Lady serving the noodles behind the counter
Thin rice noodles soup with beef brisket, radish, fried tofu and greens
Chung Kee Noodles on Sai Kung secret food alleyI live in this green part of Hong Kong where people call the "Backyard of HK" with my fiance- Russell, and two cats-Roxy and Zoe. You can hear the birds and see people paragliding from the mountains of Sai Kung on a nice day. It's a totally different story from the cosmopolitan concrete jungle.
Sai Kung is famous for its seafood restaurants by the pier with big fish tanks (with all kinds of seafood and should I say SEA CREATURES) in which you can pick your dish if you order al la carte. They are extremely popular and always packed with locals and tourists during the weekends, especially during summer when people get off their rented junks and feast.
Anyway, these restaurants aren't what I'm excited about. Instead, there's an awesome food street only the locals know about. I only found this out after living here for almost 2 years. What a shame! Anyway, this secret little place is called the "Saikung Alley" ('Sai Kung Hong Chai' in Cantonese). This alley is located between two blocks of residential buildings near the mini-bus terminal by ferry pier- it has a funny name- Fuk Man Road. Just name whatever cuisine you'd like and they have it. All these stores offer both 'indoor' and 'outdoor' sitting, where you get to eat outside the shop along the alley for a more 'local flavour'.
Anyway, sometime last week, we went to this Chinese noodles stall called "Chung Kee Noodles". It is almost impossible to get in there on the weekends because there's always a queue that stretches to the length of the alley. At the entrance of the stall, there's a huge food warmer where different sidedishes are cooked. It looks like a huge icemaker- but containing warm food. So you get to choose what type of noodles you want, like the thin or thick or round egg noodles or rice noodles and the various sidedishes you want to go with it.
The sidedishes-There are "normal" ingredients like vegetables, beef brisket, radish, soy chicken wings, fried tofu, eggplants, chilli etc, and if you are the "adventurous" type, you can pick dishes like pig's blood, cow's stomach, tip of chicken wings, fishballs, beef balls etc. You can pick as many sidedishes you want cos they bill you by the number of sidedishes you ordered. For HKD$30, you get noodles with three-sidedishes and a drink. I had thin rice noodles with beef brisket, radish and fried tofu. It's really tasty and most of all- cheap and good. This is a must-try cos there's nothing else like this in other parts of the world.
The locals calls this "Cheh Chai Meen" which translates to Little Cart Noodles. The name originates from the way this kind of noodles is sold- obviously in a cart. In the early days, actually up to the 80s, street side hawkers used to sell cooked food in little mobile carts on the streets until the government put a ban on it in the late 80s.
Chung Kee Noodles has been around for 31 years and they started as roadside hawkers by the Sai Kung ferry pier, where people would come for junk trips and fishing trips. After 7 years, they had a stall nearby and they moved to the present site 11 years ago and they never fail to have a line outside the stall. The staff are very friendly and helpful- stall is very clean. In fact, they are awarded the Cleanliness Award for 5 consecutive years.