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Level4
2013-06-27 26 views
In Chinese culture, Mee Sua soup was known as ‘’Longevity Noodles’’, thus many Chinese eat Mee Sua soup on their lunar calendar birthday. So far, I know there was two ways to cook Mee Sua, either in soup or fried. I like both versions, and I discovered one more solution for Mee Sua, dry-stirred Mee Sua.I impressed the ideology of Mee Sua in this restaurant, it served Mee Sua just like plain rice and I eat it along with the other dishes we ordered. Maybe somebody will feel that Mee Sua was an ext
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In Chinese culture, Mee Sua soup was known as ‘’Longevity Noodles’’, thus many Chinese eat Mee Sua soup on their lunar calendar birthday. So far, I know there was two ways to cook Mee Sua, either in soup or fried. I like both versions, and I discovered one more solution for Mee Sua, dry-stirred Mee Sua.
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I impressed the ideology of Mee Sua in this restaurant, it served Mee Sua just like plain rice and I eat it along with the other dishes we ordered. Maybe somebody will feel that Mee Sua was an extremely easy dish, it was healthy and refreshing. Yet it was also difficult to achieve ‘’delicious’’ standard because it was too empty to present.
(The above review is the personal opinion of a user which does not represent OpenRice's point of view.)
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DETAILED RATING
Taste
Decor
Service
Hygiene
Value
Date of Visit
2013-06-21
Spending Per Head
$10 (Dinner)
Recommended Dishes
  • Baked rice