New Silk Mandarin's 2026 Cultural Events : Live & Learn Chinese Culture

New Summary: Experience 5 authentic cultural events in 2026. Activities include Longjing tea picking in April, a Dragon Boat Festival in June, an imperial banquet, a dumpling workshop, and a traditional drinks tasting. Limited spots available.

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✨ Ready to experience Chinese culture beyond the classroom?


In 2026, Silk Mandarin invites you to step into real, living Chinese culture through 5 carefully curated Cultural Events—from tea fields and festival traditions to imperial banquets and hands-on food experiences. Learn by doing, tasting, celebrating, and connecting.


01

🌿 April 11 Hangzhou Longjing Tea Picking Experience


Pick, roast, and taste authentic Longjing tea at its origin, and discover the art and philosophy behind Chinese tea culture.


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02

🐉 June 21 | Suzhou Dragon Boat Festival Event


Celebrate one of China's most iconic festivals with zongzi-making, cultural workshops, and live dragon boat racing.


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03

👑 July 10 | Imperial Banquet Experience


Dress in Hanfu, enjoy a palace-style feast, and immerse yourself in music, dance, and cuisine inspired by imperial China.


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04

🥟 September 12 | Dumpling Delight Workshop


From dough to dining—learn the cultural meaning behind dumplings and enjoy a warm meal you make yourself.


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05

🍶 October 24 | Spirits & Traditional Drinks Tasting


Explore Chinese traditional drinks through guided tasting, stories, and interactive activities—far beyond baijiu.


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💫

Limited spots available for each event.


Join us to learn Chinese by truly living it—through vibrant culture, amazing food, and unforgettable shared experiences.


We can't wait to welcome you to China and create incredible memories together in 2026. Let's make it a year to remember! 🌏✨


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Email | [email protected]

Website | www.silkmandarin.cn

Shanghai

SOHO Donghai Plaza, 299 Tongren Road, Room 1604-1605

Suzhou

DoBe · Yulangqiao Bang, Building 3, Room 201

Foreigner Caught with Marijuana Hidden on Feet at Shenzhen Customs

Summary: Customs officers at West Kowloon Station intercepted a traveler due to a strong odor. Inspection revealed 17.6g of marijuana attached to his feet, confirmed to contain THC. The case is under investigation.

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Source: OT-Team(G), 海关发布, 深圳海关

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Customs officers at Shenzhen's West Kowloon Station recently intercepted an inbound traveler who was found concealing marijuana on the soles of his feet, authorities said.

The incident occurred during routine inspection of arriving passengers. An adult male traveler passed through the customs supervision area without making any declaration and crossed paths with an officer on duty. The officer noticed a strong, unusual odor and stopped the individual for further examination.

Upon inspection, customs officers discovered one packet of suspected marijuana plant material attached to the bottom of each of the traveler's feet. The two packets had a combined gross weight of 17.6 grams. Laboratory testing by a qualified institution later confirmed the presence of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the principal psychoactive component of cannabis, in the seized material.

The case has been transferred to the customs anti-smuggling department for further investigation and handling.

Customs authorities reminded the public that, under the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China and the Anti-Drug Law of the People's Republic of China, "drugs" include opium, heroin, methamphetamine (ice), morphine, marijuana, cocaine, and other narcotic or psychotropic substances that are addictive and controlled by the state. Smuggling, trafficking, transporting, or manufacturing drugs—regardless of quantity—can result in criminal prosecution and criminal penalties.

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Shanghai's New Dining Craze : 15-Hour Waits for Grilled Fish

A new grilled fish restaurant in Shanghai sparked a frenzy, with over 6,300 queue tickets issued daily and waits exceeding 15 hours. The location was chosen by 45,000 public votes. While scalpers profited, the hype highlights a trend where the queue itself becomes part of the consumer experience.

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Shanghai Is on Fire Again: 6300 Queue Tickets, 15-Hour Waits, and a 5 A.M. Table


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In the deep chill of a Shanghai winter, something unexpected is keeping people warm: a line.


