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Restaurant: MAXIM'S PALACE (Edinburgh Place)
Info:

To encourage eatery outlets to reduce food waste at source together with customers through offering portioned meals and adopting food waste reduction measures, the Environmental Protection Department has launched the “Food Wise Eateries” Scheme. Participants will be awarded with a Food Wise Eateries (FWE) accreditation status if they comply with the assessment criteria and will be granted with the FWE Logo and Stickers for displaying in the premises and their promotion for public identification. Applications are accepted all year round and are FREE of charge.

For details, please click here, https://www.wastereduction.gov.hk/zh-hk/waste-reduction-programme/food-wise-hong-kong-campaign

Restaurant: MAXIM'S PALACE (Edinburgh Place)
Info:

To promote a new salt and sugar reduction (RSS) dietary culture and living style to the people of Hong Kong, the Environment and Ecology Bureau, the Committee on Reduction of Salt and Sugar in Food and the Centre for Food Safety of the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department have launched the "Less-Salt-and-Sugar Restaurants Scheme" ("Scheme"). Restaurants participated in the Scheme will offer less salt or sugar options to the consumer or even tailor-make less salt or sugar dishes in designated restaurants. Participating restaurants will be granted with the Scheme Labels for displaying in the premises for public identification. For details, please click here: https://www.eeb.gov.hk/food/en/committees/crss/restaurants.html

Level2
25
0
2024-06-09 2401 views
Service standards have fallen here. At peak lunch time, there are not enough trolleys so those sitting far from the kitchen will not have any trolley come by or a poor selection by the time it does. As a result, people are getting up to where the trolleys come out of the kitchen to pickup the dim sum items, resulting in a queue and is also dangerous as the guests weave back to their tables carrying the dim sum items. Our meal cost about HK$320 per head for very ordinary dim sum. We'll be lookin
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Service standards have fallen here. At peak lunch time, there are not enough trolleys so those sitting far from the kitchen will not have any trolley come by or a poor selection by the time it does. As a result, people are getting up to where the trolleys come out of the kitchen to pickup the dim sum items, resulting in a queue and is also dangerous as the guests weave back to their tables carrying the dim sum items.
Our meal cost about HK$320 per head for very ordinary dim sum. We'll be looking for alternative places from now on.
(The above review is the personal opinion of a user which does not represent OpenRice's point of view.)
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