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Roasted duck at Z & Y Peking Duck in Chinatown.
Z & Y Peking Duck
Lauren Saria

The Best Places to Eat and Drink in San Francisco’s Chinatown

A guide to the neighborhood’s most beloved noodle joints and dim sum parlors

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Z & Y Peking Duck
| Lauren Saria

This part of San Francisco is not just a tourist destination but a living, breathing piece of United States lore. And, thankfully, it’s full of excellent restaurants, too. Now that Golden Gate Bakery is serving egg tarts once again and Z&Y is bringing Beijing-style duck to new heights, it’s a better time than ever to stroll Grant Avenue or take in the sights at Portsmouth Square. Try one of these 18 bakeries and restaurants to catch up on all that history.

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China Live

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Downstairs at George Chen’s massive, multi-venue complex, you’ll find a full menu of Chinese specialties, including customer favorites like crisp-bottomed sheng jian bao and Peking duck sesame pockets. The more upscale Eight Tables upstairs serves a more expensive tasting menu. There’s also the swanky Cold Drinks Bar for cocktail fans, and don’t forget to peruse the marketplace’s selection of housemade condiments and snacks on your way out.

A table of plates with entrees and dumplings from China Live. China Live

V.I.P. Coffee & Cake Shop

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V.I.P. features the kind of eclectic menu that’s typical of a Hong Kong-style cafe including baked pork chops over rice or red-sauce spaghetti; hot, sweet milk tea; stir-fried noodles; and fried chicken wings. It’s also a bakery, with a full selection of cakes and pastries.

Vesuvio Cafe

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As quintessential as Coit Tower, Vesuvio is well-regarded as a historic spot for beat poets to kick back after a long day of being provocateurs. Now, the bar and cafe is still a vibrant scene for bohemians and not-so-bohemians alike; the cheap drinks, tiny poetry readings, and musical performances in the alley outside keep the bar vibrant throughout the decades.

Golden Gate Bakery

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This Grant Avenue bakery is somehow the people’s champ, the prizefighter, and the underdog story all wrapped into one. Closed since 2020 due to the pandemic’s impacts, this bakery reopened to incredible fanfare in early January 2024, hopefully for good. The Hong Kong-style egg custard tarts have a reputation that is not outsized even a little bit: likely, these are San Francisco’s favorite egg tarts.

Egg tarts from Golden Gate Bakery. Lauren Saria

Chong Qing Xiao Mian

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Those looking for a hefty dose of spice will want to check out Chong Qing Xiao Mian, a Sichuan restaurant on the edge of Chinatown and North Beach. The lunch scene can get busy, but the restaurant’s fans know the spicy Sichuan noodle soup is worth the wait. Try the wontons with spicy chile oil or the Wuhan hot dry noodles, or verge into the restaurant’s chicken dishes, such as the Sichuan-style mouth-watering chicken.

A bowl of soup from Chong Qing Xiao Mian Dianne de Guzman

Z&Y Peking Duck

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From the team behind neighboring and original restaurant Z&Y, comes a haven for all things crispy and fowl. Obviously, this new restaurant specializes in carved duck and other high-end Chinese fare. The restaurant recommends reserving a duck in advance for your meal, but there are also other dishes to try such as Wan Zhou grilled whole fish or plates of dim sum. The restaurant also does special occasion meals, such as their 2024 Lunar New Year dinner, for example, a $680 feast for 8-10 people with “contemporary Beijing-inspired dishes.”

Slices of roasted duck at Z & Y Peking Duck. Lauren Saria

Bund Shanghai Restaurant

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As the name indicates, Bund Shanghai Restaurant specializes in dishes from China’s largest city including xiao long bao and braised pork belly. The unfussy dining room makes a perfect place to enjoy the menu of home-style food with a group.

Wong Lee Bakery

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Chinatown’s most legendary egg tarts can be found at Golden Gate Bakery, but in a pinch you can get your fix at Wong Lee Bakery, an itty bitty counter on Jackson Street. The egg tarts are everything you could want and more with a flaky crust — no soggy bottoms — and a smooth custard inside. There’s also a selection of dim sum classics including dumplings, noodles, and more.

