A spread of dishes from Hunan Cafe.
A spread of dishes from Hunan Cafe.
Caroline Shin

Where to Eat in Flushing’s Chinatown

From black tea-braised pork belly to sprawling new hot pot spots, here’s where to eat in dynamic Queens Chinatown

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A spread of dishes from Hunan Cafe.
| Caroline Shin

While the dining scene in downtown Flushing has evolved from no-frills mom-and-pop shops to sprawling restaurants with cinematic backdrops and dramatic presentations, one thing has remained the same: the magnificent food.

Its quality is reinforced by a local food-obsessed culture and the sheer competition — from the original Chinese immigrant entrepreneurs that put Flushing’s restaurants on the map to expansion-driven global corporations.

The current residential community hails from all regions of China and its diaspora and therefore, so do the cuisines (and their infinite subdivisions). In Flushing, you’ll find dishes like a beautiful white Hunan-style fish blanketed by pickled red chile peppers; crispy battered Cantonese squid dusted with salt and pepper; tender chunks of caramelized Shanghainese pork belly; and a Hainan-style chicken hot pot with coconut water poured straight from the fruit. And let’s not forget the vegetable dishes either, like garlicky water spinach, blistered green beans, and charred golden radish cakes.

You can find them in mall food court stands, indoor hawker center stalls, street-side takeout windows, and food carts. Not one inch of precious real estate is taken for granted. What looks like one storefront opens up into ten stands. At the opposite end of the spectrum, fantastical real estate projects are outfitted with water wheels, koi ponds, and village-scapes across thousands-plus-square-feet spaces.

It’s impossible to keep up with Flushing’s restaurants, but here’s a smattering of delicious picks from a local who grew up here, and goes back all the time.

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Eater maps are curated by editors and aim to reflect a diversity of neighborhoods, cuisines, and prices. Learn more about our editorial process.

Hunan Cafe 湘水山庄

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This 2019 Michelin Bib Gourmand winner is still bringing its Hunanese kitchen savvy. Its braised fish head is spectacular: a mound of succulent white meat blanketed by pickled red chile peppers and scallions and served with buoyant fish balls to take away some of the heat. The braised Mao-style pork belly sports a red caramelized glaze and comes with tender chestnuts. The beef noodle soup is comforting with springy rice noodles and a warming broth. The free starters of salted, roasted peanuts and shredded kelp make hungry diners feel pampered from the start.

A dish from Hunan Cafe. Caroline Shin

Lucky Cafeteria

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Lucky Cafeteria carries solid cha chaan teng (Hong Kong-style cafe) classics at affordable prices in a charming setting. It features breakfast sets such as ham noodle soup with an egg sandwich and a robust milk tea, as well as items like French toast, pineapple bun with a slab of butter, and a robust milk tea. Other Cantonese favorites display finesse, too: rice rolls (seven kinds), clay pots, and dim sum. The black pepper lamb chops are tender, and the turnip cakes are golden crispy. Catch the $3 daily specials like crystal shrimp dumplings on Monday.

Dishes from Lucky Cafeteria. Caroline Shin

Eight Jane

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It takes less than a minute for owner Jin Yuan to whip up a crackly eggy crepe inside her tiny family-run take-out window. She fills and folds each one with a number of fixings like freshly made baocui (cracker), youtiao (cruller), scallions, and thin slices of beef. Watching her make two at once with such precision is a feat to applaud — particularly when you realize this skill is what has sustained three generations of her family (from mother-in-law to her two kids). At $5 a pop, the jianbing makes for a lovely, multi-textured snack or breakfast that customers line up for throughout the day.

A scene from Eight Jane. Caroline Shin

Dong Yue

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Dong Yue is the destination for Cantonese-style seafood served and shared on a large lazy Susan. Hits include lobster with the signature sweet and savory glaze, steamed flounder, walnut shrimp, salt and pepper squid, and scallops resting on tofu slices in black bean sauce. With a spacious dining room and the karaoke rooms in the back, it’s a great spot for both casual dinners and rowdy affairs. For the latter, splurge on the king crab cooked three ways: steamed in garlic, fried rice, egg custard. Dong Yue is open from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Respect the all-day hustle.

