Bing sutt
Bing sutt (Chinese: 冰室; Jyutping: bing1 sat1; lit. 'ice room') is a type of traditional cold drinking house started in Guangzhou (Canton) and refreshed in Hong Kong. These bing sutts are commonly founded between 1950s and 1960s. They are characterized by old furniture and settings such as the small tiled floors, hanging fans, folding chairs and so on. A bing sutt provides light meals and drinks and is neighbourhood-oriented.[1] It is believed to be the predecessor of the cha chaan teng.
Change
There were several bing sutts in Canton from 1970 to 1990s. However, most of them has closed now.
Since World War II, the dietetic culture of Hong Kong became westernized. That was also the time when bing sutts started to become popular and created localized western menus to keep Hong Kong-style restaurants alive.[2] Bing sutts hit the height of their popularity in the 1950s to 1960s.[3]
Traditional bing sutts only provide drinks and localized western snacks. Although serving western menus, they keep the price low and thus become popular among people from various social status. Yet along with the development of cha chaan tengs, chained fast food shops and coffee shops, which sell a larger variety of food, bing sutts became less competitive. In the 1980s, many had no choice but to refine the traditional menus by adding rice and noodles so as to increase their competitiveness.
In 1980s, the cold drink market in Guangzhou ushered in a large number of new frozen foods. These new inventions helped bing sutt regain its popularity. In 1990s, most bing sutt mainly served to tong sui, milk, coconut milk, tortoise jelly, and other sorts of desserts. Others served dishes such as cake, fried dumplings, soup, glutinous rice, fast food lunch boxes, snacks, bread, congee, etc. In the summer, a small number of bing sutt would also serve ice cream, and cold drinks. In Guangzhou, bing sutt became a large of people’s lives. Gradually there emerged the “Four Great Bing Sutt”; it included the Shun Kee Bing, Mei Lei Kyun Bing Sutt, Sunshine Bing Sutt, and Emperor Bing Sutt (there also the Rainbow Bing Sutt and the Heung Kwan Bing Sutt).[4] As of today only the Shun Kee Bing Sutt still exists. The Mei Lei Kyun Bing Sutt has been brought under the Tai Ping Koon Restaurant.[5]
With only a few dozen traditional bing sutts are still operating, with some others opened by the younger generation fascinated by the nostalgic atmosphere of the Hong Kong style restaurant. Realizing consumers’ desire to take a glimpse of past memories, quite a number of fast food chains set up and adorn their unique experimental concept stores like bing sutts to attract customers.[6] These newly established bing sutts are usually decorated with characterized furniture and settings such as the small tile floors, hanging fans, folding chairs and so on, all that remind people of the old days.[7] Some of them have become iconic tourist attractions as well.
Hong Kong's Bing sutt appeared in the 1960s by imitating a high-end western restaurant offering cheap Western-style light meals to cater to the needs of the working class. There are called coffee shops, tea ice rooms, ice halls, cafes, ice shop cake shops, tea ice halls. . After the 1960s, the civilian population began to be sold.[8] The Hong Kong Ice Room was originally a snack and was not a staple food. The Hong Kong restaurant licenses were divided into two types: "Ordinary Restaurant" and "Small Food Restaurant": "Ordinary Restaurant" can sell any food. "Small food restaurants" can only sell foods of the specified combination [8] Most of the ice rooms that do not sell staple foods have been degraded from the 1980s to the 1990s. The remaining ice rooms refer to the operation of tea restaurants and sell more types. Food. As of 2007, there were only about 100 operations in the name of the ice room, most of which opened in the 1960s to the early 1970s.
Foods and drinks
Drinks
- Red bean ice (a drink mixed with red beans, light rock sugar syrup and evaporated milk)
- Yuanyang (a mixture of coffee and tea)
- Coffee (either instant or powder form)
- Fruit punch
- Hong Kong-style milk tea (black tea mixed with evaporated milk or condensed milk)
Pastry
- Hong Kong style swiss roll (standard cake layer with whipped cream)
- Paper wrapped cake (chiffon cake baked in a paper cup)
- Fruit tart
- Croissant
- Pineapple bun with butter
- Egg tart
Toast and sandwiches
- Toast with butter
- Sandwiches
- French toast (called “Western Toast” in Chinese, transliteration of French toast)
- Shrimp French toast
Other dishes
- Macaroni in broth with fried egg and sausage
- Swiss sauce chicken wings
- Instant noodles
- Rice served in dishes (served with sauce)
Difficulties
Bing sutts have been facing difficulties in remaining in this modern city. The reason why the bing sutt is diminishing is changes in society, be it the change in tastes of consumers or the rise of the cha chaan teng. Most of the bing sutts encounter keen competition among cha chaan tengs with heavy rent. The popularity of cha chaan tengs has taken many customers away from bing sutts, leading to many traditional ones being eliminated from the market and leaving behind no more than twenty bing sutts in Hong Kong.[9]
See also
- Cantonese restaurant
- Dai pai dong
- Cha chaan teng buffet
- Hong Kong cuisine
- China Cafe, a former bing sutt in Mong Kok
References
- Hong kong-style cafés revived. (2010, 8 9). China Daily. Retrieved from http://www.urbanphoto.net/blog/2010/08/09/hong-kong-style-cafes-revived/
- Christopher, D. (2010). Hong kong's best bing sutt: Guide to old-school diners. Retrieved from http://travel.cnn.com/hong-kong/none/bing-sutt-588428
- Hutton, Mercedes (2020-01-23). "The icy side to Hong Kong history". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
- "特别策划|再说吃冰:广州四大冰室的传奇". www.sohu.com. Retrieved 2019-02-20.
- "冰室,老广的夏日印记-广州青年报". www.gzyouthnews.org.cn. Retrieved 2019-02-20.
- Julie, M. (2009, 8 14). A Hong Kong Starbucks goes time-traveling. The New York Times. Retrieved from http://intransit.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/14/a-hong-kong-starbucks-goes-time-traveling/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=1
- Wing Hang, P. (2007, 5 9). [Web log message]. Retrieved from Archived 2011-09-17 at the Wayback Machine http://moliuology.mysinablog.com/index.php?op=ViewArticle&articleId=571660
- Guangfu, Liang; 梁广福 (2016-07-11). Zai hui jiu bing shi (Chu ban ed.). Xianggang. ISBN 9789888394777. OCLC 954194399.
- Tai, S. K. (n.d.). Combination of modern and traditions bing sutts in hong kong are never dying. Retrieved from http://sanpoyan.journalism.hkbu.edu.hk/?p=857