Chinese in Miami

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  • Hakkasan

    4441 Collins Ave., Miami Beach Mid/North Beach

    786-276-1388

    Alan Yau's London Hakkasan has earned a Michelin star, but many of the dishes at the Miami outpost are similar to those found at any other Chinese joint — just much better. Among the many standouts on the extensive menu are traditional roast Peking duck breast bursting with five-spice flavor; jasmine tea-smoked pork ribs whose soft, aromatic meat slips off the row of bones; and a juicy wedge of silver cod with a seductive champagne and honey sauce. For a light dessert, try the chocolate fondant with passionfruit, banana and soy caramel ice cream. Starters are priced high, and there are a number of expensive entrees involving seafoods and beef. Whether our local Hakkasan can ever rise to Michelin status is Mr. Yau's problem; we're just happy to be among the privileged few to get a taste of his Cantonese crowd pleasers.
    70 articles
  • Hong Kong House

    955 NE 125th St. Miami Shores/Biscayne Park

    305-891-3111

    When you're broke as a joke but can't stomach any more PB&J or ramen noodles. At times like these, thank God for Chinese takeout. North Miami's Hong Kong House will stuff that rumbling tummy for less than $10 with favorites like krab rangoon, pork fried rice and chicken lo mein. It's satisfaction for both your bank account and your belly.
    1 article
  • House of Chang

    1913 NE 168th St., North Miami Beach Mid/North Beach

    305-949-3957

    When it comes to serving up fast Chinese food, House of Chang doesn’t hold back. Not even hurricane warnings stop this joint from cranking out take out orders. For foodies who like nontraditional dishes, House of Chang serves up Moo Shi, which consists of shredded cabbage, woodear mushrooms golden needles, bamboo shoots, scallions and eggs with your choice of meat wrapped in thin pancakes. For large orders, you can’t go wrong with the boneless spare ribs, the house special fried rice and the house special soup. Stop by between 11 am and 3 pm to take advantage of the 25 lunch specials for six bucks or less.
    1 article
  • Hutong

    600 Brickell Ave. Brickell

    786-388-0805

    2 articles
  • Jamaican Kitchen

    8736 SW 72nd St. East Kendall/Pinecrest

    305-596-2585

    Jamaica Kitchen has been simmering down south in the Sunset West Shopping Center for over 25 years. The owners seem to know most of the customers, a steady stream that stroll in, place their orders at the main counter, and exit bearing plastic grocery bags that can barely contain the foods' aromatics — all to an island beat that bounces about in the background. Diners eating in also transact their meals at the counter. The workers here, many of whom are family, couldn't be nicer. "Wi ah di bess!" is the motto, and when it comes to low-budget dining, the boast holds merit. Lunch and dinner are served all day, the latter of heftier portion and dished into larger containers. Don't miss the jerk pork or jerk chicken — or, for that matter, the juicy, hacked-up Chinese roast chicken with buoyant five-spice fireworks. Jamaican patties are topnotch too. All items are also available to go.
    6 articles
  • Jamrock Cuisine

    12618 N. Kendall Dr. West Kendall

    305-598-7625

    Chef Maurice Chang's Chinese father and Jamaican mother taught him to make magic when he was growing up in Manchester Parish, near Jamaica's southern coast. One of Chang's signatures is an egg roll that's unlike any you find folded in wax paper. It starts with a thin yellow egg batter on a griddle, and as it firms, he lays down a slick of ground pork fortified with garlic and ginger. It's rolled, cooled, and sliced to reveal umami-packed disks adorned with pinwheel patterns. It comes on the choy fan — which is filled out with roast chicken, char sui (Chinese barbecued pork), and white or fried rice — as well as on the tousle of yellow egg noodles, protein, and bok choy called sui mein. Next time you think about take-out, think again.
    2 articles
  • Jin Jin

    15705 SW 56th St., West Dade West Kendall

    305-553-8887

    Not all of us are lucky enough to have a good Chinese take-out restaurant near home. This is probably why West Kendall residents thank the goddess Fortuna that Jin-Jin is in their hood. The place isn't gourmet or trendy. It simply offers the best Chinese take-out in South Miami-Dade. In fact, there is no means of dining in â?? Jin-Jin consists entirely of a take-out counter and a magical kitchen. To-die-for pork dumplings ($4.75), crisp vegetable spring rolls ($1.75 to $2.50), and incredibly tasty fried rice ($3.45 to $12.55) set Jin-Jin apart from the competition. Plus the people who run the place are such generous spirits that you'll often find a bonus goody in your take-out box â?? expect anything from an egg roll to an order of crab Rangoon â?? and that trumps a Happy Meal toy anytime.
    1 article
  • Kim's Chinese Restaurant

