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Chinese

New Shanghai Night 新夜上海 – Ashfield NSW Restaurant Review

New Shanghai Night 新夜上海 is the third in a line of consecutive Shanghainese restaurants running from West to East on Liverpool Rd and in our opinion the best. Though other sources will provide the rich history of these three related restaurants, I have not done any original research on this matter and to be truthful the lore does not interest me as much as the food, which was good, and better than the rest.

We started with these deep fried bean curd in salt chilli & pepper 椒盐豆腐 ($15.80). They were not bad, with only a light starched batter, true to our preference.

They were, however, served in this basket, which if you look closely at it and think about it makes you wonder how often it is cleaned. For this reason, I would not order these tofus again, and I would aim to avoid anything served in this kind of kitchenware.

The Pork with Chives Garlic in Dumpling 韭菜猪肉水饺 ($13.80 for 12, steamed) were really good. They had a green filling with a good density of chives and a high degree of fragrance and sweetness. I don’t know if the sweetness was the natural sweetness of the vegetables, or from added sugar into either the filling or the flour, but nonetheless the taste was good.

These dumplings are also available pan-fried (more expensive), or to take home frozen, and are some of the best I’ve had. There’s no option that combines pork, prawn, and chives, or pork, egg, and chives in a 三馅 style as apparently these are not Shanghainese in tradition, and though many dumpling would’ve suffered from the absence of a third ingredient, the cleanness of this two-ingredient combination was a winner for me.

The Pan Fried Pork Bun with Shallots 生煎包 (10 for $13.80) was another winner.

The dough was soft and airy but not too thick, and with perfectly fried bottoms.

The filling was moist, flavourful, and a little bit but not too soupy. Again I thought these shen jian bao had a bit of a sweet taste to them – possibly a house characteristic of either their filling or dough – but not problematically so. Absolutely elite tier.

Chilli oil you must ask for.

I think the tea was pu’er which is not my favourite but what can you do?

Other
The staff speak very good English and also seemingly no Mandarin, which I guess makes sense since they are a Shanghainese restaurant, despite general Mandarin hegemony. They were confused and unable to produce a tax invoice when requested. Service was generally good and nicer than at New Shanghai .

Overall the best Shanghainese restaurant in Ashfield. It is a wonder how the other two even have customers, let alone lines outside New Shanghai whilst there are still tables free at New Shanghai Night.

This is a cat we saw on our walk to the restaurant. Hopefully we can go for more walks to this restaurant in 2026.

UPDATE MARCH 2026
We went back today, for lunch rather than dinner. Perhaps this was our big mistake, as the restaurant is not called New Shanghai Day. The meal was not as good as last time, and if this had been our initial experience we wouldn’t have come back a second time. The staff also spoke to us in Mandarin. Is there a separate crew for the day shift?

First, the pork ribs in black bean sauce on rice 豉椒肉排飯 ($15.80). My wife had not gotten the memo to not order generic Chinese food from a regional Chinese restaurant, but mostly because I hadn’t communicated this strategy. These weren’t what we expected (from only the English title) – we were more expecting yum cha style steamed pork ribs.

The flavour was OK even thought it was not what we wanted, but the pork was randomly battered and deep fried for seemingly no reason – something another online commenter had mentioned about another dish. A reasonable portion size, but it almost seemed like a meal designed for someone not Chinese?

I will take credit for choosing the steamed Shanghai style mini pork & crab bun xiaolongbao 南翔小籠包 ($12.80), which at least are regional Shanghainese cuisine. These weren’t terrible, but did not stand out like the shen jian bao had on our first visit.

I didn’t think they were better than frozen supermarket XLBs, and I couldn’t appreciate the crabbiness of these allegedly crabby bao.

My order of pork with coriander in dumpling 香菜豬肉水餃 ($13.80 for 12, steamed) was another attempt to replicate our previous success, which again didn’t go that well. They were nothing to really write home about, and led me to wonder if as an adult one could suddenly go from someone who enjoyed coriander to someone who doesn’t like coriander.

Comments 2.0 Perhaps I had betrayed us by making us get things outside of what we’d already had and knew we enjoyed. Perhaps it was the B ‘day team’ at a ‘night restaurant’. All I know is we weren’t particularly happy with our meal.

New Shanghai Night 新夜上海
267B Liverpool Rd, Ashfield NSW 2131

Categories
Chinese

Sunny Seafood Restaurant Central Park Mall 偉洋海鮮酒樓 – Chippendale NSW Restaurant Review

My partner and I got married relatively recently, and celebrated with a small lunch at Sunny’s Seafood Restaurant with close family only. We were seated in a private dining room and had dishes from a slightly varied banquet menu, which provided a good balance of price and performance as well as tastiness. The majority of dishes that we chose were classical Chinese restaurant fare however some were of the restaurant’s Teochow specialty regional cuisine.