An egg tart from Wong Lee Bakery Lauren Saria

New Woey Loy Goey Restaurant

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This Chinatown basement restaurant — whose history goes back some 90 years — serves some of the heartiest and most inexpensive Cantonese food in town. Customer favorites include old-school dishes like tomato-and-beef chow mein, salt-and-pepper fried pork chops, and steamed pork hash. The rice plates are an especially good deal, at just $9 or $10 a pop.

Li Po Cocktail Lounge

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There are few more legendary watering holes than Grant Avenue’s Chinese mai tai progenitor Li Po. Yes, it’s well-known as a respite for celebrities including Abbot Elementary’s Chris Perfetti, NFL players, and Anthony Bourdain. But really this longtime drinking destination is for the people, and believe the hype: The mai tais are that good.

Li Po in Chinatown. Patricia Chang

City View Restaurant

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High-end places like Yank Sing and Dragon Beaux may get all the dim sum glory, but City View should share the spotlight for its very solid dim sum. The restaurant is open for dine-in, with a wide selection of both classic dim sum items and larger entrées. The restaurant moved to a new location after facing eviction at its longstanding home in spring 2023.

City View Stefanie Tuder

The Coffee Movement

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The Coffee Movement is serious about its coffee drinks, yet it manages to be accessible to the coffee-curious. Along with the usual suspects of coffee — namely, the espressos, drip coffees, cappuccinos, and lattes on the menu — there is a tasting flight of three different coffees, or one coffee prepared in three different ways, perfect for learning about caffeine preferences. There is also an espresso tonic for a cooling moment, seasonal drinks, and two tea offerings should one need a less caffeinated drink.

A close-up of the Coffee Movement’s sign. Nora Lalle

Hon's Wun-Tun House

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Ordering at this decades-old legacy business is about as straightforward as it gets. You’re going to want noodles, probably the soupy ones with bite-size wontons served in the same style as the bustling noodle shops found on countless Hong Kong street corners — and at a similarly affordable price point. Toppings run the gamut from stewed beef brisket and tendon to pig’s feet, and the housemade chile oil is a must.

A bowl of soup from Hon’s Wun-Tun House in San Francisco Dianne de Guzman

Capital Restaurant

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Capital remains a prime destination for large groups and rambunctious get-togethers in Chinatown. Whatever you do, don’t skip the salt-and-pepper fried chicken wings.

R & G Lounge

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Known for salt-and-pepper Dungeness crab and other elegant Cantonese dishes, R & G is a Chinatown staple, especially for seafood lovers and connoisseurs of Chinese-style roasted poultry. The dining rooms at this three-story restaurant are once again bustling, plus takeout and app-based delivery are available.

A deep-fried crab. Lauren Saria

Four Kings

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Four Kings made the leap from pop-up to permanent location in 2024, infusing Chinatown with Hong Kong food nostalgia. The showstopper dish is the restaurant’s fried squab, which is dry-aged for a week and then fried to order — just be aware that availability is limited. Other favorites include escargot mixed with XO sauce and served with a side of milk bread; pork chop rice with tomato egg; and mapo spaghetti. The beverage list is brief but features some unique options, such as Toastea Lager from Taiwan’s Ugly Half Beer and Chinese almond milk.

Clay pot rice with Chinese sausage and bacon — with a yolk in the center — from Four Kings restaurant in San Francisco. Patricia Chang

Mister Jiu's

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Mister Jiu’s is a destination not only in Chinatown but also for all of San Francisco and the greater Bay Area. There’s perhaps no better place to get a taste of what fine dining modern Cantonese food can be than at James Beard award-winning chef Brandon Jew’s Michelin-starred restaurant. Perched on the second floor of a building overlooking the neighborhood, the tasting menu changes seasonally but you can (and should) add on a whole roasted Liberty duck served with peanut butter hoisin.