Dishes from Dong Yue. Caroline Shin

Shaxian Snacks

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Regional food from the Shaxian district of the Fujian Province is a rare find in NYC, and the growing Shaxian Snacks chainlet is the place to get it. This simply designed spot in the once-vibrant corridor of Union Street welcomes lots of regulars who come for well-executed dishes at affordable prices. The miniature Shaxian wontons are a must-get. With long slippery drapes of wrapper, they look like tiny ghosts swimming in a light and savory peanut broth. The beef soup features thin slices of beef, al dente carrots and a clean, light broth of white and ginger. The soy bean paste noodles are heaping with minced pork and cucumbers.

Dishes from Shaxian Snacks. Caroline Shin

Chongqing Lao Zao 重慶老灶

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Fans start lining up well before the wooden doors swing open at noon, eventually to walk through corridors that lead them to a bi-level dining area that evokes an old Chinese village, complete with a water wheel, koi, and a faux fire at the foot of each table. One private section is elevated on stilts. Chongqing Lao Zao stands out from the high concentration of nearby hot pot spots — Hai Di Lao, Liuyishou, 99 Favor Taste. It offers varying grids: nine compartments to keep track of each ingredient, or three for just as many broths. On nearly every table, a hunk of red beef tallow slowly melts into the restaurant’s signature spicy broth that’s bubbling and fiery red — and can be ordered mildly spicy for the low of tolerance.

A hot pot spread includes a triple-divided pot, leafy greens, lettuce stems, and beef.
Three-flavor hot pot at Chongqing Lao Zao.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Maxi's Noodle

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The calling card at this compact, no-frills noodle spot is its juicy, golf ball-sized wonton stuffed with buoyant shrimp inside a thin, slippery wrapper. You can order frozen bags to go, or better yet, add them as a topping to your noodle soup for dine-in. Maxi’s Noodle runs a streamlined operation where you choose up to three toppings to go with your solo broth, noodle soup or dry lo mein. The oblong dace fish balls are also a must-order topping, exuding a smoked meat — and not fishy — flavor. Over the years, the three-table spot has filled with so many families slurping together that owner Maxi Lau opened up a second counter spot about one-and-half miles south in Flushing.

A red awning features a woman eating noodles and letters that read “Maxi’s Noodle.”
Outside Maxi’s Noodle.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Coco Hot Pot

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Flushing has endless options for hot pot, and so for those who can’t handle the mouth-numbing fire of the predominant Sichuan hot pot style, Coco Hot Pot presents an appealing counterpoint. To create a light, sweet and savory broth, whole coconuts are poured into the pot and then chopped chicken pieces simmer in the coconut juice. To this, add any ingredients like filet mignon slices and shrimp paste as well as typical veggie fixings like watercress and assorted mushrooms. Hit up the sauce bar for dipping. Order any of the four clay pot options — beef and poached egg or pork ribs in black bean sauce — on the side.

A dish from Coco Hot Pot. Caroline Shin

Fu Yuan 富源腸粉

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Joe’s Steam Rice Roll mainstreamed the sticky, chewy concentric Cantonese treat in Flushing, and now locals are lining up in front of the tiny takeout window of Fu Yuan. Favorites are the shrimp and watercress rolls as well as the thick rice logs (like those in Korean tteokbokki) with curry fish balls or peanut butter sauce.

Three people lined up outside of a takeout window.
Outside the Fu Yuan’s takeout window.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Szechuan Mountain House

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Szechuan Mountain House is a beautiful, high-end ode to chiles, from dried red peppers to Sichuan peppercorns. The signature swing pork belly, paper-thin slices of pork belly and cucumber, hang down in a line over a dipping sauce of chile garlic oil. The Jiangbei Style Boiled Fish is a swirl of tender, white fish fillets and crushed red chiles whose heat builds with every bite. Another bestseller is the frog braised in pickled chile peppers for a spicy, sour finish. Seek refuge from the heat in dishes like the shrimp fried rice served in a hollowed-out pineapple and sautéed water spinach — all served in a gorgeous setting complete with a koi pond.

