| 
本文通过一路BBS站telnet客户端发布 
 Peter Mandel, Hangzhou, China's tea-shaped capital where Longjing is king.
 Washington Post, June 20, 2010.
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/17/AR2010061705019.html?sub=AR
 
 Note:
 (a) Kevin said, "Each one have a garden for family growing [vegetables]."
 His is pidgin English
 (b) The Beverly Hillbillies
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Beverly_Hillbillies
 (A CBS sitcom from 1962-1971)
 
 * hillbilly (n; hill + Billy, nickname for William): "a person from a
 backwoods area"
 (c) For "floodlit" (past participle of floodlight as the verb), see
 floodlight (n): "artificial illumination in a broad beam"
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floodlights_(sport)
 
 Why called floodlight? I can not find the answer.
 
 (d) Kevin mentions "Pizza Heart." I suspect it is "Pizza Hut," owned by
 Pepsi.
 (e) Lowailou 楼外楼
 http://www.louwailou.com.cn/intro.asp
 (f) The author writes, "No one wants to risk the eel." Apparently Westerners
 do not eat eels. I have not seen eels in American menus or supermarkets.
 (g) shrimp fried with Longjing tea leaves 龙井虾仁
 (h) Beggar's Chicken 叫化童鸡
 (i) Yongfu Temple: No.16, Fayun Alley, Lingyin Road, Hangzhou, 杭州市西湖区
 灵隐路法云弄16号永福寺
 (j) The "chip" in "a thin chip of dawn" is a noun defined as
 "a flaw left after a chip has been broken off."
 (k) The article states, "Cashews are in demand -- everyone's chopsticks
 stretch for them, clashing like brittle swords."
 
 My comment; Chinese still do not divide a meal into individual portions.
 (l) Meijiawu 杭州梅家坞西湖龙井茶叶网
 http://www.meijiawu.com/
 (地址:杭州西湖区梅家坞村168号)
 (m) Hefang Street 浙江省杭州市 河坊街
 Wangxingji Fan 王星记扇子
 Zhang Xiaoquan Scissors 张小泉剪刀
 Wanlong Ham Store 万隆火腿庄
 
 (n) poodle
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poodle
 (o) Longjing tea
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longjing_tea
 ("Longjing, which literally translates as "dragon well", is named after a
 well that contains relatively dense water, and after rain the lighter
 rainwater floating on its surface sometimes exhibits a sinuous and twisting
 boundary with the well water, which is supposed to resemble the movement of
 a traditional Chinese dragon.")
 
 * Longjing, Hangzhou
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longjing,_Hangzhou
 
 My comment: Aghast. Until today, I thought Longjing tea originated from
 Taiwan.
 
 --
 
 |