The largest city in China is also its most cosmopolitan, offering visitors a chance to experience the past, present, and future all at once. The Huangpu River splits Shanghai into two districts: Pudong and Puxi. The Pudong skyline looks like it was ripped from the Jetsons, with the bulbous Oriental Pearl TV and Radio Tower looking a bit like a two headed lollipop. On the Puxi side, you can walk the Bund riverside district to get a taste of old Shanghai.
Restaurants in Shanghai
4.5 based on 170 reviews
What a pleasant find in Shanghai for quality tea with thousands of years of history. I've read many reviews before I came here, nice tea smell once stepped in the tea town, walked around happy no crowded tourists like Shanghai other sites :):), some shops sellers are very passionate to invite you try different teas, take your time and no pressure haha. We finally went in Jane’s shop (first floor Room1068) in the center with an old Shanghai bicycle outside, turned to be a really smart choice, it’s a tea shop not specially for tourist. Jane runs family business, she is 50th generation, and their family have more than 1400 yrs history for planting tea, they have a tea farm and even their own tea museum in yellow mountain---the most beautiful mountain in China. We are planning to go there next spring. Moreover here all products price are transparent, no worry pay more might get low quality thou. it’s a China top brand tea, have online like Taobao shops and many offline shops, all prices are the same in whole China, of course offline is better for us because we can taste, haha choose the proper ones...love their green tea, black tea and jasmine tea!
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