This HTML5 document contains 9 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata.

Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
n4http://www.openvoc.eu/poi#
schemahttp://schema.org/
rdfhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
n2http://data.yelp.com/Review/id/
n6http://data.yelp.com/Business/id/
revhttp://purl.org/stuff/rev#
xsdhhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#
n7http://data.yelp.com/User/id/

Statements

Subject Item
n2:Q0mTncb_JN3sBYupZLDDyg
rdf:type
rev:Review
schema:dateCreated
2016-06-14T00:00:00
schema:itemReviewed
n6:9g4jaW7IzcuwXg86eJbynw
n4:funnyReviews
0
rev:rating
4
n4:usefulReviews
1
rev:text
My husband & I decided it would be fun to do a "dumpling hop" in Chinatown, Montréal while here for the F1 Grand Prix. The 3 restaurants we randomly dropped into while walking down Chinatown: Restaurant Noodle Factory, Restaurant Pain Farci, and Qing Hua. We only ordered their juicy pork dumplings at each place. Restaurant Noodle Factory - 4 stars. The 6 dumplings weren't very juicy but they were tasty and I really enjoyed their sweet dipping sauce. Worth the $10 price tag. Restaurant Pain Farci - 4 stars. The dumplings here were super soupy, flavorful, and ginormous, hence the $13/$14 price tag for 10 pieces. Qing Hua = 1 star. The worst dumplings we've ever tasted...unless you like tons of extra hard dough with your dry dumplings. I would caution anyone from going there. Boo! Thumbs down NOTE: We've been to a few Din Tai Fung restaurants in Singapore, Japan and southern California so we have something to compare the dumplings to.
n4:coolReviews
0
rev:reviewer
n7:jC3XHk3oxqayr0Ti5_B29Q