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Liberty Farm Peking Style Roast Duck at Mister Jiu’s. Lauren Saria

Hang Ah Tea Room

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This dim sum parlor is more than 100 years old and even sits next to a road christened in its honor, Hang Ah Street around the corner. The siu mai and sesame balls are brilliant, the prices are more than reasonable, and, as SFGATE’s Margot Seeto puts it, those are just a few of the reasons tourists and locals alike keep business booming over the years.

China Live

Downstairs at George Chen’s massive, multi-venue complex, you’ll find a full menu of Chinese specialties, including customer favorites like crisp-bottomed sheng jian bao and Peking duck sesame pockets. The more upscale Eight Tables upstairs serves a more expensive tasting menu. There’s also the swanky Cold Drinks Bar for cocktail fans, and don’t forget to peruse the marketplace’s selection of housemade condiments and snacks on your way out.

A table of plates with entrees and dumplings from China Live. China Live

V.I.P. Coffee & Cake Shop

V.I.P. features the kind of eclectic menu that’s typical of a Hong Kong-style cafe including baked pork chops over rice or red-sauce spaghetti; hot, sweet milk tea; stir-fried noodles; and fried chicken wings. It’s also a bakery, with a full selection of cakes and pastries.

Vesuvio Cafe

As quintessential as Coit Tower, Vesuvio is well-regarded as a historic spot for beat poets to kick back after a long day of being provocateurs. Now, the bar and cafe is still a vibrant scene for bohemians and not-so-bohemians alike; the cheap drinks, tiny poetry readings, and musical performances in the alley outside keep the bar vibrant throughout the decades.

Golden Gate Bakery

This Grant Avenue bakery is somehow the people’s champ, the prizefighter, and the underdog story all wrapped into one. Closed since 2020 due to the pandemic’s impacts, this bakery reopened to incredible fanfare in early January 2024, hopefully for good. The Hong Kong-style egg custard tarts have a reputation that is not outsized even a little bit: likely, these are San Francisco’s favorite egg tarts.

Egg tarts from Golden Gate Bakery. Lauren Saria

Chong Qing Xiao Mian

Those looking for a hefty dose of spice will want to check out Chong Qing Xiao Mian, a Sichuan restaurant on the edge of Chinatown and North Beach. The lunch scene can get busy, but the restaurant’s fans know the spicy Sichuan noodle soup is worth the wait. Try the wontons with spicy chile oil or the Wuhan hot dry noodles, or verge into the restaurant’s chicken dishes, such as the Sichuan-style mouth-watering chicken.

A bowl of soup from Chong Qing Xiao Mian Dianne de Guzman

Z&Y Peking Duck

From the team behind neighboring and original restaurant Z&Y, comes a haven for all things crispy and fowl. Obviously, this new restaurant specializes in carved duck and other high-end Chinese fare. The restaurant recommends reserving a duck in advance for your meal, but there are also other dishes to try such as Wan Zhou grilled whole fish or plates of dim sum. The restaurant also does special occasion meals, such as their 2024 Lunar New Year dinner, for example, a $680 feast for 8-10 people with “contemporary Beijing-inspired dishes.”

Slices of roasted duck at Z & Y Peking Duck. Lauren Saria

Bund Shanghai Restaurant

As the name indicates, Bund Shanghai Restaurant specializes in dishes from China’s largest city including xiao long bao and braised pork belly. The unfussy dining room makes a perfect place to enjoy the menu of home-style food with a group.

Wong Lee Bakery

Chinatown’s most legendary egg tarts can be found at Golden Gate Bakery, but in a pinch you can get your fix at Wong Lee Bakery, an itty bitty counter on Jackson Street. The egg tarts are everything you could want and more with a flaky crust — no soggy bottoms — and a smooth custard inside. There’s also a selection of dim sum classics including dumplings, noodles, and more.

An egg tart from Wong Lee Bakery Lauren Saria

New Woey Loy Goey Restaurant

This Chinatown basement restaurant — whose history goes back some 90 years — serves some of the heartiest and most inexpensive Cantonese food in town. Customer favorites include old-school dishes like tomato-and-beef chow mein, salt-and-pepper fried pork chops, and steamed pork hash. The rice plates are an especially good deal, at just $9 or $10 a pop.