I will aim to picture and vaguely describe each dish, but the overall takeaway should be that the food was all very good, even though no particular dish necessarily stood out.

Though I can no longer identify each of the various components of this braised mixed platter, I can remember that I enjoyed it thoroughly, as the first piece of food that was offered. I enjoyed the braised pork hock, which I remember to be gelatinous and melty, as well as the tofu and other now unidentifiable animal pieces. I think there was some chicken in there.

The lobster with e-fu noodles, ginger and shallot 姜葱龙虾 is a classic dish that no Chinese restaurant celebration can go without, no complaints here.

The special pork Spare ribs with vinegar sauce 镇江排骨 were really good. We’ve been searching for these pork ribs for a multiple years, and this is the first time where we were able to find something that was sweet and sour but mostly sour and only a very little bit sweet. The meat was tender, the flavors were right on, and I’m happy we were able to have this for our wedding.

The Peached Vegetables with Oyster Sauce (郊外油菜胆) were ordered to appease some kind of higher power that demanded that at least some vegetables be present in our meal. It came with seasoned with these little pieces of dried fish which were crispy and quite interesting, even though my wife did not love them, fish-hater as she is.


The family got to the steamed coral trout before I was able to take a photo. I didn’t end up having much of it, but it was pretty good with tender flesh and a very classical coriander, soy and shallot based saucing.

This braised pan fried bean curd with mushroom 冬菇红烧豆腐 was also the victim of family members. Don’t they understand why I had gathered everyone there? It was also pretty good – not something we normally have (a recommendation from the restaurant), but quite tasty, and well liked by all.

The Signature Stir Fried Beef Steak in Japanese Style 招牌清酒和牛粒 was tender and tasty. Even though I had originally envisioned getting the one with the wasabi sauce, I did not regret my decision to not change it once I realised I had ordered the wrong one.

The stir fried scallop with vegetable 翡翠带子 tasted as it looked.

The Crispy Goose 脆皮烧鹅 was actually really good. There aren’t that many places in Sydney to get barbecued goose, and this was our first time having it. It was so much meatier than your average roast duck, but also so tender and juicy and fatty in all the right places and cooked with such a crispy skin.

The fried rice with chicken and salted fish 咸鱼鸡粒炒饭 was ordered for my brother in law as a low-seafood option, given the large volume of seafood on the menu. He instead opted for an entire bowl of steamed white rice. The fried rice was pretty good.

For dessert, the red bean soup. Very standard.

They also patiently served and cut up 3 cakes, packing half of all cake up into takeaway boxes for us to take home, which was really good from a service point of view. They had a good eye for the amount of cake required for the attendees, and it was much more obvious to them than it was to us that we had ordered twice as much cake as we needed.

This unusual, slightly sweet jelly, embedded with flowers and goji berries, was quite refreshing and had a bit of a tea flavour. I don’t know what it’s called, but I would not mind having it again.

These cookies were fresh out of the oven and absolutely amazing. So warm and buttery.

Overall

We had a really good meal. I think at least a large part of this was the fact that we literally got to order everything that we wanted to eat and nothing that we didn’t want to eat. It’s so hard for a two-person couple (as opposed to what, a three-person couple?) to go to a formal sit-down Chinese restaurant and order a variety of food, simply because the portions are so large. In gathering all of our close family under the auspices of having a wedding we were able to eat everything that we wanted to.

Total cost was around $100 pp, which is amazing for a wedding.

Sunny Seafood Restaurant Central Park Mall 偉洋海鮮酒樓
R201/1 Central Park Ave, Chippendale NSW 2008





Categories
Chinese

Canton Noodle House – Hurstville NSW Restaurant Review

Canton Noodle House’s Burwood restaurant was a frequent haunt for my family in the early 2000s, and I recently had the chance to relive those memories with my partner, ordering a couple of dishes that I loved as a young teen, as well as one of her choice in an ultra-traditional sit down meal.

My partner and I rarely eat whole fish these days, but my parents were always big fans of Deep Fried Flounder with Salt & Pepper ($21.80), even if they did their best to avoid other deep fried foods in general. This fish was as good as I remembered it, with an extremely crispy exterior, the classic “salt & pepper” mix of mild chillis, garlic, and spring onions, and a thin layer of delicate flesh beneath the batter. It was great, and totally not a low-fat post cholecystectomy dish for me to have.

The diced fillet steak with wasabi sauce ($27.80) was another favourite from childhood, though in this case much saltier than I remembered. The beef was cut into inconsistently sized and shaped pieces, with the cubed pieces clearly more tender than the rectangular ones – a distinction that I also don’t remember making as a kid. The wasabi-cream sauce was still excellent even after all these years, with just a mild nose of wasabi, but with a creaminess that dampened down the saltiness of the beef. Just look at it all glisten in the light. Great with rice.

