Dunkin' Donuts are about to look like a bunch of hosers, eh?
That's because infinitely superior Canadian coffee and sweets chain Tim Horton's has just announced that it's making its way to the Middle Kingdom. Timmy's plans to expand to China with a whopping 1,500 coffee-and-donut shops over the next 10 years via a deal with a New York-based private equity group, according to the Canadian Press.
For China-residing Canucks, this development is a dream come true. Many of us have long pined for our homeland's no muss, no fuss cups of joe when navigating the typically more uppity and latte saturated café scenes in China's first-tier cities. Workday mornings often simply call for a stronger, simpler, and cheaper quick double-double (the standard two teaspoons of sugar and two creams menu option that many in the Great White North are hooked on). Dunkin' Donuts' renewed push in Beijing in 2016 (after a failed launch a few years prior) made for a decent substitute, but its blander coffee and drier, less fluffy donuts made Canadians in the capital wistful for Timmy's sweets that provided enough calories to shovel waist-high snow drifts out of our driveways or strap on some skates and head out into frigid temperatures to play a few rounds of pond hockey.
Sure, there is some overlap between Tim's and DD when it comes to menu items like Boston Cream donuts and bite-sized donut balls (they're called Timbits up North). But for the uninitiated, there'll much to be enjoyed once these beloved, more unique Tim Horton's donuts grace Beijing shelves:
So as you can see, there's potentially plenty to look forward to once Tim's makes its way to China. Let's just hope they don't stoop to Dunkin' Donuts Chinese pandering style with pork floss and seaweed donuts. On the flipside, the less that's said about Tim's poutine the better.
Photos: Canadian Press (cbc.ca), Giphy.com, Mashable.com, spoonuniversity.com, thebeaverton.com
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