Li Po Cocktail Lounge

There are few more legendary watering holes than Grant Avenue’s Chinese mai tai progenitor Li Po. Yes, it’s well-known as a respite for celebrities including Abbot Elementary’s Chris Perfetti, NFL players, and Anthony Bourdain. But really this longtime drinking destination is for the people, and believe the hype: The mai tais are that good.

Li Po in Chinatown. Patricia Chang

City View Restaurant

High-end places like Yank Sing and Dragon Beaux may get all the dim sum glory, but City View should share the spotlight for its very solid dim sum. The restaurant is open for dine-in, with a wide selection of both classic dim sum items and larger entrées. The restaurant moved to a new location after facing eviction at its longstanding home in spring 2023.

City View Stefanie Tuder

The Coffee Movement

The Coffee Movement is serious about its coffee drinks, yet it manages to be accessible to the coffee-curious. Along with the usual suspects of coffee — namely, the espressos, drip coffees, cappuccinos, and lattes on the menu — there is a tasting flight of three different coffees, or one coffee prepared in three different ways, perfect for learning about caffeine preferences. There is also an espresso tonic for a cooling moment, seasonal drinks, and two tea offerings should one need a less caffeinated drink.

A close-up of the Coffee Movement’s sign. Nora Lalle

Hon's Wun-Tun House

Ordering at this decades-old legacy business is about as straightforward as it gets. You’re going to want noodles, probably the soupy ones with bite-size wontons served in the same style as the bustling noodle shops found on countless Hong Kong street corners — and at a similarly affordable price point. Toppings run the gamut from stewed beef brisket and tendon to pig’s feet, and the housemade chile oil is a must.

A bowl of soup from Hon’s Wun-Tun House in San Francisco Dianne de Guzman

Capital Restaurant

Capital remains a prime destination for large groups and rambunctious get-togethers in Chinatown. Whatever you do, don’t skip the salt-and-pepper fried chicken wings.

R & G Lounge

Known for salt-and-pepper Dungeness crab and other elegant Cantonese dishes, R & G is a Chinatown staple, especially for seafood lovers and connoisseurs of Chinese-style roasted poultry. The dining rooms at this three-story restaurant are once again bustling, plus takeout and app-based delivery are available.

A deep-fried crab. Lauren Saria

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Four Kings

Four Kings made the leap from pop-up to permanent location in 2024, infusing Chinatown with Hong Kong food nostalgia. The showstopper dish is the restaurant’s fried squab, which is dry-aged for a week and then fried to order — just be aware that availability is limited. Other favorites include escargot mixed with XO sauce and served with a side of milk bread; pork chop rice with tomato egg; and mapo spaghetti. The beverage list is brief but features some unique options, such as Toastea Lager from Taiwan’s Ugly Half Beer and Chinese almond milk.

Clay pot rice with Chinese sausage and bacon — with a yolk in the center — from Four Kings restaurant in San Francisco. Patricia Chang

Mister Jiu's

Mister Jiu’s is a destination not only in Chinatown but also for all of San Francisco and the greater Bay Area. There’s perhaps no better place to get a taste of what fine dining modern Cantonese food can be than at James Beard award-winning chef Brandon Jew’s Michelin-starred restaurant. Perched on the second floor of a building overlooking the neighborhood, the tasting menu changes seasonally but you can (and should) add on a whole roasted Liberty duck served with peanut butter hoisin.

Liberty Farm Peking Style Roast Duck at Mister Jiu’s. Lauren Saria

Hang Ah Tea Room

This dim sum parlor is more than 100 years old and even sits next to a road christened in its honor, Hang Ah Street around the corner. The siu mai and sesame balls are brilliant, the prices are more than reasonable, and, as SFGATE’s Margot Seeto puts it, those are just a few of the reasons tourists and locals alike keep business booming over the years.

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