The sun-dried scallop with chicken and fried Japanese tofu ($21.80) is not a dish from my childhood, but I simply couldn’t subject my partner to Hokkien fried rice in addition to all the other stuff that I wanted. This is a classic gravied dish of fried Japanese egg-style tofu with some chicken mince, baby corn, mushrooms and carrot, not salty enough to need to be eaten with rice, but still great with some rice to soak up the sauce and its flavours. Pretty good, though I honestly think no better than what I’ve made at home?

Rice, probably a few dollars for a bowl. White. Steamed. Good with everything.

OVERALL Canton Noodle House’s rapid service, great food and generous serving sizes are reason enough for its place as one of the top staple Chinese restaurants in Chinese dominated areas of Sydney like Burwood and Hurstville. The Hurstville restaurant is more spacious than the one in Burwood, occupying an entire first floor above the kitchen, though they were still completely full during our weekday lunch visit, with a seemingly long list of regulars who order their bowl of noodles before even sitting down.

Can recommend. I still want to go back for the Hokkien Fried Rice of my childhood. I wish the menu had photos, but in the meantime, blog posts like this will have to do.

Canton Noodle House Hurstville 中發雲吞麵家
3/206 Forest Rd, Hurstville NSW 2220
(02) 9580 0588

Categories
Chinese

The Eight – Haymarket NSW Restaurant Review

This will be a quick play by play of our yum cha lunch at The Eight, chosen because sadly Marigold is no more, and The Eight had 2 hours of free parking (though we overstayed by like 20 minutes and paid $9 for the privilege).

These pork spare ribs in black bean sauce were fine. Pretty meaty, not super fatty. Flavour I thought was a bit too mild.

I think these steamed chicken feet could’ve been steamed a little bit longer, but the flavour was good.

I actually also thought these bean curd skin rolls could’ve been more flavoured.

The steamed chive dumplings were fine, not extraodinary, and could’ve used more chive taste. I don’t know what’s happening. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with my specifically, things just tended towards blandness.

The shu mai were good, and adequately flavoured.

The texture and flavour of this this doufu fa was good.

The steamed custard buns were really good! My first one burst hot liquid all over me and the table, and our friend MP gave up hers so I could have an extra.

Overall
We had a pretty decent and well priced meal, spending around $32 per person for yum cha, with 2 hours free parking down below during the day, and unlimited free parking after 6PM (important for CBD lunch considerations). My partner had had dinner with her mother and brother the previous week and had a similarly good experience.

Not bad (though I think Marigold was better. RIP.)

The Eight
Market City Shopping Centre, Level 3/13 Hay St, Haymarket NSW 2000
(02) 9282 9988

Categories
Vietnamese

Hoa Hung (Hòa Hưng) Artisan Tofu – Belmore NSW Restaurant Review

We’re going to call Hòa Hưng a restaurant simply by virtue of the fact that even though they don’t officially offer any seating, there seems to be at least four people scoffing down dòufunǎo/ dòufuhuā / tofu fa just outside the store at any given time.

We happened upon Hoa Hung’s tiny tofu stand and the modest line outside it as we sought out a different restaurant in the area. Though I had known from my paediatrics colleague GZYL that there did exist dedicated tofu shops selling fried soft tofu in Sydney, I had not yet had the time or will to seek one out for myself.

The triangle tofu ($8/kg) was my favourite out of the things that we tried, though I do not know that outside of shape there would have been much difference between this and the square tofu. I’m known to love a good combination tofu hot pot (doufu bao, 豆腐煲) and it’s one of the dishes that I order almost without fail at a traditional Chinese restaurant. The silkiness of the tofu with the mildly fried exterior, bathed in the umami stew of vegetables, meat, and seafood is one of life’s simple pleasures, and up until this point I had never been able to make or find such fried tofu outside of a restaurant. All variations of fried tofu at the Asian grocery store are dry and shrivelled – great for hot pot in one sense of the term but not great for hot pot in the other. This fried triangle tofu ticked all of the boxes that I was looking to fill.

The tofu fa ($2.50), served with ginger syrup was a warm and silky dessert, smooth and delicious. It was not too sweet even with all of the ginger syrup added in, and additional syrup was available for 20 cents a packet. There is no savoury version on offer (the version I grew up with), but I guess you could always pour in some of your own soy sauce

Straight up white tofu ($7/kg) was warm, fragrant, and white as per the description.

OTHER COMMENTS
These guys are here to sell tofu, and not to play any of your games. My partner didn’t know how much tofu she wanted, and the lady running the store essentially told her “up to you, doesn’t matter to me”. my partner countered with “one tofu please”.

Great value. Cash only.

Hoa Hung (Hòa Hưng) Artisan Tofu
296 Burwood Rd, Belmore NSW 2192
0425 306 787