Dairy Farm cafe

Mon, 09/22/2014 - 21:45

Is this the Dairy Farm Martin Booth wrote about in "Gweilo"? I know there was a cafe on the Hong Kong side, too, but this one looks like it could be in the New Territories. It's dated from sometime in the 1950s.

Date picture taken
1950s

Comments

Memory serves that we used to refer to the 100 Peak Road complex as 'The Dairy Farm'. I am unsure as to when it became Wellcome, which is now Market Place, all different names for the same grocery shop owned by the same company. I've always justified calling it the dairy farm as the company's logo still appears on the building.

Submitted by
vanessa (not verified)
on
Tue, 10/05/2010 - 05:46

In reply to by J (not verified)

in the late 60s there were several 'dairy farms' usually along the lines of what the americans call 'ice cream parlours'.  besides repulse bay there was one in shatin (where you could ride donkeys), another on nathan road in lane crawford house and the best was on queen's road central - it served all kinds of other delicious snacks too - malted milkshakes and toasted club sandwiches, mmmm.

dairy lane was the supermarket which morphed into parknshops and wellcomes as the dynasty grew.  my late father called them all dairy lanes anyway, no amount of correction changed that :)

My Dad's office was in the building next door to Dairy Lane in Central.  As a very special treat, the whole family (5 kids) were allowed to go on Saturday and have lunch at Dairy Lane until my Dad could join us after his Saturday half-day of work at noon.  

The restaurant was on the mezzanine floor with a staircase similar to the way the Mandarin lobby is designed (but definitely not flash).  It was at Dairy Lane that I first learned that it was impolite to blow bubbles into your milk with your straw.  Good heavens, then what is a straw for - asked my infant brain ?  I can pick up the glass and drink the milk without it.  In fact, that question has never been properly answered to this day.

And the waffles - just like in America - I was told.  In today's world of "all day breakfast", I still remember feeling decadent eating waffles in a restaurant at noon smothered with butter and syrup.

Hi there,

I guess that concerns local customs and table manners, which differs from country to country or ethnic groups to ethnic groups.  However a piece of straw (pun intended) is basically for sucking........

Anyway, if you are in Japan and if you enjoy noodles, it would be impolite if you do not slurp your noodle through.  In their strange table manners the louder the slurp the merrier.  Oh, BTW, if you like the noodle you should drink up all the soup as well.  However if you are among Chinese, slurping on anything (soup, noodles, drinks to say a few), or using your chopsticks to bang on other utilsils would be treated as very impolite.

My 2 cents,

T

unfortunately i wouldn't be able to pinpoint it on a map but from memory it was off the taipo road - (the only road) as you came down from shatin heights on the right.  it was quite well frequented on weekends - i know someone who has a photo, will see if she will authorise its posting

1953 -  the waffles were my favourite, too !

"And the waffles - just like in America - I was told.  In today's world of "all day breakfast", I still remember feeling decadent eating waffles in a restaurant at noon smothered with butter and syrup."

Afternoon Break at Shatin Roadhouse -  1953

I remember there was one on the Peak (now Welcome) and one on Repulse Bay.  Dairy Lane veloved into Welcome not Park N Shop which is in Li Ka Shing's stables.

The best of them was located in the ground floor of Gloucester Building, it was the cafe in Central to see and been seen.  The smell once one went inside was distinct, a mixture of coffee and smoke.  When Gloucester Building was demolishd, the coffee shop moved to Windsor House on the Mezz floor.  The building was also eventually demolished......