Ruby Tuesday Tuen Mun Review

Ruby Tuesday are on a tear with the opening of a third new restaurant in less than a year. The success of the new style restaurant in K11 Art Mall saw the opening of a first Ruby Tuesday in what could be considered a very local market: Po Lam – Tseung Kwan O. The new outlet in Tuen Mun builds on those successes while incorporating new Covid protections and innovations to ensure the safety of customers and staff.

The Tuen Mun branch, located on the ground floor of Trend Plaza, is smaller than the other new outlets but incorporates the outdoor seating which has proven very popular among customers. While it may be a little hot (or wet), there are no fans, to sit outside in summer. The outdoor tables will surely be in high demand as the weather cools.

The feel of the new branch is a little darker than the bright openness of K11, the more notable difference though is Ruby Tuesday’s first open kitchen in Hong Kong. It’s not fully open, but offers diners the chance to see the kitchen crew in action and also a chance to see that Covid protocols are being observed in the kitchen and that the staff member tasked with keeping the broad swathes of stainless steel shining clean is on task.

As for the food, a new Express set lunch (available only at TKO, Po Lam and Tuen Mun) offers meals at prices similar to local chain outlets. And the staff were working hard to ensure that diners could enjoy their meal during a lunch hour.

It was steaming hot the day bc visited Ruby’s in Tuen Mun so we sampled Ruby’s range of (delicious) smoothies and iced drinks – the highlight being Ruby’s Passion a mango smoothie topped with passion fruit puree, the tartness of passion fruit reigning in the sweetness of the mango. The coffee frappuccino with ice cream was basically flavourless liquid and a disappointment compared to the rather nice one we enjoyed previously at K11.

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On a personal note, I don’t really see the point of trying to create ‘fake’ meat and have always found the results disappointing. Discussing this recently, a friend offered a suggestion, don’t think of Impossible as fake meat, think of it as something like tofu which can be prepared and enjoyed in many different ways. Seen and eaten in that way, it’s an enjoyable and textured alternative to meat. Ruby’s Impossible quesadilla was tasty and filling, while the newly added Butcher’s Steak offered a meaty and flavourful reminder that there really is nothing like meat.

bc hadn’t noticed it on the menus in previous visits, so we can’t say if it’s new, but several menu items had a Keto symbol to help those on that food plan.

One of the many small changes in recent years that have re-energised the brand locally and made it an enjoyable place for lunch and dinner where the food tastes as good as it looks.

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Ruby Tuesday Tuen Mun

Location: Shop 39-40, Level 1, North Wing, Trend Plaza, Tuen Mun
Tel: 3598 3098

$5,000 Covid Vouchers – Registration Open

Registration for the first tranche of $5,000 Covid ‘vouchers’ is now open until 17 July. Sign up online or via the government’s iAM Smart app. Paper registration is also available, but you’ll have to wait until 1 September for your first payment.

Only adult permanent SAR residents and ‘new arrivals’ will be eligible and applicants will have to make a declaration that they are currently living in Hong Kong.

Octopus Card users will first receive HK$2,000, another HK$2,000 two months later, and then HK$1,000 several weeks after that. The vouchers can be collected by using Octopus card readers at MTR stations or in shops, or via the card’s app.

People who receive the vouchers via their AlipayHK, Tap & Go or WeChat Pay HK digital wallets will first get HK$2,000 and then HK$3,000 two months later.

www.consumptionvoucher.gov.hk

InTaste a New Food Stand in Tuen Mun

Newly opened in Orchid Court, Tuen Mun is 燃味棧 InTaste a small takeaway food stand serving burritos, hotdogs and other tasty snacks.

This is the third iteration of InTaste for owner Kelvin Chui and features an expanded menu with the addition of hot dogs and assorted snacks to the menu. Portion sizes are good and served in as environmentally friendly packaging as possible.

Delivery is coming soon.

燃味棧 InTaste
Shop 5, Orchid Court, 14 Yan Oi Tong Circuit, Tuen Mun
Tel: 9303 6665
Open: 11:30am – 9:30pm

$5,000 Covid Vouchers

The government has announced that the first tranche of $5,000 Covid vouchers will be distributed from 1 August, 2021.

Registration for the ‘vouchers ‘will open on 4 July with people able to sign up online or via the government’s iAM Smart app. Paper registration is available, but you’ll have to wait until 1 September for your first payment.

Only adult permanent SAR residents and ‘new arrivals’ will be eligible and applicants will have to make a declaration that they are currently living in Hong Kong.

Octopus Card users will first receive HK$2,000, another HK$2,000 two months later, and then HK$1,000 several weeks after that. The vouchers can be collected by using Octopus card readers at MTR stations or in shops, or via the card’s app.

People who receive the vouchers via their AlipayHK, Tap & Go or WeChat Pay HK digital wallets will first get HK$2,000 and then HK$3,000 two months later.

www.consumptionvoucher.gov.hk

Ruby Tuesday Opens in Tuen Mun

Ruby Tuesday have a new outlet in Trend Plaza, Tuen Mun. It’s the chain’s seventh restaurant and the third new location opened in the last year.

Commenting about the new outlet Ruby Tuesday Managing Director Leslie Bailey said “We have taken every lesson that the COVID-19 Pandemic has taught us and incorporated it into our new restaurant design. In addition to the standard water and air-filters, we’ve also taken the extra precaution of adding a state-of-the-art Philips UV Disinfection System to filter and clean the air circulating in the restaurant.”

