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".
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