Category: Openings

Greenstyle offers chemical-free and certified organic

The latest on Mui Wo’s increasingly diverse retail scene is Greenstyle, an organic store selling green foods and products.

Opened two weeks ago, the store is run by local couple Gary Tsang and Edith Ng. Gary previously used to sell solar and wind power equipment, while Edith worked in cosmetics.

“We use natural rather than chemical ingredients,” Gary said. As well as selling the products, “we want make more people understand more about the environment.”

Since last week Greenstyle has been selling fresh vegetables, including kale, tomato, carrots, red beetroot and sweet potato.

The vegetables are sourced from Ecofarm, an FDA-certified farm in Jiangxi, China, run by two former Hong Kong University professors.

Gary, whose grandfather has a farm in Cheung Sha, says he’s next planning to buy from local Lantau organic farms. An online store for the website is also on the way.

As well as food and snacks, Greenstyle stocks skincare, healthcare, natural household and baby food products. Most are imported through a local agent.

 

What: Greenstyle

Where: Shop J, Sea View Building, Mui Wo (opposite Park’n’Shop)

Web: www.hkgreenstyle.com

Contact: Email garytsang@hkgreenstyle.com Phone 2981 8860

Bringing the Chile vibe to Mui Wo

South Lantau has its first taste of Chile. Mapuche, which sells Chilean meats, cheeses and wines, opened in Mui Wo a month ago. Lantau News spoke to owners James and Paola.

 How did you come to be on Lantau?

James: I came back to Hong Kong nearly four years ago. We had been running big Spanish restaurants in Central London. That’s how we met. I’m a restaurateur. I was running three to four restaurants, but it became a bit much after our twins were born.

I had money saved up, so we went first to Chile, where Paola is from. I got involved in a restaurant tech but Chile wasn’t quite ready for it. And my Spanish was pocito.

I grew up in Hong Kong, and my dad who lives in Tung Chung suggested we come back.

What gave you the idea for Mapuche?

James: Our idea was to do tapas tasting covering the 14 viticultures of Chile. The wines and the food that go together.

Myself, I’ve opened lots of big restaurants and closed lots of big restaurants. We’re not trying to be too ambitious. This is a project of love for me and my wife.

This is a project with my wife and hopefully it will take me away from town and we can become full islanders one day. My wife is the hero here – she is the person that is working every day and making it happen.

What does ‘mapuche’ mean?

Paola: The Mapuche are the indigenous inhabitants of Chile.

Why did you choose Mui Wo?

James: We started coming down here and we loved it. More recently we have engaged with the shopkeepers and the bar people here. Everyone has been so nice.

Paola: Because it’s a community. It’s nice to go around and everyone says ‘good morning’, ‘good afternoon.’ Lantau is very nice – it reminds me of Chile, especially South Lantau. Hong Kong is too big for me, especially with the twins.

What are you selling in Mapuche?

James: We started off with mainly Spanish products, the cheeses and the hams. The idea was stuff you could take to the beach that was not available in the supermarket, artisanal stuff – premium light chorizos, hams, stuff you can grab and chuck in your picnic basket.

We buy what we like to eat. Nothing here is available in the supermarket – the wines are all unique Hispanic varieties.


The idea was to call it ‘box my picnic’ – it was supposed to be a popup. But we realised people want the choice and the service. They want someone who knows about the wine.

Apart from the store, what else?

We’re doing these events called Pimp My Chef, where we bring a Chilean chef around to your house. These are the kind of events we hope to start doing just to get the idea of our food out there. We are tasting three different wine flights, with three different ceviches, with three different cuts of meat and three different reds from Chile.

We would like to turn this into a more café style shop experience, where you could come for coffee, light tapas, glass of wine. Very family-oriented and informal – you can bring your kids.

We have another floor upstairs we would like to use as a supper club. We would like to make it a tourist destination, pick people up by junk from Pier 9, bring them here for a dining experience for a few hours. That’s where we see some massive potential.

What: Mapuche

Where: Shop B, 10 Ferry Pier Road 10, Silver Centre, Mui Wo

When: Monday-Sunday 11am-9pm

Web: http://www.mapuchehongkong.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mapuchehk/

After 18 years on the beach, the Stoep gets new lease of life

It’s the end of an era. The Stoep, a landmark at Cheung Sha beach, has closed its doors.

It will live on in another guise, but the old Stoep was a much-loved restaurant that became a destination.

In its golden years people from all over Hong Kong flocked to the beachside eatery, savouring its sandy floor and laidback vibe as much its breads and boerewors. You could count the yachts moored offshore.

Dolla and team at the Gallery, late 1990s

Founder and co-owner Dolla Bruce, now preparing the new Stoep in Mui Wo, recalls that she fell into the restaurant trade by accident. She’d been a specialist in organisational development in South Africa, arriving here in 1994 with “a husband, a cat and three dogs.”

She quickly tired of being idle and found an outlet for her energies at the Gallery in Tong Fuk, in those days a weekend bar run by a Kiwi who was looking to retire. In those days there was no Lantau expressway or MTR. Just the slow ferry.

“Within three months, it was packed,” she says. “I brought my multibraai [barbecue] from South Africa and on the weekend I closed the kitchen and just cooked with the grill. You could smell the braai all across the village.”