    1245 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach South Beach

    305-672-8822

    Some say Miami doesn't have good Chinese food. Still, those for whom Chinese is a must, Kim's will not disappoint. It is a solid option among the weaker alternatives -- enjoyable, provided you don't start trying to compare it to New York's Chinese fare. Delivery is quick and competent, which in this arena, is extremely important. The four-page menu features every kind of Chinese combination for which you could hope with photos of the less common dishes to ease confusion. Egg rolls are deliciously crunchy and finger-lickingly greasy, though the spring rolls check in at about half the size. A sound selection for main course would be the mu-shu chicken, the meat white and tender, the vegetables fresh (crunchy, not soggy), and the sauce light and lively. For those who may prefer a more wholesome grain, brown rice is available as a side with any meal. A wide array of vegetarian dishes are also offered, including a tasty eggplant with tofu dish. Portions are hefty, and once you make peace with the fact that Miami Chinese is not Manhattan Chinese, Kim's will hit the spot.
  • Ki'Na

    420 N. Federal Highway Fort Lauderdale

    954-900-3107

    1 event
  • King Duck Chinese BBQ

    10340 W. Flagler St. Westchester/West Miami

    786-803-8108

    2 articles
  • King Palace Chinese BBQ

    330 NE 167th St. Aventura/North Miami Beach

    305-949-2339

    Painted on the window of this nondescript highway-side restaurant is its specialty: "Chinese B-B-Q." And sure enough, hanging inside the door are bright red-dyed whole roast ducks (beaks and all) and the rest of the rotisserie items one would expect to find in any major U.S. city's Chinatown. But the real news is: There are four live tanks, making this humble joint possibly Miami-Dade County's only Chinese restaurant where fish and shellfish are alive and swimming until seconds before they're cooked. The clientele is mostly Asian, and the food is the real thing. Winning choices include fresh clams with black bean sauce, salt-and-pepper softshell crab, and live lobster with ginger and green onion.
    12 articles
  • Kings Chef Chinese Food

    476 NE 125th St. North Miami

    305-895-7878

  • Kon Chau Chinese Restaurant

    8376 SW 40th St. Westchester/West Miami

    305-553-7799

    Located in the same West Miami-Dade shopping plaza as long-standing Asian grocery Lucky Oriental Mart, Kon Chau has been disproving the slander that you can't get decent dim sum in Miami since 2011. Rolling carts steam forth from the kitchen stocked with all the usual small-plate suspects — lotus leaf-wrapped sweet sticky rice, sauce-slick chicken feet, Shanghai-style soup dumplings, fluffy steamed pork buns, tender pork siu mai, etc. The cognoscenti know to order lesser-known offerings like salted pork porridge with century egg, duck-stuffed dumplings, and tripe noodle soup.
    14 articles
  • Lee's Chinese Food

    7102 SW 117th Ave. West Kendall

    305-271-4891

  • Long Gong Chinese Restaurant

    11920 SW Eighth St. Tamiami

    305-553-4644

    1 article
  • Lotus House

    9061 SW 107th Ave., Palmetto Bay East Kendall/Pinecrest

    305-279-0969

    Sometimes, when you're too wiped to whip up a quinoa salad or broccoli bake - all that'll do instead is a good mess of chicken lo mein ($6.15) and crab rangoon ($5.55), served up in old-school white takeout containers with a fortune cookie on the side. When one of those cravings strikes, Lotus House is your home for spring rolls ($2.85), egg drop soup ($2.35) and cashew chicken ($10.95). Easy, breezy. So head to Kendall for some Chinese classics on those all-too-exhausting days.
    1 article
  • Lucky China One

    9796 SW Eighth St. Westchester/West Miami

    305-226-8032

    Faves at these popular eateries are golden mountains of honey garlic chicken and huge steaks -- yes, steaks. In addition to Cantonese, there's Szechuan and Mandarin cuisine. Sauces tend toward thick, gravylike textures; this is not a place for people with tiny feet and similarly bound appetites. Canton also houses Toyoma, a sushi bar.
    2 articles
  • Lung Gong Restaurant

