ksun
Senior Member
There are also two cultural generalization to Chinese food culture that bother me, although I appreciate that they might be stronger or less strong regionally. The first is that the Chinese love everything new. New things are invested in, appreciated, well patronized. But beyond the initial investment nothing is maintained. Those shiny new Shanghai restaurants you posted will probably soon be demolished or run into the ground. The second is that price equals quality. Expensive food is good because of the price, not because of the taste or quality.
I think you are overgeneralizing a bit.
That Shanghai restaurant (it originally in Hangzhou and was expanded to Shanghai later) has been extremely popular for several years, and has been expanding, not shrinking. And that happened despite the cutting throat competition in Shanghai's restaurant scene. This is not a "shiny" restaurant in Shanghai by any means. If you visit the city and know the life there, that's pretty much the standard for the middle class. Our Chinatown Lee Garden kind of restaurants won't survive in Shanghai for more than 6 months.
I agree with your comments on health concerns. However, there shouldn't be paranoia around it, and let's not make it sound like food in China in general is dangerous. I went back to Shanghai every year and eat with friends all the time, and never for once had problems. You only need to stay away from restaurants that obviously don't look that sanitary, for example, I never eat street food or the small eateries with dirty plates. I can't say for all Chinese city, but Shanghai is decent and improving every year. As long as you stick with restaurants of apparently good quality (not necessarily expensive), the chance of getting sick due to food in Shanghai is not that different from Toronto.
And yes, SOME people tend to believe price equals quality. I think it is because they want to show their wealth more than anything. However, most people are not stupid and don't really frequent restaurants with poor value. For example, my brother's family makes twice the median income in Toronto, and I never see them going to pricy restaurants, almost always the mid-ranged ones (let's say average spending C$20-40). Those who go to pricy restaurants usually because either it is not out of their own pocket (company/government funded) or to impress someone. However, most of them do tend to tolerate much higher price for non-Chinese restaurants, which I find very bizarre - I don't see any rational reason why that should be the case, and that's where the stupidity and ignorance lies. I am not talking about high end French cuisine or seafood Italian, but just regular food such as a pasta or hamburger with fries.
In general, I also think the Chinese food in GTA is not bad for Chinese standards - but that doesn't include areas south of Sheppard, where it is hard to find many which can be considered decent.