Hong Kong street food

Summary

Hong Kong street food is characterised as the ready-to-eat snacks and drinks sold by hawkers or vendors at food stalls, including egg tarts, fish balls, egg waffles and stinky tofu, according to the definition provided by the Food and Agriculture Organization.[1] They can be found throughout the city, especially in the areas of Mong Kok, Causeway Bay, Yuen Long, Tsuen Wan, and Kwun Tong.

A street food stall in Tai Wai
A street food stall in Sai Yeung Choi Street, Mong Kok
A street food stall in Sham Shui Po

Characteristics edit

Street food is ready to be taken away and eaten elsewhere immediately. Generally, the customers are served snacks, which are contained in polystyrene boxes, with disposable bamboo sticks or plastic utensils. Street food needs to be sold along the street, even though nowadays street stalls have transformed into shops without providing seats. Food can easily be taken away via small plastic bags, paper bags or bowls. The food is prepared quite quickly.

Nutritionists contend that, compared to other food, street food is often cooked in greater quantities of oil such and hawkers usually add large amounts of sugar or salt for seasoning.[2]

According to travel websites Timeout.com and About.com in 2013, food prices averaged between $1 and $25 and were found to be most acceptable to Hongkongers.[3][4]

Cultural research suggests that food stalls supply a variety of snacks, including both local and international, ranging from red-bean pudding from Guangdong to Thai prawn cutlets.[5]

History edit

Ancient snack stalls edit

According to Tang Zhiyan (Chinese: 唐摭言, "selected words from the Tang"), hawkers had sold cold food on the streets to get relief during summer heat as early as the Tang dynasty. Then, during Qing dynasty, the street-side snack stalls gradually developed into street markets.[6] As highlighted in a feature article namely 'Finding the Dining Habit of the Unemployed' (Chinese: 尋找地踎飲食), the scene of hawkers carrying wood barrels, traditional wares and stoves has become part of the history of local street snacks.[7]

Development in 20th century edit

In the 1950s, facing the economic downturn and high unemployment rate, the majority of grass roots were forced to become itinerant hawkers to maintain their livelihood. Owing to the limited resources, rough canopies, cooking stove and wooden carts were used. Considering the effectiveness and convenience, they sold the snacks on mobile carts in the main streets to maximise revenue.[8] During the post-war period, the political stability and economic development of Hong Kong attracted immigrants from Mainland China.[9] At that time, 300,000 of them worked as hawkers, including street food hawkers. The growth in the number of itinerant hawkers fostered the development of street food culture.[10] These hawkers mainly served the lower-income group. These stalls were in form of junkers, a kind of wooden car with wheels, allowing these junkers to be pulled and pushed around.[11] The food was very often cheap in price and with many variations.[12] They became very popular during 1950s to 1960s. However, the Hong Kong government has banned these type of shops in order to build a hygienic image of the society while maintaining public health. Thus, the owners attempted to run their business in a shop instead of utilizing their own junkers.[13][14] Although the original style of "wooden junkers service" has more or less been changed, the types of food being sold are the same as those in the past.[15]

Contemporary development edit

From the 1970s to 1980s, several changes concerning the development of street snacks were caused by the following factors.

Governmental factor edit

In 1970s, the government adopted an oppressive attitude towards hawkers instead of the laissez-faire approach adopted before.[16] This showed in the change in government policies. For example, the government stopped issuing itinerant hawker licenses to control the number of hawker stalls since 1979. Later, the Urban Council and the Regional Council implemented a policy to eliminate hawkers in 1995.[17] All of the above actions suppressed the prevalence of street food at that time.

Hygiene factor edit

Street food does not have a high concern in regards to hygiene. The street snacks contained germs like cholera and Escherichia coli. According to a publicity film released by the Medical and Health Department in 1987, food stalls were considered unhygienic in terms of their environment and cooking process. In the video, a hawker was shown smoking while selling snacks.[18] His stall was located beside a busy road and the floor was wet with rubbish and sewage. This unhygienic condition aroused customer concern, which acted as a catalyst for change. The hawkers do not sell their goods in permitted areas, apply for hawker licenses, or fight for legislation that will make unlicensed hawking a kind of legal activity in the 1970s.[19]

Social factor edit

[20] The presence of hawkers contributed to the surge of Mainlanders, who suffered from the end of Civil war, mainly after the 1950. Those people were trying to live a better life in Hong Kong, as an escape of Chinese Authority. However, most of the people were not educated, therefore, barely did they earn a living. At that time, people lived in extremely crammed environment, many them chose to start their 'business' in the street, including food selling, singing and story telling.

