bright colors were adopted to lighten up the subway system.

MTR colored station on our Hello! Hong Kong tour.  Photo Credits: discovery cathaypacific

MTR colored station on our Hello! Hong Kong tour. Photo Credits: discovery cathaypacific

Architects planned the colors to help people navigate the system especially during the ’70s where people who don’t understand English or Chinese will be able to recognize the place by color. Most of the name of the colors were derived from its Chinese name, the meaning of its place, and the consideration for the place surrounding environment.

If you are out on a tour, don’t forget to take pictures with the help of our Hello! Hong Kong tour guide and tag our Facebook page Hello! Hong Kong Tours!

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Hello! Hong Kong participates in ICM Annual Virtual Banquet

Hello! Hong Kong is proud to be part of the ICM’s Virtual Banquet - streamed live on October 9, 2020 from Hong Kong. The annual banquet included a silent auction to raise funds to reach more communities in both the Philippines and Uganda that are in need.

Hello! Hong Kong donated 2 spots on our Residents Tour which were successfully contributed to HK$4,000 to the overall of HK$13,300,000 raised in the auction. We hope this contribution will help change lives of the people in Philippines and Uganda for the better. ICM has spent the last 27 years transforming over one million lives. For more information on their work please visit: www.caremin.com

ICM’s focus is on children living in poverty at the absolute bottom of the economic ladder, providing help, inspires hope and creates change in families earning less than US$0.50 a day.

ICM’s focus is on children living in poverty at the absolute bottom of the economic ladder, providing help, inspires hope and creates change in families earning less than US$0.50 a day.

Hello Hong Kong
Hong Kong Activities | Lin Heung Tea House

Travel restriction is still in force and borders of every country are still closed to leisurely travels. Luckily, the government has relaxed the social distancing restriction allowing a maximum of 4 people in a group. Why not take advantage of the time being ‘stuck’ in our wonderful city and revisit the places that we normally go to. Just don’t forget to wear masks and bring your alcohol and hand sanitizers.

Hong Kong is a very unique city as there a lot of places and Hong Kong activities to explore! From a street market, shopping malls, Michelin street food, and hole in the wall restaurants that are rich in history!

One of the most famous and oldest dim sum places in Hong Kong that you can also visit when you book our HONG KONG ISLAND FOOD & CULTURE RESIDENTS TOUR is the Lin Heung Tea House. It offers the best dim sum in Hong Kong and the best place to experience the traditional way of ordering dim sum from a trolley.

Try dim sum served  in trolleys on our Hello! Hong Kog Tour

Try dim sum served in trolleys on our Hello! Hong Kog Tour

Did you know that Lin Heung Tea has been featured in several films, including The Longest Summer (1998) and In the Mood for Love (2000)?. A lot of stories to tell about the place and our Hello! Hong Kong tour guide will definitely fill you in on those very interesting topics over dim sums and desserts!

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The Corona Diaries part 2 | A drink of history with Mel

Ever since the 2 people per group restriction was implemented in Hong Kong, our Hello! Hong Kong tour guide Mel mostly stays at home and realized there are lots of things to do! So, he started to cook more and try out some simple local recipes that he always wanted to try. One of which is the famous Hong Kong milk tea!

Did you know that Hong Kong-style milk tea originates from British colonial rule over Hong Kong. The British practice of afternoon tea, where black tea is served with milk and sugar, grew popular in Hong Kong. Who wouldn’t want to try it?

Looks like Mel is not the only one having fun making his own made milk tea. His dog Nyla looks happy and wanted to try what his favorite person made.

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Hong Kong Milk Tea ala Mel

You will need:

2 Litre of water to boil.

8~10 tea bag ( English Black Tea, from Sri Lanka )

200 ml of evaporated milk

6 tablespoons of sugar

Instructions:

Boil water

Once the water is boiled, put the tea bags in to simmer for 5min.

Take out the tea bags and squeeze out till they are dried.

Turn off the heat, add the milk, and add the sugar gradually to taste.

I put the mixture into a bottle and chill it in the fridge.

Its just a great refreshment for these hot summer days.