    11920 SW Eighth St. Tamiami

    305-553-4644

    Lung Gong looks like any other strip-mall Chinese restaurant, but the sweeping breadth and awesome authenticity of the menu sets it apart from the masses. A yellow menu offers Cantonese standards, but the one whose pages are sky blue is a compilation of foods you won't find elsewhere. Main courses are just as intriguing, none better than tender morsels of beef flank stewed with malanga and coconut-tinted brown sauce, and "bay leaves duck," whose smoky, exotic aromatics emanated in all directions. Anyone who treasures the unique allure of authentic Chinese cooking will be absolutely agog about Lung Gong.
    3 articles
  • Mary Ann Bakery

    1284 NE 163rd St. Aventura/North Miami Beach

    305-945-0333

    The sweet smell of cakes a-bakin' tickles your nose way before you step into Mary Ann Bakery, and you'd have to be subhuman to resist the urge to walk into this unassuming little spot tucked away on 163rd Street. The front window is filled with birthday and bridal cakes, and although they look (and probably are) delicious, the real gems are inside. Side-by-side, draped in icing, and calling your name are the most fabulous minicakes this side of the Little Debbie factory. Whether you fancy mocha, chocolate, strawberry, orange, or almond, one of the dozens of confections in the refrigerated case of this Chinese bakery will surely hit your spot.
    5 articles
  • Miami China City

    41 NW 167th St. Miami Gardens

    305-655-9698

    Everyone can use a little Asian persuasion every now and again, but Miami's lacking in a proper Chinatown, Japantown, Koreatown ... hell, any town a la the Asian continent. Luckily, Miami China City is a little town unto itself. From samurai swords and litchi juice to cast-iron tea seats and Hello Kitty suitcases, you'll find any Asian treasure your little heart desires. And more you didn't know it did.
    1 article
  • Mimi Chinese

    1575 Alton Rd., Unit 2, Miami Beach South Beach

    305-701-3137

  • Ming Yuan Restaurant

    3006 NW 2nd Ave. Midtown/Wynwood/Design District

    305-576-6466

    1 article
  • Mr. Chow

    2201 Collins Ave., Miami Beach South Beach

    305-695-1695

    There has been an influx of high-end, gourmet Chinese food restaurants in Miami, but Mr. Chow is the original innovator of the trend. Mr. Chow has been cranking out pricey chicken satay and prawn toast since 1968 in London, with other well-known locations in New York City and Beverly Hills. Opened in 2009, the Miami version, located inside the W South Beach hotel, has all the accouterments one might expect from a fashionable eatery: modern décor, beautiful people, and nearly impossible reservations to wangle. Once you make it past the maitre'd stand and the bar teeming with well-coifed patrons, expect small portions of Chinese delicacies at sky-high prices. But it's worth it for a chance to rub shoulders with regulars such as Pat Riley, Michael Bay, and Michael Jordan. Insiders know to order the chicken satay ($5.50), squab with lettuce wraps ($18), green prawns ($29.50), crispy beef ($28), and Beijing duck ($62). Many dishes, such as the lettuce wraps and the homemade Mr. Chow noodles, can be ordered vegetarian-style. Watch out, though, for the white-tuxedo-clad waiters will surely steer you toward the most expensive entrées. Don't miss the dessert trolley, full of French-style sweets, and the lychee-infused martinis. And though some critics claim Mr. Chow is simply a fancified, overpriced version of P.F. Chang's, it definitely makes for an exciting night of people-watching and tasty snacking.
    4 articles
  • MSMR Lounge & Karaoke

    7632 NW 186th St., Hialeah Miami Gardens

    305-528-7163

  • New Chinatown

    5958 S. Dixie Highway, South Miami Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-662-5649

    New Chinatown isn't reinvented Chinese fare, as the name might suggest, but it does feature exquisitely fresh old-time Cantonese cuisine. Barbecue spare ribs are meaty, egg rolls crusty and propped up with a plethora of ground pork. Yatka mein soup (chicken broth filled with curly egg noodles) is great lunchtime fare. Deep-fried honey garlic chicken, greaseless ham-and-roast-pork fried rice, and shredded beef sautéed in a garlic sauce are pleasantly mild, hearty portions. Lunch and dinner.
    1 article
  • No Name Chinese

