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Veteran coffee clubbers turn their noses up at Starbucks

By Xu Junqian in Shanghai | China Daily | Updated: 2015-06-22 08:44

Deda cafe has survived the onslaught of foreign chains and now serves as a de facto Old Boys' club for the city's seniors

It is 7:15 on Monday morning. The flood of white collars has yet to descend on the metro station at People's Square, where the popular Chinese phrase renshan-renhai (a mountain and sea of people) really comes into its own. The Starbucks outlet above the station has just unlocked its well-polished glass doors, waiting for the first order.

Less than 1 kilometer away, a zigzagging line has been waiting outside Deda, an unpretentious cafe and restaurant, for the first sip of what many patrons describe as "the cheapest and most fragrant coffee in town".

Veteran coffee clubbers turn their noses up at Starbucks

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