Between the 1960s and 1970s, it was the heyday of hawkers. There were more than 300 thousand people in the industry, accounting for 20% of the labor force. Thanks to the time that there were neither shopping malls nor markets, it provided many opportunities for hawkers to extend their business.

The hawkers were then no longer limited to earning a living, but started to pursue better quality of life.

Often crowds surrounding hawkers' carts are seen as causing inconvenience to other pedestrians. In some cases, the elderly might slip as they walked over the puddles, while children might get hurt by the boiled oil from the stalls.[21] The safety concern and disturbance to the public aroused their discontent towards street hawkers.

Changes made in the contemporary society edit

Over the past few decades, Hong Kong street food has changed its operation.

Introduction of new legislation edit

The government has set a quota in the licenses provided. According to the official document, they have let 233 contracts for fixed-pitch hawkers and 93 contracts for itinerant hawkers until 2011.[22] The number of hawkers has decreased compared to 2005, in which there were 1,075 contracts for fixed-pitch hawkers.[23] To maintain a safe and clean environment, the government has also controlled hawking activities through laws. They are listed below:

  • Sections 83-86D of the Public Health and Municipal Services Ordinance (Cap.132);
  • Hawker Regulation (Cap.132, sub.leg.);
  • Food Business Regulation (Cap.132, sub.leg.); and
  • Section 4A of the Summary Offences Ordinance (Cap.228).[24]

Improvement in hygiene condition edit

Street food is readily available for sale and hawkers keep them boiling during operation to prevent the growth of bacteria.[25]

Change in operation mode edit

Due to the limited supply of itinerant licenses and the introduction of a compulsory deletion policy, hawkers have a fixed bunk after moving into shopping malls.[22] The distribution of street snacks was geographically dispersed throughout Hong Kong before.[26] But nowadays, street snacks are mainly located in six districts, including Eastern, Central and Western, Wan Chai, Yau Tsim Mong, Sham Shui Po and Kowloon City.[27][28]

Importance to Hong Kong edit

Local tourism and international recognition edit

The worldwide popularity of local street snacks has fostered tourism in Hong Kong. It is recognised locally and internationally. The Hong Kong Tourism Board website featured street food as 'must-eat food'.[29] While for the overseas media, the CNN travel has opened a column especially for Hong Kong street snack.[30] According to Reuters' article, Hong Kong street food gourmets was ranked the first in the top 10 street-food cities by online travel advisor Cheapflights.com in 2013.[31] In short, the above honour has arisen Hong Kong citizens' appreciation towards the local street food culture.

Demonstration of core values in Hong Kong edit

Street snacks have epitomised Hong Kong's core values of cultural diversity. An example can be the emergence of street stalls selling foreign treats like Takoyaki and Indonesia skewers.[5] This showed the diversity of choices of street snacks and matches Hong Kong's title of Gourmet Paradise. Despite all changes, it can also represent Hong Kong's identity. For example, the name of 'Hong Kong style Egg Waffle' showed its local origin.[32] The alterable essence of local street food has demonstrated Hong Kong cultural acceptance and serves as a medium to display its character to the world.

In 2015, a marked rise in nativist sentiment led to the growing influence of localist parties such as Civic Passion and Hong Kong Indigenous. Localists, feeling that street vendors – who generally representing the bottom stratum of Hong Kong society – were being increasingly oppressed by a government colluding with commercial interests and property owners, offered high-profile support for the traditional lunar new year Kweilin Street Night Market in 2015 when it was targeted for closure by the CY Leung administration. On the eve of lunar new year in 2016, FEHD inspectors carried out a pre-emptive raid against street vendors in Sham Shui Po, and made arrests and seizures.[33] This led to the 2016 Mong Kok civil unrest, where nativists defended stall holders from being victimised by FEHD inspectors and engaged in confrontations with the police.[34]

List of common Hong Kong street food edit

[35][36][37]

Name Image Description
Fishballs

魚蛋

  Fishballs are usually served in curry and sold on skewer.[13]
Siu mai

燒賣

  Different from the dim sum served in Chinese restaurants. It does not include any ingredient other than fish meat and pork.