    7400 SW 57th Ct., South Miami Coral Gables/S. Miami

    786-577-0734

    Do you want a wine that goes best with roast duck and pickled vegetables? Or maybe you would like to know which varietals pair well with dumplings and steamed buns. Fret not. No Name Chinese has the perfect bottle to go with thoughtfully sourced and executed Chinese cuisine that turns what was once familiar into something that honors Chinese traditions with a South Florida twist. The turnip cake is a dim sum classic with sweet soy, Japanese mayo, katsuobushi flakes, lap cheong sausage, and shiitake mushrooms. Many of the dumplings here were picked up from Asian masters when the kitchen crew traveled around looking to fill out the menu and the classic take-out dishes. Among them are beef and broccoli, which deploys grass-fed tenderloin and gai lan to create something that's guilt-free even if you devour the entire plate. Read our full review of No Name Chinese.
    16 articles
  • Novikov Miami

    300 S. Biscayne Blvd. Downtown/Overtown

    305-489-1000

    Novikov Miami is the first U.S. outpost of the Japanese-Chinese fusion eatery, with locations in London, Moscow, and Dubai. In Miami, the menu boasts 17 sections with dozens of plates. Robata items are perhaps some of the heartier fare on the menu. The Wagyu skirt steak, asparagus with soy sauce, and corn on the cob all arrive with a nice char. But the show-stopper is the Peking duck. The crisp foie gras version is like a meaty duck potato chip, and for an extra $90, it comes topped with caviar, making it the most expensive item on the menu.
    23 articles
  • Peking One Chinese Restaurant

    16229 N. Kendall Dr., Kendall South Dade

    305-388-8816

    You wouldn't think there's anything special about Peking One; it's a three-table takeout spot with pink Formica walls. The menu, or rather, a series of photographs of typical dishes, sits above the counter. Boring-looking takeout décor usually hints at dull and standard Chinese fare, but at Peking One the flavors attack your taste buds without reaping havoc on your wallet. For instance, the chef does ole General Tso proud by serving moist chicken in a broth of sweet-yet-spicy sauce garnished with crisp broccoli ($8.95). Orange chicken ($8.95) is similar, but the subtle citrus flavors are well balanced rather than overwhelming. Pepper steak ($8.95) is tender and evenly spiced. Plus, lunch can cost under $5 for a combo, and that includes a main dish, fried rice, and a soda.
    1 article
  • Philippe by Philippe Chow

    36 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach South Beach

    305-674-0250

    Clad in white elegance and black lacquer floors, this room is as debonair as one might expect from a Chinese restaurant named Philippe. The space soars with supper-club sophistication, central focal points being a circular bar and a large window that offers peeks into the big, bright, spotless kitchen. The fare is fresh and tasty, if not a whole lot different from that at your favorite neighborhood Chinese-American joint. What distinguishes Philippe is price, meaning a considerable amount more than one is used to paying for this particular ethnic food -- though you do get some South Beach scene. Skewers of chicken satay are a signature starter, and the bright orange strips of meat, dyed in carrot juice, are lusciously enlivening via a sweetened, very buttery, hot-Buffalo-wing-like crust. Other high points are the dishes crafted by master noodle chef Wai Ming Cheng -- such as his "noodles with veal bean sauce": firm-to-the-bite linguine-shaped rice noodles topped with a meaty ragout. Dumpling dough is dainty and delicious as well, whether steamed with pork filling or pan-fried and plumped with beef. Peking duck for two is a dandy too, but skip the American desserts.
    10 articles
  • PK Oriental Market

    255 NE 167th St. Aventura/North Miami Beach

    305-654-9646

    Tucked out of sight in a rear corner of this small Asian grocery store is a hidden gem: a glassed-in take-out counter that looks like a miniature version of one of the rotisserie windows you'd expect to find on New York's Mott Street. And the housemade Chinese barbecue within - hanging ducks, strips of pork, soy sauce-marinated chickens, spareribs - is as tasty as any found in the nation's major Chinatowns. Best bet is to hit the barbecue counter Saturdays and Sundays, when PK offers a more extensive selection, including double-cooked (roasted and then deep-fried) pei pa duck, crispier-skinned and less fatty than the regular roast duck. Also highly recommended: crisp pork with tender meat and a succulent layer of crackling. There are no vegetable dishes to complement the protein, but PK's grocery shelves are well stocked with ready-to-assemble rice and noodle offerings (like Myojo's excellent cold sesame noodles) plus exotic Chinese produce for stir-fries, far more authentic than standard Miami Chinese eatery fare.
    4 articles
  • Sang's Chinese Food