Szechuan Mountain House’s dining room, inspired by villages in the mountains. Jean Schwarzwalder

Asian Jewels

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If craving top-notch Cantonese dim sum, such as is readily available in Sunset Park and Manhattan Chinatown, Asian Jewels is the place to go in Flushing. The dumplings go around and around on carts, often delivered only minutes after they’re made and steamed. The huge dining room is elegant and relentlessly red, and dim sum is served well into the afternoon. Pillowy vegetarian rice noodle rolls and minced beef balls scented with orange peel are particularly recommended, as are steamed chicken feet with black bean sauce and honeycomb tripe with black pepper sauce. Humongous servings of soup such as fish maw with diced seafood will satisfy an entire table.

Two dim sum dishes — bundles covered in a thin white wrapper and minced beef balls — stand next to a dipping sauce.
Two dim sum dishes with dipping sauce.
Robert Sietsema/Eater NY

Fish With You 鱼你在一起

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This enormous fast-casual chain in China landed stateside in the summer with a sole focus: Sichuan fish and fermented cabbage stew. The five broths hit up all the distinctive traits of Sichuan: spicy, tingly, and sour with sprigs of Sichuan peppercorns still on the vine. Take your pick of basa or snakehead (a thinner, flaky white-fleshed fish) fish fillets and toppings like enoki mushrooms. With rice on the side, portions are hefty.

Two orange containers of Sichuan fish and fermented cabbage stews stand next to two white containers of rice.
Sichuan fish and fermented cabbage stews.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

White Bear

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A tiny, cash-only operation out of a takeout window, White Bear gives pre-gentrification 1990s vibes and some of the city’s absolute best dumplings. Order the No. 6, juicy pork and veggie wontons steeped in chile oil crisp. A handwritten Sharpie message on a taped menu also notes that the No. 12, noodles in hot sauce, is a bestseller. It’s one of these neighborhood institutions with a legacy that’s up in the air so get them while you can. Peer inside to see the owners stuffing dumplings.

Way before Malaysia’s wildly popular Papparich chain landed in 2016, Malay has been doling out sumptuous Malaysian dishes since it opened on a then-seedy side street in 1988. You’ll still catch vestiges of old Flushing before the skyscrapers cropped up. An employee assembles satay sticks in a tiny window at the left upon entry. A sliver of an aisle is made even more narrow by packed tables steaming with chicken curry noodle soup. Other hits include the al dente kang kung belacan, or water spinach heavy with shrimp paste; barbecued skate; roti canai; Hainanese chicken; and beef rendang.

Dishes of barbecued skate, curry chicken noodle soup, and kangkung belacan sit on a pink and blue floral table.
Barbecued skate, curry chicken noodle soup, and kangkung belacan.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Corner 28

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If you grew up in Flushing, you went to Corner 28. Sure, that’s an exaggeration, but Corner 28 did establish the local benchmark for roast meat, and it was once home to the famous $1 Peking duck bun. Its location has jumped around the neighborhood, but always prevailed at making a show of its tender and sweet roast duck and pork hanging in the window. To buy: Order with the staff, take the ticket to the cashier, purchase with cash only, and then take the receipt for pick-up. There’s hidden, limited seating in the back. As for the Peking duck buns, they’ve moved to the dim sum stalls at sister restaurant, Shanghai You Garden.

A scene from Corner 28. Caroline Shin

Deng Ji Yunnan Guoqiao Mixian

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The rice noodles at Deng Ji are showstoppers: cascading presentations of ingredients that tumble into an individual pot on top of a glass table filled water. These deluxe versions include up to 25 ingredients like morel mushrooms, shrimp, and sausage. But in the tighter recipes, the ingredients are less chaotic and more complementary. For instance, the savoriness of the beef broth gets compounded with the umami of mushrooms. Or the spicy and sour broth is reinforced by the fermented mustard greens. The rice noodles stay springy and many dishes feature mushrooms and edible flowers from their origins in fertile Yunnan province.

A bowl of broth with 14 small dishes above it waiting to be dumped in.
Ingredients just about to be dumped in the broth.
Robert Sietsema/Eater

Lao Ke Le

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Lao Ke Le offers Shanghainese classics in a brightly lit, modern setting at the second floor of the New World Mall. Get your hands on thin-skinned xiao long bao served with a light black vinegar and juicy pan-fried soup dumplings. The red braised pork belly might not be the most tender pork on the block, but sure goes well with the batch of quail eggs that have been cooked so soft the yolk is almost creamy. The pan-fried crispy noodles come with toppings like shrimp and crab sauce or pork and fish fillets. The two eel dishes are great: with a crispy batter in a sweet and sour sauce, and stir-fried in a garlicky brown sauce.

