Montreal Chinatown is the first stop I have ever went to Montreal. It takes ten minutes to walk east from the via train station in the city. My first stop is a bun shop. I ate the barbecued buns and wontons that I couldn’t eat in Ottawa for a few months. It’s really cool.
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Montreal Chinatown is the first stop I have ever went to Montreal. It takes ten minutes to walk east from the via train station in the city. My first stop is a bun shop. I ate the barbecued buns and wontons that I couldn’t eat in Ottawa for a few months. It’s really cool.
Children like to come to Chinatown to eat, full of Greater China cuisine, all home-cooked dishes, eat the taste of my home. The price is fair, after all, is it dollars. The children are full of wine, the children are happy to play games, and the children are happy and I am happy.
When I took the bus, I accidentally passed by Chinatown. This bus was passed through Chinatown. Chinatown was about 500 meters away. It was not a long time for the signs of the shops on both sides of the street.
Some people basically have Chinese people everywhere, so China Town came into being all over the world. However, Chinatown in Europe and the United States is dominated by immigrants from the south. Canonese in Hong Kong, Guangdong Province is the majority. So there are not too many feelings, just Chinese restaurants and seafood pharmacies. Ah, this time Montreal saw Wu Chengen's journey to the west! Very cordial, culture borderless national boundaries
Montreal is a tasteful city in North America. Chinatown is also well managed. There is a big door at the entrance, the street inside is cleaned, the place is not big, the whole circle is only an hour, there is a Zhongshan Park, there are many common domestic food and beverage chain stores. I ate a strong memory restaurant and a big drum rice noodles. It tasted very good and recommended.
Great place to get some authentic Asian food. There are many Asian supermarkets and stores.
On the way to the Cathedral of Notre Dame, in order to find a parking lot, I found Chinatown next to it. The Chinese archway with red walls and yellow tiles declares to the world that it is a gathering place for Chinese people. In Toronto, I live in Chinatown, and Toronto has a large number of Chinese, so I feel the Chinatown here is very pocket-sized, but sparrows are small and full of internal organs. All kinds of stores come one after another, such as vegetable and fruit grocery stores, fish and meat stores, restaurants, hotels, travel agencies, insurance companies, Chinese bookstores, small gift shops, jewelry shops, pharmacies, daily necessities stores, tea shops, etc. Chinese crafts are dazzling, and native products are on the shelves. From daily necessities, from the famous Chinese wine Wuliangye, the monkey trump jasmine tea in Hunan, to the soy sauce in Guangzhou, the vinegar in Zhenjiang, and even the Guangdong "Wang Laoji" to basically meet the needs of life. All kinds of restaurants, mostly Cantonese cuisine, other Vietnamese cuisine, Southeast Asia is also mixed in. Seeing the dog ignore, little sheep, the heart silently want to laugh, will not be a Shanzhai bar. Horizontal and vertical plaques, advertisements and shop names written in Chinese, English and French, give people a sense of time and space staggering.