    1925 NE 163rd St. Aventura/North Miami Beach

    305-947-7076

    Proprietors Purwan and Irene Cheung have cooked and waited tables here since they opened Sang"s 19 years ago. Nowadays, the unchanged, basic-Chinese-restaurant décor is tired, but two important details stand out: Most of the seats are filled with Chinese people, and most of the plates are filled with rewarding Cantonese fare. There are two menus here - ask to peruse both. You"ll likely want to start with items from the pink, more Americanized bill of fare, for that"s where you"ll find familiar favorites such as hot-and-sour soup, which is requisitely piquant. Egg rolls and dumplings also come from the pink list; the former are pretty standard, the pan-fried dumplings thick-skinned and plushly padded with minced pork. The more authentic and equally extensive white menu offers a fantastic, hacked-up half-roast duck with crisp mahogany skin and juicy meat; slowly braised stew of beef and turnips; and soft, sweet pieces of purple Chinese eggplant dissolving with flat, tender squares of beef in a spicy-sweet brown garlic sauce. Don"t miss the whole steamed fish plucked fresh from the fish tank in back. Sang"s waitstaff is a sturdy hybrid of no-nonsense personalities with no-incompetence efficiency. Prices are refreshingly affordable; most entrées on either menu cost $8 to $12. Lunch specials run from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., and some 60 dim sum snacks are available daily from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    7 articles
  • Sango Jamaican and Chinese Restaurant

    9485 SW 160th St. Cutler Bay/Palmetto Bay

    305-252-0279

    You can find better Chinese food elsewhere, but Sango is unparalleled when it comes to serving up big portions of authentic, affordable, and delicious Jamaican cuisine. A rotating daily menu ensures fresh meals, but it also means you'll have to consult the calendar when choosing which day to visit. Wednesday is jerk day, with succulent chunks of spicy pork; it's also the day that Jamaica's popular pepper-pot soup gets ladled. Also recommended: ackee and codfish, and curried goat. Primarily a take-out operation, Sango also has a small area with tables and chairs for onsite dining. Not much ambiance, mind you, and the closest thing to alcohol is imported ginger beer, but the nonstop procession of people coming in, placing orders, waiting, and then leaving with very large paper bags filled with very good food makes for pleasurable people-watching.
    4 articles
  • Shing Wang Bubble Tea Cafe

    237 NE 167th St. Aventura/North Miami Beach

    305-654-4008

    Shing Wang signals the arrival of Miami's first all-vegetarian Chinese restaurant and one of its few purveyors of Taiwanese shaved ice and bubble tea. The latter is a milkshake-like beverage made from powdered milk, sugar, tea, and choice of main flavoring ingredient (mango, taro, etc.); viscous pearls of black tapioca pile up in the bottom of the cup. Shaved ice comes with a selection of toppings such as fruits, puddings, peanuts, condensed milk, beans, and rice -- zany! More conventional diners might choose to refresh their palate with slush ice soaked in fruity syrups. As for the food at this bright little self-serve shop: Select your mock meat (beef, chicken, pork) or seafood (shrimp, scallop, lobster, squid), all prepared from soy and wheat gluten products. Then pair it with one of a dozen-plus Chinese preparations such as black bean sauce, piquant ko-po sauce, or mixed vegetables; pepper steak or General "Tao"-style; noodle or rice dishes. Mixing-and-matching can potentially yield more than 60 distinct dinners, not including separate vegetable and tofu offerings. A cup of miso soup comes with each entrée, as does a heaping helping of jasmine or brown rice. The price for this hearty meal, at lunch or dinnertime, is a mere $6.95. Could these soy substitutes con a carnivore? Never. But vegetarians and vegans will deem it close enough, and most folks should appreciate it for what it is: fresh, flavorful, healthful Chinese food at an excellent price.
    8 articles