Siu Mai even has its encyclopedia, as three Hongkongers administrate a popular Facebook page called “Hong Kong Siu Mai Concern Group.” The group frequently shares food reviews and information on the best Siu Mai across the city. At the same time, the page also posts submissions from other enthusiasts, who sometimes create peculiar recipes such as putting Siu Mai (or shumai) in a salad.[38]

Imitation shark fin soup

碗仔翅

  Mushrooms, vermicelli, scrambled egg are commonly used as the major ingredients. It is a tradition to add red vinegar in the soup when eating it.[39]
Fried chestnuts

炒栗子

  Chestnuts are stir-fried with black sand and sugar in a wok.
Egg waffles

雞蛋仔

  Made by stirring eggs, sugar and flour as a pulp, then baking it until it turns to golden colour. It is crunchy on the outside and soft on the inside.
Put chai ko

砵仔糕

  Palm-sized, steamed in a porcelain bowl.
Stinky tofu

臭豆腐

  Deep-fried, smells stinky after natural fermentation.
Baked waffles

格仔餅

  Peanut butter, butter, sugar and condensed milk are put together in the 2 waffles.
Beef offal

牛雜

  Braised beef offal, including tripe, lungs and intestine.
Fried squid tentacles

炸魷魚鬚

  It is pre-pickled till the outside become orange. The texture is like a rubber. It is conventional to dip it in black vinegar when served.
Deep-fried pig intestine

炸大腸

  It is cut into slices and placed on a bamboo skewer. The outer side is fried until orange colour and the inside is filled with grease and fat.
Roasted sweet potatoes

煨蕃薯

  soft and piping hot - perfect snack during the winter
Three fried stuffed treasures

煎釀三寶

Stuffed eggplant, stuffed bell pepper and stuffed bean curd.
Traditional Candy and Coconut Wrap

糖蔥餅

 
A traditional Cantonese snack wrap with hard sugar and coconut inside a white wafer slice.
Tofu Pudding 豆腐花
 
