My cousin Sophia picked us up and took us to the hotel. After a short rest, we hopped on the metro and headed to the famous Shanghai Bund.
We walked through
To our disappointment, when we reached the Bund, the area was all blocked off due to World Expo 2010 construction. We couldn't see anything other than the top of the Pearl Tower through the dust. The Bund stretches one mile along the bank of the Huangpu River. Back in the day, this area was an international settlement which explained the various very European or Westernized architectural styles. Across the river is the PuDong Business District which provides the best skylines at night. After a very Shanghai dinner, we checked out the night scene from the PuDong and HuangPu River.
The next day was more shopping and food. We went to where we can do both: ChengHuang or City God Temple.
After a quick drink at XinTianDi, a very trendy bar district, we arrived at the seafood street called TongBei Street (PuDong District). The whole street was nothing but
seafood restaurants. Everything about this place was an instant sensory overload. The smell, sound and bright neon lights was China at its best. Buckets of live seafood are on display outside of the restaurants which you can just point and order your dinner. You can even get snakes! The restaurant we picked was called MangLingGe (满灵阁大宝海鲜排档). But due to overcrowding, we were seated almost ri
ght on the street next to our future dinner. When cars drove by us, couple of us had to get up to let it through. We ordered drunken shrimp (yes, the shrimps were uncooked, but soaked in cooking wine and spice), clams, raw clams, snails, oysters, sea mushrooms, fish and so much more. All of us agreed that was the best meal we had in China. But that wasn't just a meal, it was an experience, the quintessential China experience.Tomorrow we wake up early for our trip to Yellow Mountain!
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