At 9:30 a.m., at Wujiaochang's Hopson One (合生汇)—before the mall has even opened—a hundred-meter queue is already snaking toward the entrance. Shoppers aren't here for luxury brands or a seasonal sale. The moment the doors slide open, people sprint upstairs like it's a track meet, all chasing the same prize:


A waiting-number ticket for Kaojiang Spicy Grilled Fish (烤匠麻辣烤鱼).


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On January 30, Kaojiang's first Shanghai store officially opened. The very first day, the wait time reportedly surged past 13 hours.


But what happened the next day turned "popular" into "phenomenon."


On January 31, the store handed out queue numbers for over 6,300 tables in a single day. The longest waiting time hit 15 hours. At 1:46 a.m., there were still 2,660+ tables waiting. Some diners didn't step into the restaurant until 5 a.m.


Shanghai has seen food crazes before, but this one looked almost unreal: a packed mall at midnight, people scrolling their phones with a queue receipt in hand, and the smell of chili and grilled fish floating like a beacon.


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When a Queue Becomes a Marketplace


Where there's demand, there's always someone looking to profit.


The chaos attracted scalpers—"huangniu"—selling queue numbers on-site. Kaojiang had previously posted public statements rejecting scalping and rolled out countermeasures, but the reality on the ground was harder to control.


A reporter at the mall described seeing scalpers holding thick stacks of printed queue slips. One scalper claimed that online the going rate was about 150 RMB per number, but he was willing to sell for 100 RMB, calling it "the lowest price."


Some say scalpers can make over 1,000 RMB a day, just from flipping the right numbers to the right people at the right time.


Meanwhile, real customers kept paying in something more valuable than cash: time.


One visitor arrived around 3–4 p.m. to take a number—there were already 354 tables ahead. They waited until 2 a.m., and still didn't get to eat.


In most cities, that would kill the hype.

In Shanghai, it became part of the story.


The Most Unusual Store Location Decision: 45,000 Votes


The opening itself was dramatic—but the way Kaojiang chose its Shanghai location might be even more striking.


In late 2025, Kaojiang's official WeChat account asked a question that brands often ask as a formality:


"Where should our first Shanghai store be?"


The options were the usual "prime commercial logic" list: Xujiahui, People's Square, Jing'an Temple, Wujiaochang, Huaihai Road.


At first, Xujiahui dominated—exactly what you'd expect from traditional retail thinking.


Then social media got involved.


A comment under the post—"Can Wujiaochang work?"—collected 925 likes. Students from universities around Wujiaochang started campaigning like it was election season. They rallied in group chats, WeChat Moments, comment sections.


In the end, the poll drew around 110,000 viewers, with nearly 45,000 actually voting. Wujiaochang won with 23,113 votes, more than half of the total—an upset that effectively "voted" Kaojiang into the neighborhood.


It's rare to see consumers influence a site decision so directly. This wasn't just a store launch. It was a store summoned.


"Open One City, Ignite One City": Why Kaojiang Keeps Exploding


Shanghai isn't Kaojiang's first viral stop.


Beijing, September 26, 2024: first store opened—2,000 tables queued in one day, waits starting at 7 hours.


Xi'an, January 16, 2026: first store opened—2,600+ queue numbers, average wait around 6 hours.


A pattern has emerged: wherever Kaojiang opens, lines spill into midnight. People don't just eat—they endure.


So what's driving it?


1) Hype that feeds itself


Kaojiang builds momentum through pre-opening social media warm-up, influencer visibility, celebrity appearances, and tasting events. The slogan—roughly travels fast because it's simple, punchy, and easy to repeat.


2) The queue is part of the product


In modern urban consumption culture, long waits can act like a billboard. A line signals scarcity; scarcity signals value; value pulls more people in. The line becomes content. Content becomes traffic. Traffic becomes a longer line.


3) They're selling a mood, not just a meal


Spicy grilled fish is already a "high-emotion" food: bold flavors, heat, shared plates, late-night energy. For many customers, it's not only about taste. It's about participating in the moment.


Even Kaojiang's founder, Leng Yanjun, admitted the brand expected queues—but not queues this extreme: "Queuing was expected; queuing this long was not." Before the Shanghai opening, she predicted it would be popular, but not necessarily a repeat of Beijing's intensity.