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The Corona Diaries part 2 | Baking with Don

We are now in the last quarter of the year and looks like COVID-19 is not going away anytime soon. But, that won’t stop our Hello! Hong Kong tour guide Don in practicing his baking skills by making his own made Christmas cake!. Don made sure that he makes use of his free time wisely and productively, other than baking, he is currently doing stream walks and coast steering which are awesome fun in the heat as you are wet most of the time.

We believe that sharing is caring so Don, has shared with Hello! Hong Kong tours his newfound Christmas cake recipe.

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Christmas Cake

8 oz (250 g) butter
8 oz (250 g) caster sugar
5 eggs
8 oz (250 g) plain flour 2 oz (60 g) self-raising flour
Pinch salt 1 teasp ground nutmeg 1 teasp ground allspice 1 teasp cinnamon
8 oz (250 g) raisins
8 oz (250 g) currants
1 lb (500 g) sultanas
2 oz (60 g) glace cherries
2 oz (60 g) almonds (blanched, slivered or flaked)
2 oz (60 g) lemon peel (I use fresh grated rind from 1 lemon instead)
2 oz (2 tblsp) brandy, sherry or orange juice.

Notes: Butter must first be “creamed” until it changes colour and then the sugar is gradually added. For electric baking, preheat oven to 325°F (165°C) then reduce temperature to 275°F (135°C) when cake is put in the oven. For gas, no need to preheat. Put cake into cold oven then light gas, 275°F (135°C).

Baking Instruction:

  • Prepare tin: line 8 inch (20 cm) x 3 inch (8 cm) tin with two layers white paper and on the outside cover with one layer of brown paper (I use foil for outside). Recommend also cover outside with damp tea towel.

  • Cut the white paper 2 inches (5 cm) longer than circumference of the tin, allowing 3 inches (8 cm) more than depth of tin. Turn up a 1 inch (2 cm) band along one edge and slash at 1 inch intervals. This will enable paper to sit smoothly in tin. Bases for lining the bottom should be cut fraction smaller than base of tin to allow them to sit completely flat on top of the interlocking slashed band.

  • Sift plain and self-raising flours with salt and spices. Combine dried fruits with almonds, cherries and lemon peel. Soften butter, working until light in colour.

  • Gradually add sugar and cream together until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at time, and beat well, can add little flour to prevent separating, then add remaining flour and fruit alternately, and lastly the brandy.

  • Put mixture into tin and make a slight hollow in centre.

  • Bake in oven 275°F (135°C) for about 4 hours. Can lightly cover with foil after 3 hours or so if browning too much.

  • When cake is taken from oven, allow it to sit in tin for 15 mins or so to set. Then gently lift from tin and allow to cool without removing the paper. When cool store in airtight tin. For added protection, wrap in cling wrap and/or foil.

Christmas came a little bit early for Don so as a special offer in partnership with Chef Rajesh, they are offering a 10% discount to all Hello! Hong Kong customer who wanted to book a Zoom online cooking class. For more information, you can email him at don@indiansummerhouse.co.

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The Corona Diaries part 2 | Digging Clams with Ryan

Clam digging was one of the main sources of income for locals in the past. Nowadays, it is an extremely popular Hong Kong activity. That is why our Hello! Hong Kong tour guide Ryan did not miss the chance of spending his free time digging up clams with his friends. What a great way to stretch those back muscles and arms from your own harvest isn’t it? But of course, Ryan made sure to end the day by dipping in the cool ocean water!

Nothing beats a freshly harvested clams straight from the sea for dinner! He even got a big one!

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Room 309

Room 309 brings a flair of Victorian-era alchemist’s den. Its richly decorated interior is a perfect getaway for those who seek a certain cosy intimacy. To access the mixologist Antonio Lai’s Room 309, you must acquire a key
card and fill out a check-in form from The Envoy—the adjacent bar in The Pottinger—to be able to enter.

The bar’s outstanding cocktail menu features 8 “invisible” drinks that mix colourless ingredients in an attempt 
to focus on the taste rather than aesthetics—to this end, unconventional ingredients such as peanut butter, salted egg yolk and yoghurt contribute to one of the most unique cocktail experiences in recent memory.