The pudding can be served hot or cold with brown sugar. [40]
Maltose Crackers

麥芽糖夾餅

 
This snack is made of two pieces of crackers stuffed with sticky sweet maltose in the middle, rolled up on a thin strip of bamboo.[40]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fellows, P. & Hilmi, M. (2011). Selling street and snack foods, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations: Rome. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  2. ^ MSL Nutritional Diet Centre Website. Retrieved 3 November 2014
  3. ^ Lau & Gwun (2014).The last of the street hawkers. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  4. ^ Boland, R. Mongkok Ladies Market Tour, About Travel. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  5. ^ a b 香港「街頭小食」與香港文化認同, 白頌麒, 《嶺南大學 文化研究》, September 2007.
  6. ^ <自負>, 《唐摭言》卷十二, 王定保.
  7. ^ 柏齊, <尋找地踎飲食> Archived 4 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine, HKEdCity website.
  8. ^ 消失中的小販文化, 梁燕玲,《嶺南大學 文化研究》, July 2011
  9. ^ 香港戰後工業發展, 《香港記憶計劃》, 2012
  10. ^ Hawker, Wikipedia. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  11. ^ Hong Kong Travel Guide: Hong Kong Street Food http://www.hongkongtripguide.com/hong-kong-street-food.html
  12. ^ Popular Hong Kong Street Food by Lionel http://www.weekendnotes.com/popular-hong-kong-street-food/
  13. ^ a b Weekly wrap [videorecording]; A factory hub reborn; An appetite for HK / reporters/producers, Michael Wong, Linda Kennedy; visual director, Ho Keung Kwong; TVB News, Public Affairs production. 2014.
  14. ^ Huayuan Jie pai dang shang fan fan dui "zhao hang wan chai"][videorecording].[花園街排檔商販反對"朝行晚拆"] [videorecording]. Xianggang : Ya Zhou dian shi, 2012. 香港 : 亞洲電視, 2012
  15. ^ Next Media. 旅遊網選出 港街頭小食 全球最惹味. 29 April 2013. http://hk.apple.nextmedia.com/news/art/20130429/18243794. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  16. ^ PARTICIPATING IN THE INFORMAL SECTOR: To be or not to be? Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  17. ^ Hung, W. S. (2001), <大城市小人物──小販>[permanent dead link], Cyber Culture Express
  18. ^ 切勿光顧無牌熟食小販, publicity film (1987), Medical and Health Department
  19. ^ Siu, K. W. M. (2007). Guerrilla wars in everyday public spaces: Reflections and inspirations for designers. International Journal of Design, 1(1), 37-56.
  20. ^ Leung, Y.L.(2011) 消失中的小販文化. Department of Cultural Studies in Lingnan University. Retrieved by https://www.ln.edu.hk/mcsln/25th_issue/pdf/feature_01.pdf
  21. ^ <誰的城市─戰後香港的公民文化與政治論述>, 羅永生, Oxford University Press(Hong Kong). Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  22. ^ a b Public Consultation on the Management of Fixed Pitch Hawker Areas. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  23. ^ 呂國民, <澳門,新加坡,香港小販管理比較研究>,《行政》第二十三卷, 澳門公共行政雜誌, 2012
  24. ^ Control of license and unlicensed hawkers – legislation. Retrieved 29 October 2014
  25. ^ <次文化 食在街邊>,《大學線月刊》, Chinese University of Hong Kong. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  26. ^ 吳昊: 《飲食香江》(香港: SCMP Book Publishing Limited)
  27. ^ 43 fixed-pitch hawker areas.Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  28. ^ The hawkers do not sell their goods in permitted areas, apply for hawker licenses, or fight for legislation that will make unlicensed hawking a kind of legal activity in the 1970s. Siu, K. W. M. (2007). Guerrilla wars in everyday public spaces: Reflections and inspirations for designers. International Journal of Design, 1(1), 37-56
  29. ^ Local Snacks, Hong Kong Tourism Board. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  30. ^ Mok, C. (2010).Gai daan tsai challenge: The quest for Hong Kong's best egg waffle.
  31. ^ Casciato, P. (Ed). (2013).Travel Picks: Top 10 street-food cities. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  32. ^ Christine Ho (2010).Kong Style Egg Waffle (雞蛋仔 Original Flavour)
  33. ^ "【街頭夜市】警察食環夾擊桂林夜市拉人封檔 斥市民煽動包圍". Apple Daily 蘋果日報.
  34. ^ Moss, Stephen (9 February 2016). "Is Hong Kong really rioting over fishball stands?". the Guardian.
  35. ^ Next Stop Hong Kong. http://www.nextstophongkong.com/gourmet/street-food/ .Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  36. ^ Christopher DeWolf, Izzy Ozawa, Tiffany Lam, Virginia Lau, and Zoe Li. Hong Kong Food: 40 dishes we can’t live without. CNN Travel, 13 July 2010. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  37. ^ "Hong Kong 2010 - Street Food". CW's Food & Travel. 30 October 2010. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  38. ^ Farny, Tobias (1997), "Einleitung", Die Rückgabe Hong Kongs an die VR China, Wiesbaden: Deutscher Universitätsverlag, pp. 3–23, ISBN 978-3-8244-4219-5, retrieved 27 February 2023
  39. ^ CNNGo. Better than the real thing: Hong Kong imitation shark’s fin. CNN Travel, 27 May 2010. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  40. ^ a b Farny, Tobias (1997), "Die Entstehung der Kronkolonie Hong Kong", Die Rückgabe Hong Kongs an die VR China, Wiesbaden: Deutscher Universitätsverlag, pp. 25–66, ISBN 978-3-8244-4219-5, retrieved 27 February 2023

External links edit

  •   Media related to Street food in Hong Kong at Wikimedia Commons