Dishes from Lao Ke Le. Caroline Shin

New World Mall

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The New World Mall is a maze of delicious options: Look in one direction, and a cook is slapping noodles as long as a jump rope at the Lanzhou stand. Look another way, and there’s a huge pan containing around 60 black sesame-topped, soup-filled buns lightly frying at the Pan Bao 66 stall. All over the place, cooks are folding pork and chive dumplings, dusting cumin and chile powder over Uyghur-style lamb kebabs, and stir-frying fish and veggies in mala spices. Go with friends to mix and match and share everything.

A dish from New World Mall Caroline Shin

Hunan Cafe 湘水山庄

This 2019 Michelin Bib Gourmand winner is still bringing its Hunanese kitchen savvy. Its braised fish head is spectacular: a mound of succulent white meat blanketed by pickled red chile peppers and scallions and served with buoyant fish balls to take away some of the heat. The braised Mao-style pork belly sports a red caramelized glaze and comes with tender chestnuts. The beef noodle soup is comforting with springy rice noodles and a warming broth. The free starters of salted, roasted peanuts and shredded kelp make hungry diners feel pampered from the start.

A dish from Hunan Cafe. Caroline Shin

Lucky Cafeteria

Lucky Cafeteria carries solid cha chaan teng (Hong Kong-style cafe) classics at affordable prices in a charming setting. It features breakfast sets such as ham noodle soup with an egg sandwich and a robust milk tea, as well as items like French toast, pineapple bun with a slab of butter, and a robust milk tea. Other Cantonese favorites display finesse, too: rice rolls (seven kinds), clay pots, and dim sum. The black pepper lamb chops are tender, and the turnip cakes are golden crispy. Catch the $3 daily specials like crystal shrimp dumplings on Monday.

Dishes from Lucky Cafeteria. Caroline Shin

Eight Jane

It takes less than a minute for owner Jin Yuan to whip up a crackly eggy crepe inside her tiny family-run take-out window. She fills and folds each one with a number of fixings like freshly made baocui (cracker), youtiao (cruller), scallions, and thin slices of beef. Watching her make two at once with such precision is a feat to applaud — particularly when you realize this skill is what has sustained three generations of her family (from mother-in-law to her two kids). At $5 a pop, the jianbing makes for a lovely, multi-textured snack or breakfast that customers line up for throughout the day.

A scene from Eight Jane. Caroline Shin

Dong Yue

Dong Yue is the destination for Cantonese-style seafood served and shared on a large lazy Susan. Hits include lobster with the signature sweet and savory glaze, steamed flounder, walnut shrimp, salt and pepper squid, and scallops resting on tofu slices in black bean sauce. With a spacious dining room and the karaoke rooms in the back, it’s a great spot for both casual dinners and rowdy affairs. For the latter, splurge on the king crab cooked three ways: steamed in garlic, fried rice, egg custard. Dong Yue is open from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Respect the all-day hustle.

Dishes from Dong Yue. Caroline Shin

Shaxian Snacks

Regional food from the Shaxian district of the Fujian Province is a rare find in NYC, and the growing Shaxian Snacks chainlet is the place to get it. This simply designed spot in the once-vibrant corridor of Union Street welcomes lots of regulars who come for well-executed dishes at affordable prices. The miniature Shaxian wontons are a must-get. With long slippery drapes of wrapper, they look like tiny ghosts swimming in a light and savory peanut broth. The beef soup features thin slices of beef, al dente carrots and a clean, light broth of white and ginger. The soy bean paste noodles are heaping with minced pork and cucumbers.