It wasn’t just the villagers whose attention she caught. Governor Chris Patten so enjoyed his trek out to Tong Fuk that his chef called to ask for the seedloaf recipe.

Dolla said she didn’t have a recipe – it was all in her head. So she was invited to demonstrate how in the governor’s kitchen. She made her own trek, laden with ingredients, to Central. The governor’s bodyguard met her at the pier and whisked her to Government House, where she spent the afternoon baking in front of 11 chefs.

Dolla and Renee Mandela, daughter-in-law of the late President Mandela

The Gallery days ended when out of the blue she received another phone call – did she want to take over a vacant space at Lower Cheung Sha?

So Dolla started up the Stoep – Afrikaans for verandah – and the legend began.

It was 1999. The owner had spied an opportunity and was buying up properties on the beach.

“There was nothing on the beach at the time – just one Chinese restaurant next door,” she said.

A slew of other restaurants and beachside businesses sprung up in the Stoep’s wake. On summer weekends the small space is clogged with cars and visitors.

Dolla (front, second from right) in the thick of dance action at the Stoep

“Because of Stoep, Cheung Sha became very, very popular,” Dolla says.

Perhaps too popular. In 2014, her landlord decided not to renew the Stoep’s lease. A new tenant moved in. The Stoep moved around the corner to another site near the beach.

But then the lease ran out for High Tide, the Thai restaurant run by business partner Mei Tai, and she had to exit Cheung Sha after more than a decade.

Mei and Dolla are friends – they met the day Dolla arrived in Hong Kong – and shared the workload across their businesses. That means anything from shopping to keeping an eye on the other restaurant. When Dolla took an eight-year sabbatical from Hong Kong, Mei managed both.

She reopened High Tide at the new Riverwalk building in Mui Wo, but at that distance it was difficult to work together.  They discussed it earlier this year and agreed – one restaurant had to go.

“Yes, it was heartbreaking,” Dolla admits. But she also thinks business was getting harder at Cheung Sha.

“The transport situation is becoming very diabolical. Weekend after weekend, people were calling to cancel after waiting two hours for a ride.”

The new Stoep

Now she has rejoined Mei at Riverwalk in a new venture called Stoep at High Tide.

The place is currently closed as they renovate and revamp the kitchen. It doesn’t have an opening date – “some time in July,” Dolla says.

She will still bake bread and “keep the things that worked at the Stoep.” It will have an Asian section and a  bar at the front of the house.

Dolla is relishing some of the advantages of her new location. The landlord is a professional management team, so she’s not wrestling with maintenance tasks.

Plus the new site means a different flow of customers.

“We are expecting a more even trade. On the beach it’s feast and famine. When the sun comes out, everybody comes Here, if it’s cold they come in, if it’s hot they come in.”

A taste of the Caribbean at Cheung Sha

We’re going to be liming at Cheung Sha this summer.

Di Jerk Shed, Lantau’s first Caribbean restaurant opens today at the site vacated by the Stoep, just a few steps from the Cheung Sha sands.

Lantau News spoke to Larry la Guerre, a Hong Kong Airlines captain and Tung Chung resident, and co-founder Phil St Hill, a fellow pilot who hails from St Vincent.

Larry (left) and Phil: Bringing the Caribbean experience

Q: What makes a successful airlines captain jump into the Hong Kong restaurant scene?

You can find Caribbean food in places like New York, London and Toronto but there’s nothing in Hong Kong. We have so many expats here and the Caribbean is a long way away. We want to bring the Caribbean experience here.

Q: What is Di Jerk Shed going to offer?

There will be Caribbean food, like Jamaican jerk – chicken, pork, wings. Plus doubles from Trinidad, which is like pita, with split peas in the middle, and roti.

You can’t get alot of the ingredients here. There’s nothing remotely like pimento in Hong Kong, so we’re bringing them from North America.

For drinks there is rum Julep punch, and we’re trying to order in Red Stripe lager from Jamaica.

And there’s music. Reggae and calypso – Bob Marley, Might Sparrow, Peter Tosh – classic reggae from the 70s to the 90s.

Q: What kind of vibe are you aiming for?

You go to a restaurant in the Caribbean and you don’t see just one colour or culture. There’s a huge diversity and that is reflected in our food.

We also have a word ‘lime’, which means to hang out. We want people to lime – relax, kick back, enjoy the music, the beach, the food.

Q: This is a very seasonal location – most of the business takes place in the space of four months. What will you do for the rest of the year?

Getting here is the biggest challenge people face. We will offer free transportation to Cheung Sha with our van – that will be a scheduled service to North Lantau.

We’re going to get local residents involved. We’ll hold events like Latin dance night, we’ll have a residents’ VIP card with special offers, and we’re also marketing to airline crews. We will have crew nights, with 30% discount.

Q: How did the two of you get together?

[Larry] I worked here from 2002 to 2007 and then came back to work for Hong Kong Airlines in 2012. My wife loves it here.

We bumped into each other last year. Phil used to run a chain of successful bars on Phuket, and we both had exactly the same idea of bringing the Caribbean experience to Hong Kong.

We were looking for a location and when this spot became vacant we both thought this had it all – beach, sun, sand. Perfect for liming.

What: Di Jerk Shed

Where: G/F, 50 Lower Cheung Sha Beach, South Lantau

When: Daily

Phone: 2234-JERK

Website: www.dijerkshed.com

Roast chicken finds roost in Mui Wo