Essential Dishes
The dishes every curious cook should know — a starting point, not a complete list.
The Philosophy
Wok hei — "breath of the wok" — is the smoky, slightly charred flavour that comes from cooking over extreme heat in a well-seasoned carbon steel wok. It cannot be replicated on a domestic stove. It's the thing that makes Chinese takeaway from a restaurant taste different from what you cook at home.
Michelin Recognition
Where the guides point — and why these restaurants matter beyond the stars.
The Chairman
Danny Yip's seasonal Cantonese cooking at its absolute finest — ingredient-first, technique-perfect, and profoundly Cantonese
Tim Ho Wan
The world's most famous cheap Michelin star — dim sum so good it has a permanent queue. The baked BBQ pork buns are the reason.
Ultraviolet
10 seats, 20 courses, a room that changes its lighting, sound, and scent to match each dish — Paul Pairet's maximalist vision of Chinese-influenced modernist cuisine
Local Favorites
The places locals actually go — no guide required, just a willingness to queue.
Din Tai Fung
XiaolongbaoThe Michelin-starred dumpling chain that started in Taipei — the xiao long bao have 18 pleats and exactly 21g of filling. Obsessive precision.
Da Dong
Peking duckThe most famous Peking duck restaurant in Beijing — the skin is lacquered, air-dried, and roasted in a hung oven to a translucency that's almost architectural
Yu's Family Kitchen
SichuanChef Yu Bo's private dining room — booking requires a contact, the menu is secret, and the cooking is arguably the finest Sichuan food in existence
Chefs Worth Knowing
The people who shaped this cuisine — and continue to define it.
Alvin Leung
Chef of Bo Innovation, "Demon Chef" of Hong Kong
Self-taught engineer-turned-chef who invented "X-treme Chinese" — taking Cantonese classics and rebuilding them with modernist technique. His molecular xiao long bao is a single bite that contains an entire dish.
Find recipes & articles →Martin Yan
TV chef, the face of Chinese cooking for a generation of Western audiences
"Yan Can Cook" introduced Chinese technique to millions — his knife skills are still the standard by which home cooks measure themselves.
Find recipes & articles →Fuchsia Dunlop
British food writer, the foremost Western authority on Chinese regional cuisine
"Every Grain of Rice" and "The Food of Sichuan" are the two best books on Chinese cooking written in English. She trained at the Sichuan culinary school and stayed.
Find recipes & articles →