Dishes from Shaxian Snacks. Caroline Shin

Chongqing Lao Zao 重慶老灶

Fans start lining up well before the wooden doors swing open at noon, eventually to walk through corridors that lead them to a bi-level dining area that evokes an old Chinese village, complete with a water wheel, koi, and a faux fire at the foot of each table. One private section is elevated on stilts. Chongqing Lao Zao stands out from the high concentration of nearby hot pot spots — Hai Di Lao, Liuyishou, 99 Favor Taste. It offers varying grids: nine compartments to keep track of each ingredient, or three for just as many broths. On nearly every table, a hunk of red beef tallow slowly melts into the restaurant’s signature spicy broth that’s bubbling and fiery red — and can be ordered mildly spicy for the low of tolerance.

A hot pot spread includes a triple-divided pot, leafy greens, lettuce stems, and beef.
Three-flavor hot pot at Chongqing Lao Zao.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Maxi's Noodle

The calling card at this compact, no-frills noodle spot is its juicy, golf ball-sized wonton stuffed with buoyant shrimp inside a thin, slippery wrapper. You can order frozen bags to go, or better yet, add them as a topping to your noodle soup for dine-in. Maxi’s Noodle runs a streamlined operation where you choose up to three toppings to go with your solo broth, noodle soup or dry lo mein. The oblong dace fish balls are also a must-order topping, exuding a smoked meat — and not fishy — flavor. Over the years, the three-table spot has filled with so many families slurping together that owner Maxi Lau opened up a second counter spot about one-and-half miles south in Flushing.

A red awning features a woman eating noodles and letters that read “Maxi’s Noodle.”
Outside Maxi’s Noodle.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Coco Hot Pot

Flushing has endless options for hot pot, and so for those who can’t handle the mouth-numbing fire of the predominant Sichuan hot pot style, Coco Hot Pot presents an appealing counterpoint. To create a light, sweet and savory broth, whole coconuts are poured into the pot and then chopped chicken pieces simmer in the coconut juice. To this, add any ingredients like filet mignon slices and shrimp paste as well as typical veggie fixings like watercress and assorted mushrooms. Hit up the sauce bar for dipping. Order any of the four clay pot options — beef and poached egg or pork ribs in black bean sauce — on the side.

A dish from Coco Hot Pot. Caroline Shin

Fu Yuan 富源腸粉

Joe’s Steam Rice Roll mainstreamed the sticky, chewy concentric Cantonese treat in Flushing, and now locals are lining up in front of the tiny takeout window of Fu Yuan. Favorites are the shrimp and watercress rolls as well as the thick rice logs (like those in Korean tteokbokki) with curry fish balls or peanut butter sauce.

Three people lined up outside of a takeout window.
Outside the Fu Yuan’s takeout window.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Szechuan Mountain House

Szechuan Mountain House is a beautiful, high-end ode to chiles, from dried red peppers to Sichuan peppercorns. The signature swing pork belly, paper-thin slices of pork belly and cucumber, hang down in a line over a dipping sauce of chile garlic oil. The Jiangbei Style Boiled Fish is a swirl of tender, white fish fillets and crushed red chiles whose heat builds with every bite. Another bestseller is the frog braised in pickled chile peppers for a spicy, sour finish. Seek refuge from the heat in dishes like the shrimp fried rice served in a hollowed-out pineapple and sautéed water spinach — all served in a gorgeous setting complete with a koi pond.

Szechuan Mountain House’s dining room, inspired by villages in the mountains. Jean Schwarzwalder

Asian Jewels

If craving top-notch Cantonese dim sum, such as is readily available in Sunset Park and Manhattan Chinatown, Asian Jewels is the place to go in Flushing. The dumplings go around and around on carts, often delivered only minutes after they’re made and steamed. The huge dining room is elegant and relentlessly red, and dim sum is served well into the afternoon. Pillowy vegetarian rice noodle rolls and minced beef balls scented with orange peel are particularly recommended, as are steamed chicken feet with black bean sauce and honeycomb tripe with black pepper sauce. Humongous servings of soup such as fish maw with diced seafood will satisfy an entire table.

Two dim sum dishes — bundles covered in a thin white wrapper and minced beef balls — stand next to a dipping sauce.
Two dim sum dishes with dipping sauce.
Robert Sietsema/Eater NY

Fish With You 鱼你在一起

This enormous fast-casual chain in China landed stateside in the summer with a sole focus: Sichuan fish and fermented cabbage stew. The five broths hit up all the distinctive traits of Sichuan: spicy, tingly, and sour with sprigs of Sichuan peppercorns still on the vine. Take your pick of basa or snakehead (a thinner, flaky white-fleshed fish) fish fillets and toppings like enoki mushrooms. With rice on the side, portions are hefty.

