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Moving with the times

By Li Yingxue | China Daily | Updated: 2018-07-17 09:05
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According to Tian Haishan, vice-manager of Meiweizhai, the restaurant closed in the 1990s due to city planning measures, but it subsequently reopened in Baiguang Lu in Xicheng district in 2005.

Meiweizhai added a takeout window in 2013, selling snacks such as pan-fried buns, sweet and sour pork ribs, baked bran, meatballs and spring rolls.

"The takeout window was really popular as soon as it was opened. There were long lines along the street then," says Tian, who joined Meiweizhai in 1993 after graduating from culinary school.

In 2017, the restaurant closed again, before reopening in smaller premises in Guang'anmennei Dajie, a couple of kilometers away. While the Shanghai outlet still operates only as a snack bar, the Beijing restaurant has retained its traditional flavors and is trying to keep pace with the times.

"When we reopened in 2017, we decided to make the restaurant more of a fast-food style as people now, especially the younger ones, have less time to eat," says Tian.

The restaurant is decorated in the style of old Shanghai, while the menu has been simplified for convenience. "To ensure that all the dishes can be served within 15 minutes after ordering, we had to pare down the old menu and drop the dishes that took too long to prepare," says Tian.

The new menu includes some of the Shanghai dishes they originally brought to Beijing in 1956, as well as some newer fusion dishes combining the culinary cultures of East and West.

Only around 30 hot dishes remain from the previous version of menu, which originally included more than 400 dishes. "It was a tough decision, as each dish is like a child to me. But due to the size of the new premises, we had to make some important choices," Tian says.

The newly reopened Meiweizhai has proved a success. Always full and popular with families-from infants to grandparents in their 70s and 80s-diners flock there to enjoy the authentic tastes of Shanghai and indulge in their favorite dishes.

Its popularity is such that the Shanghai eatery has become part of the collective memory of the people who grew up in the neighborhood.

A man in his 80s had been a regular customer since he moved to Beijing from Shanghai in 1953 after graduation, and Meiweizhai has been providing him with a taste of home ever since it opened three years later.

Even though dining out in the 1970s and 1980s was not as commonplace as it is now, he always tried to bring his family or friends to eat at Meiweizhai every Sunday-and all his memories and important life experiences seem to blend with the flavors of the restaurant.

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