Lunch in Jollibee
I had lunch alone yesterday, so I walked to Central to explore any special restaurant. In the lane beside World Wide House, there were some Filipino restaurants. One was a McDonald's-like fast-food shop called Jollibee.
The appearance looked a rough clone of McDonald's, the menu of foods was similar too. They were still different yet. Jollibee was better, I mean.
Most of cashiers were Filipino, who could speak in English and Cantonese. Similar to staff of McDonald's, they did upselling too. However, they were more friendly and polite. The pace was not slow but I did not feel pushed at the counter. I felt comfortable to buy foods there.
I ordered a lunch set with ALOHA, which was a Hawaii-style hamburger. As well as burger meat and some vegetables, it consisted of bacon and pineapple piece, which are my favorite. The fried potato sticks were hot and crisp, not too heavy in taste. Plus HK$2.5, Mr. Juice accompanied me.
Although Centralmen may not appreciate such raw place, the Filipino restaurant has built an oasis which balances the speed and the stress of lunch hours.
The appearance looked a rough clone of McDonald's, the menu of foods was similar too. They were still different yet. Jollibee was better, I mean.
Most of cashiers were Filipino, who could speak in English and Cantonese. Similar to staff of McDonald's, they did upselling too. However, they were more friendly and polite. The pace was not slow but I did not feel pushed at the counter. I felt comfortable to buy foods there.
I ordered a lunch set with ALOHA, which was a Hawaii-style hamburger. As well as burger meat and some vegetables, it consisted of bacon and pineapple piece, which are my favorite. The fried potato sticks were hot and crisp, not too heavy in taste. Plus HK$2.5, Mr. Juice accompanied me.
Although Centralmen may not appreciate such raw place, the Filipino restaurant has built an oasis which balances the speed and the stress of lunch hours.
Comments