Two orange containers of Sichuan fish and fermented cabbage stews stand next to two white containers of rice.
Sichuan fish and fermented cabbage stews.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

White Bear

A tiny, cash-only operation out of a takeout window, White Bear gives pre-gentrification 1990s vibes and some of the city’s absolute best dumplings. Order the No. 6, juicy pork and veggie wontons steeped in chile oil crisp. A handwritten Sharpie message on a taped menu also notes that the No. 12, noodles in hot sauce, is a bestseller. It’s one of these neighborhood institutions with a legacy that’s up in the air so get them while you can. Peer inside to see the owners stuffing dumplings.

Malay

Way before Malaysia’s wildly popular Papparich chain landed in 2016, Malay has been doling out sumptuous Malaysian dishes since it opened on a then-seedy side street in 1988. You’ll still catch vestiges of old Flushing before the skyscrapers cropped up. An employee assembles satay sticks in a tiny window at the left upon entry. A sliver of an aisle is made even more narrow by packed tables steaming with chicken curry noodle soup. Other hits include the al dente kang kung belacan, or water spinach heavy with shrimp paste; barbecued skate; roti canai; Hainanese chicken; and beef rendang.

Dishes of barbecued skate, curry chicken noodle soup, and kangkung belacan sit on a pink and blue floral table.
Barbecued skate, curry chicken noodle soup, and kangkung belacan.
Caroline Shin/Eater NY

Corner 28

If you grew up in Flushing, you went to Corner 28. Sure, that’s an exaggeration, but Corner 28 did establish the local benchmark for roast meat, and it was once home to the famous $1 Peking duck bun. Its location has jumped around the neighborhood, but always prevailed at making a show of its tender and sweet roast duck and pork hanging in the window. To buy: Order with the staff, take the ticket to the cashier, purchase with cash only, and then take the receipt for pick-up. There’s hidden, limited seating in the back. As for the Peking duck buns, they’ve moved to the dim sum stalls at sister restaurant, Shanghai You Garden.

A scene from Corner 28. Caroline Shin

Related Maps

Deng Ji Yunnan Guoqiao Mixian

The rice noodles at Deng Ji are showstoppers: cascading presentations of ingredients that tumble into an individual pot on top of a glass table filled water. These deluxe versions include up to 25 ingredients like morel mushrooms, shrimp, and sausage. But in the tighter recipes, the ingredients are less chaotic and more complementary. For instance, the savoriness of the beef broth gets compounded with the umami of mushrooms. Or the spicy and sour broth is reinforced by the fermented mustard greens. The rice noodles stay springy and many dishes feature mushrooms and edible flowers from their origins in fertile Yunnan province.

A bowl of broth with 14 small dishes above it waiting to be dumped in.
Ingredients just about to be dumped in the broth.
Robert Sietsema/Eater

Lao Ke Le

Lao Ke Le offers Shanghainese classics in a brightly lit, modern setting at the second floor of the New World Mall. Get your hands on thin-skinned xiao long bao served with a light black vinegar and juicy pan-fried soup dumplings. The red braised pork belly might not be the most tender pork on the block, but sure goes well with the batch of quail eggs that have been cooked so soft the yolk is almost creamy. The pan-fried crispy noodles come with toppings like shrimp and crab sauce or pork and fish fillets. The two eel dishes are great: with a crispy batter in a sweet and sour sauce, and stir-fried in a garlicky brown sauce.

Dishes from Lao Ke Le. Caroline Shin

New World Mall

The New World Mall is a maze of delicious options: Look in one direction, and a cook is slapping noodles as long as a jump rope at the Lanzhou stand. Look another way, and there’s a huge pan containing around 60 black sesame-topped, soup-filled buns lightly frying at the Pan Bao 66 stall. All over the place, cooks are folding pork and chive dumplings, dusting cumin and chile powder over Uyghur-style lamb kebabs, and stir-frying fish and veggies in mala spices. Go with friends to mix and match and share everything.

A dish from New World Mall Caroline Shin

Related Maps