Ruby Tuesday Tuen Mun

Location: Shop 39-40, Level 1, North Wing, Trend Plaza, Tuen Mun
Tel: 3598 3098

Primo Pizza Grand Opening – 22 May, 2021

A beautiful Sunday afternoon saw Primo Pizza & Bar celebrate its Grand Opening. Located at 169 Gloucester Road family, friends, customers and those lucky enough to be walking past enjoyed a mix of tasty pizzas washed down with cold beer accompanied by some laid-back jazz standards.

Congratulation, see the full gallery of images here

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Primo Pizza and Bar
179 Gloucester Road, Wanchai
Open: 11am-11pm
www.facebook.com/pizzaprimohk

images: primo pizza

“Local Snacks in Hong Kong” Special Stamps

Feeling peckish? There’s always a tasty snack to be found, Hong Kong Post are immortalising Hong Kong’s street food in a new series of stamps released on 22 April 2021.

Originally sold mainly by food hawkers on the streets at “push-cart stalls” this part of Hong Kong’s culture has sadly gradually disappeared under government regulation.

The set of six stamps and a stamp sheetlet under the theme of “Local Snacks in Hong Kong”, features traditional favourites fishballs, candy and coconut wrap, stuffed three treasures, buttered pineapple bun, stewed skewers, peanut candy, steamed rice rolls…

The stamps are produced using an embossing technique creating a three-dimensional effect to, as Hong Kong Post describes it “Putting them close at hand, feasting our eyes on a veritable banquet of local delicacies!”

$2 – Fishballs skewering, deep-fried fishballs are boiled and skewered onto bamboo sticks. Golden in colour and springy in texture, original and curry flavoured fishballs both have their own aficionados. Hawkers often create their own ‘secret recipe’ sauces to stand out from the crowd. Still as tasty from a shop, but not quite the same experience as from a street cart.

$2.60 – Candy and coconut wrap arrived in Hong Kong from the Chiuchow-Shantou region during the 1950s. Traditionally, the hawker would carry the ingredients for the wrap in a tin box for sale on the street. The main ingredient of the wrap is melted sugar made from maltose that is pulled into a white hollow tube. Its Chinese name means “candy scallion” so named because it resembles the white stem of a scallion. The melted sugar is then wrapped in a piece of rolled-out dough and coated with shredded coconut, sesame seeds and crushed peanuts.

$3.40 – Stuffed three treasures is a pan-seared snack stuffed with mud carp paste. Green pepper, red pepper and eggplant are the traditional choices, but any ingredients can be used as it’s the cooking method that defines the snack. Dip your ‘treasure’ in soy sauce for a tasty fish flavoured snack.

$3.70 – The Pineapple Bun is Hong Kong’s signature pastry. Contrary to its name, there is no pineapple inside. Instead, a crumbly crust resembling a pineapple skin covers the bun, hence its name. Add a large piece of butter, cold and fresh from the fridge, sandwiched in the warm bun, for a delicious mix of contrasting tastes that’s best enjoyed with milk tea.

$4.90 – Stewed skewers: there are dozens of meats and cuts to choose from, ranging from cuttlefish and red sausage to chicken kidney and various offal. The Hong Kong style marinade is a pinch less salty than its Chiuchow equivalent, it better complements the original flavours of the ingredients. Top with sweet paste and mustard.

$5 – Peanut candy is another traditional delicacy brought from Chiuchow as people immigrated in the 19th century. The main ingredients are peanuts, maltose and white sugar. The peanuts are first fried and subsequently mixed with a syrup made from melted maltose and white sugar. After cooling it’s cut into small pieces of nutty, treacly and chewy peanut candy.

The $10 stamp sheetlet showcases five delectable local snacks: silky-smooth steamed rice rolls poured over with soy sauce, sweet paste, sesame sauce and chilli sauce, and sprinkled with sesame seeds; velvety tofu pudding with a strong soy aroma; maltose crackers with gummy maltose and crunchy crackers; soft and mushy steamed rice pudding with boiled red beans; and egg waffle crispy on the outside and fluffy on the inside that leaves a strong aftertaste.

Philatelic products include mint stamps, stamp sheets, stamp sheetlet, mini-pane, presentation pack, collector card, serviced first-day covers are available to order now and collect from Post Offices after 22 April.

11 Hong Kong Restaurants in Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants 2021

Hong Kong has 11 entries in ‘Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants 2021‘ with local Cantonese restaurant The Chairman replacing last year’s numero uno Singapore’s Odette in top spot.

The very subjective list is compiled and voted on by over 300 ‘leaders’ in Asia’s culinary field including journalists, food critics, chefs, restaurateurs and culinary experts.

Quite how it can pretend to be remotely objective this year when travel and dining out have been extensively curtailed… But congratulations to the local restaurants listed.

The local restaurants in this year’s ‘Top 50’ are Vea (16),  Neighbourhood (17), Belon (25), Caprice (28), Otto e Mezzo Bombana (33), Amber (37), Ta Vie (38), Mono (44), Lung King Heen (47) and Seventh Son (48).

The only Macau entry is Wing Lei Palace in 50th spot.