Shanghai proved otherwise.


How Long Can the Heat Last?


Online reactions have split into two camps.


Some call it marketing theatre—manufactured scarcity, influencer-driven frenzy, a "viral bubble" waiting to pop.


Others sound more measured:


"It's tasty and the service is fine, but whether it's worth that wait depends on the person."


"Let it play out. It's too crazy right now—check again after the holiday."


"Give it a few months. Real consumers vote with their feet."


And that may be the key.


Shanghai has seen plenty of "internet-famous" restaurants follow the same arc:


Explosive opening → scalpers → nonstop social buzz → impossible expectations → backlash → decline


This is the "traffic rebound" stage—when the hype becomes so loud that even a good product struggles to match the fantasy people built in line.


Only a few brands make the jump from viral to lasting. To do that, Kaojiang will need more than queues and slogans. It will need consistency: flavor, service, operations, and a reason to come back when the line is gone.


Because in the end, a 15-hour wait is a headline.


But what keeps a restaurant alive is what happens when the wait becomes… 15 minutes.


Source: 新民晚报






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New Labor Dispute Mediated for Foreign Employee Over Permit and Reimbursement

Summary: A foreign employee in Beijing sought help after her company froze her work permit, demanding reimbursement of relocation costs before allowing resignation. Mediators clarified labor laws, stating employees can resign with notice and employers must process permit cancellation. After negotiations, the company agreed to cancel the permit, and the employee paid partial costs, resolving the dispute.

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Source: OT-Team(G), 房山区委政法委

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The Fangshan District Comprehensive Governance Center in Beijing has successfully mediated a labor dispute involving a foreign employee and her employer.

The case centered on Ms. Ya, a foreign national employed as a sales representative by a foreign-invested enterprise in Fangshan. Upon hiring, the company assisted her in obtaining a Foreigners' Employment Permit, a work visa, and a residence permit, and the two parties signed a written labor contract.

After commencing her employment, Ms. Ya repeatedly expressed her intention to resign. The company, however, required her to reimburse travel and related expenses it had advanced for her relocation to China before agreeing to process the cancellation of her foreigner work permit. Without completion of the required deregistration procedures, Ms. Ya was unable to proceed with her departure, effectively blocking her resignation. She subsequently sought assistance from the Fangshan District Comprehensive Governance Center.

Upon accepting the case, the Ding Junhong Mediation Studio under the governance center promptly initiated its response mechanism. Leveraging the center's coordinating function, it quickly convened consultations with relevant authorities, including public security and market regulation departments, to analyze the core issues and formulate a viable resolution plan.

The mediation team also used translation software to communicate effectively with Ms. Ya and reviewed the materials she submitted, including her Foreigners' Employment Permit, work-related chat records, and business receipts. Based on the evidence, the mediators determined that the parties met the essential characteristics of an established labor relationship and proceeded to contact the company to begin mediation.

Given that tensions between the two sides had escalated, the company's management initially refused to cooperate. Mediators subsequently reached out through the district Party organization department and the Xilu Police Station to reestablish contact. Shifting their approach, they conducted online communication to clarify relevant legal principles. They explained that foreign employees in China enjoy equal rights to employment and to choose their occupation, and that under Chinese labor law, an employee may unilaterally terminate a labor contract by providing 30 days' prior notice. Employers, in turn, are obligated to handle the cancellation procedures for a foreigner's work permit; failure to do so may result in liability for any resulting losses. Through sustained legal clarification and dialogue, the mediators gradually eased the company's resistance.

To address the dispute over compensation, the mediation office engaged a government-employed lawyer whose professional expertise and English-language proficiency proved instrumental. Multiple rounds of negotiations were organized to guide both parties toward mutual understanding and compromise. Ms. Ya was encouraged to consider the company's reasonable concerns, while the company was reminded that prolonged unresolved disputes could harm its commercial reputation and operational stability.

After extensive consultations, the two sides reached a settlement agreement: the company would complete the necessary work permit cancellation procedures for Ms. Ya, and she would compensate the company for part of its advanced expenses. With both procedural and financial issues resolved, the dispute was successfully concluded.

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