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  4. Forbidden City 'Bargain' Tours? More Like Scam City! You've Been Warned.

Forbidden City 'Bargain' Tours? More Like Scam City! You've Been Warned.

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    Mr. Philip Hudson
    wrote last edited by
    #11

    I was frowning as I read through the comments above, but yours made me burst out laughing. Totally!!!

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      Barry Kuphal
      wrote last edited by
      #12

      Beijing, huh? It really depends on whether you like local cuisine. For Luzhu (pork offal stew), Bao Du (quick-fried tripe), and Chao Gan (fried liver stew), go to Qianmen. For Yang Xiezi (lamb spine hot pot), hot pot, and Halal sweets, head to Niujie. For Peking Duck, try Siji Minfu, 1949, or Shengyongxing... For old Beijing Zha Jiang Mian (noodles with soybean paste) and Wandouhuang (pea flour cake), go to Dawanjia... You can also find a spot in the Second Ring Road area to try Beijing Zhizi Kaorou (grill-plate barbecue). Sanlitun has international cuisine: Italian, Thai, Middle Eastern... You can also eat authentic regional dishes at the various provincial government liaison offices (Zhu Jing Ban). And then there's the Wenzhou cuisine recently featured in Xu Zhiyuan's interview with Chen Xiaoqing. I never thought Beijing was a food desert; it's just that people haven't found the right places or a taste that suits them. If it's your first time, you have to accept being a tourist – it's like that everywhere.

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        Susie Kutch-Green
        wrote last edited by
        #13

        Which Peking Duck restaurant is good in Beijing? Please don't say Quanjude.

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          Lorraine Rau
          wrote last edited by
          #14

          As a local, I also don't know many great Beijing-style spots. I scrolled through my own social media feed to give some tentative recommendations: 1. Peking Duck: Quanjude (specifically, search for the main branch – emphasis on this!). 2. Copper Pot Hot Pot: Man Heng Ji (on Zhaodengyu Road) or Le You Yuan (near Xizhimen). 3. Beijing Cuisine: Xingyuan Restaurant (Fuchengmen branch); Juqi (near the Deyun She crosstalk theater) and Xiao Diao Li Tang are also decent. Others: If you're near Xidan, besides the major chain restaurants, there's a place called Xidan Xiaoyuan that tastes pretty good. Feel free to add more, everyone! (Most small Beijing-style restaurants near tourist attractions or on the roadside are likely to be bad. You can check Xiaohongshu or Dianping beforehand, but they'll probably just be enough to fill your stomach, so don't expect amazing flavor.) Also, many of the truly old, time-honored Beijing shops are also letdowns now. The taste has changed, and so have the people.

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            Orlando Ryan
            wrote last edited by
            #15

            Excuse me, besides Quanjude, are there any other recommended Peking Duck places?

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              Jose Beahan
              wrote last edited by
              #16

              Me too, I had a really bad experience.

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                Mr. Nathan Waelchi
                wrote last edited by
                #17

                I had a terrible experience after coming here, so I just wrote about my honest feelings. Then people in the comments started flaming me, saying things like 'if you don't like it, don't come,' and even called me 'a princess with a maid's destiny' [implying I'm overly sensitive for my station], suggesting my bad experience was just because I'm poor. It's so infuriating!

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                  Lula Turner
                  wrote last edited by
                  #18

                  I feel that the young people in Beijing are generally okay; many are 'Beijing drifters' (people who've moved here for work or other reasons) or just here on business, and they're usually considerate to each other on subways and buses. The most annoying ones are the so-called 'Old Beijingers,' around sixty years old, with an overwhelming superiority complex. It's like the very air above their heads is sacred and inviolable. Even if you quickly apologize for accidentally bumping into them, they'll just keep nagging and nagging, very aggressively and self-righteously, saying things like: 'Do you have any manners? How were you raised?' I was stunned. A little bump on a swaying bus and suddenly I'm ill-mannered? I don't know common courtesy? I have no upbringing? In short, Beijingers left a very bad impression on me – so much fake politeness!

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                    Sammy Schiller
                    wrote last edited by
                    #19

                    After visiting, I finally get it. Especially the older folks, they have this deep-seated superiority complex, like they're looking down their noses at everyone. I was queuing for breakfast, not blocking anyone's way, and an old man just shoved me aside. I was speechless.

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                      Israel Koss
                      wrote last edited by
                      #20

                      Damn it, with short video apps being so popular these days, you're still asking taxi drivers for recommendations? The taxis you hail at tourist spots, often driven by non-locals, are the ones that will rip you off. They're not even from Beijing, so what does their behavior have to do with Beijing itself?

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