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{{Unreferenced|date=May 2008}}'''One bowl with two pieces''' (] 一盅兩件), is a ] term that has long been in the vernacular of ]. In the past, ] was not offered in a present-day teapot but a bowl in ]s. ] were not bite-sized. Instead, quite a number of them were simply big buns such that two of them easily filled up one's stomach. The legendary "雞球大包" (Lit. ''Chicken Ball Big Bun'', meaning a bun with chicken filling) serves as an excellent example. This saying, however, is now rendered anachronistic under the heavy influence of the "bite-sized trend".{{Fact|date=August 2007}} {{Unreferenced|date=May 2008}}'''One bowl with two pieces''' (] 一盅兩件), is a ] term that has long been in the vernacular of ], meaning "a bowl of tea with two ]". In the past, ] was not offered in a present-day teapot but a bowl in ]s. ] was not bite-sized. Instead, quite a number of them were simply big buns such that two of them easily filled up one's stomach. The legendary "雞球大包" (Lit. ''Chicken Ball Big Bun'', meaning a bun with chicken filling) serves as an excellent example. This saying, however, is now rendered anachronistic under the heavy influence of the "bite-sized trend".{{Fact|date=August 2007}}


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One bowl with two pieces (Chinese: 一盅兩件), is a slang term that has long been in the vernacular of Hong Kong tea culture, meaning "a bowl of tea with two dim sum". In the past, tea was not offered in a present-day teapot but a bowl in Cantonese restaurants. Dim Sum was not bite-sized. Instead, quite a number of them were simply big buns such that two of them easily filled up one's stomach. The legendary "雞球大包" (Lit. Chicken Ball Big Bun, meaning a bun with chicken filling) serves as an excellent example. This saying, however, is now rendered anachronistic under the heavy influence of the "bite-sized trend".

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