Photo credit: World’s Best Bars

Photo credit: World’s Best Bars

Address: 3/F The Pottinger Hong Kong, 74 Queen's Road Central, Central
Operating Hours: Mon - Thu: 5:00pm - 12:00am, Fri-Sat: 5:00pm - 2am, Sun: Closed
Website: www.room309.hk
Nearest MTR: Central Station

Ping Pong 129 Gintonería

Nestling in happening Sai Ying Pun, transformed from an old ping pong hall into spacious, urban chic interior, and hidden hangout vibe, where to enter you have to find a small red door with “Ping Pong City” inscribed in Chinese. It is the hip spot for stylish sipsmith’s and cocktail casualistas alike.

This stylish Gintonería, as the name entails, focuses on gin-based Spanish-style drinks. Artisanal pours from the spiritual home of the now cult cocktail dominate the list, each served with garnishes and accompaniments expressly added to draw out the flavours of the specific gin or tonic involved.

Photo credit: Pinterest

Photo credit: Pinterest

Address: 129 Second Street L/G Nam Cheong House, Sai Ying Pun
Operating Hours: Mon-Wed: 18pm-12:30am, Thurs:12pm-1am, Fri-Sat:12pm-2am
Tel: +852 9835 5061
Website: www.pingpong129.com
Email: info@pingpong129.com
Nearest MTR: Sai Ying Pun Station

XX

The recently opened XX is a chic, luxuriously furnished, Hong Kong’s first speakeasy for ladies only. XX, named after the chromosomal combination only females possess, tucked into a hidden corner of the Rosewood Hong Kong hotel. To enter the venue, head through the grand double doors, up the elevators and down a dim corridor somewhere within the walls and you will find an inconspicuous knob. Flip the panel up, enter the password, and with a resounding whoosh, the wall will open inwards. It is by reservation only.

Expect sultry and intoxicating cocktails, among others: Sexy, a champagne-based cocktail, is a concoction of jasmine, bergamot orange, fizz and London No. 3 Gin. BFF, a refreshing, light, easy-on-the-throat highball that pairs Fair vodka with cucumber juice, pine needles, and yuzu vinegar and Macho, a Japanese influenced, equally sophisticated in its blend of lemongrass, matcha, Palo Santo, and Lillet Blanc.

Photo credit: Prestige Hong Kong

Photo credit: Prestige Hong Kong

Address: 5/F, Rosewood Hong Kong, Victoria Dockside, 18 Salisbury Rd, Tsim Sha Tsui
Operating Hours: Tue-Sat: 6:00pm - 12am. Sun-Mon: Closed
Tel: +852 5239 9219
Website: www.xxspeakeasy.hk
Nearest MTR: Tsim Sha Tsui Station

PDT (Please Don’t Tell)

This bar packed a true sense of a bar within a bar, hidden in the mezzanine level on MO Bar entering through a secret phone booth, it is the haven for stellar cocktails and equally amazing snacks. This hip and intimate spot is a unique collaboration with the operators of the iconic New York cocktail bar PDT (Please Don't Tell), PDT Hong Kong features creative cocktails developed by renowned mixologists Jim Meehan and Jeff Bell, with a talented bar team led by New York transplant and Bar Manager, Malaika Suarez alongside Head Bartender Kervin Unido.

Don’t miss PDT NYC’s legendary cocktails such as Benton’s Old Fashion and Big Fan, created for Hong Kong with locally brewed Moonzen Fujian radler. A range of delicious hot dogs, Impossible Burger served with a generous heap of waffle fries and tater tots are designed by two Michelin-starred Chef Richard Ekkebus.

Photo credit: JetSetReport.com

Photo credit: JetSetReport.com

Address: Landmark Atrium, 15 Queen's Road Central, Central
Operating Hours: Mon–Sun: 4pm-12am (Temporarily Closed)
Tel: +852 2603 6020
Website: www.mandarinoriental.com
Email: LMHKG-RESTAURANTS@MOHG.COM
Nearest MTR: Central Station