Time Out has teamed up with tastelondon to offer you a fantastic one month free trial
By Charmaine Mok. Photography Michael Franke
Hong Kong is a city of discerning diners and top-class restaurants. But it’s also where, in a metropolis full of food-loving nomads, a simple bowl of soup noodles is king. It’s a telling sign when some of the most humble street-side mein dong (mein = noodle; dong = stalls) rank alongside glittering fine-dining hotspots in popularity. One of my favourites is my local family-run caff on a side street in Shau Kei Wan, in the Eastern district of the island, that does the best fish ball noodles in town. Likewise, over in the grubby end of the glamorous Central district’s Soho lies a filthy little joint (that nevertheless attracts crowds at all hours of the day) that profits from its legendary beef brisket noodles. All over the city there are hole-in-the-wall noodle shops that only do one dish, but they do it damn well.
Cha Cha Moon is Hong Kong-born restaurateur Alan Yau’s take on a mein dong. But instead of focusing on the myriad of noodle dishes found just in his home town, it’s a culinary journey careening around all corners of China, plus neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia for good measure. There are beef noodles from Taiwan and prawn noodles from Penang, while Sichuan dumplings and Singaporean char kway teow sit alongside spring onion pancakes from the north. To the moon and back, indeed.
Six months ago, Yau claimed that the inspiration behind opening Cha Cha Moon was a lack of decent Chinese soup stocks in London. So, to test the waters, we sampled two classic varieties from the soup noodle category: roast duck, and wonton. The former had an unctuous and flavoursome broth; while not helped by a somewhat ghastly greyish hue, it was full of the umami taste, punctuated by the surprising medicinal aroma of tiny red wolfberries. Fresh, al dente noodles were spot-on, transporting us back to the noodle bars of Hong Kong.
The benchmark dish, wonton noodles, was a let down. Far from the delicate dumplings their name suggests (‘wonton’, in Cantonese, literally means ‘swallowing clouds’), ours were filled with stodgy chicken and had thick, heavy wrappers. If the menu had made the distinction that these were Shanghai-style wontons (which indeed are heavier than their Cantonese-style counterparts), it would have been easier to understand.
Things picked up, though. Zhajiang mian (a northern dry noodle dish) had us picking at every last little morsel of minced pork, mushrooms and bamboo shoots, while the kitchen’s take on chicken fen pi, a Shanghainese cold noodle dish, was inspired by the use of jasmine tea-smoked chicken. The traditional sesame dressing, while slightly too watery, was spiked with hints of wasabi and sweet red onions – elements certainly reminiscent of Yau’s trademark culinary cunning, where the results are neither too shocking nor bastardised, yet different enough to delight.
With all dishes currently priced at a mere £3.50 (Update: the prices have risen at both branches, with dishes averaging around £5), we seemed to be guinea pigs for this new opening. Yau was omnipresent during the first few days; he stuck to the kitchen pass, observing diners and rattling off both compliments and criticisms to his battalion of chefs.
It is certainly admirable of Yau to throw the door wide open on Chinese noodle culture, and he hasn’t merely recreated a quintessential Hong Kong-style caff. That’s fine with us, but we feel the eclectic nature of the menu hinders the restaurant from truly delivering the best of these well-loved classics. There’s a lot of potential in this hip and cheerful operation, but for now, it has nothing on my local mein dong.
FEBRUARY 2009: The second branch of Cha Cha Moon, located in the Whiteleys Shopping Centre, is now open.
Time Out Issue 1971: May 29-June 4 2008
|
|
Hello there! Well, what can I say about myself? I'm a fairly laid-back & tolerant person overall. I work as a civil servant, often indulging in...
|
|
|
|
It's an incredible experience: original and innovative tastes, beautiful place with a warm atmosphere, excellent service and at last good value for money!!!
went to have lunch last sunday 4/1/09
the price of the menu is no longer £3.50 for all food. £3.5-£5.5 but the food is still good and portion i think is bigger now...still value for money though
nice and cheap but Wong Kei in Chinatown has character.
Amazing. The food is great and compared to wagamama prices it's a gem! Food great! Great menu as well.
it´s really good, you pay 3,50 pund for each meal...and it´s really delicious
At 1 am, I am suddenly missing Zhajiang mian (a minced pork dry noodle dish) which tastes like heaven to me a few days ago. I also mwish to have Beef noodle soup which is better than anywhere I tried in Taiwan Shanghai or HK. The only one will match it is London HK restaurant. But this one has a twist of Taiwanese flavour. Turnip paste cake also left a delicious taste in my tongue from last week with its beansprouts and Penang influence.Yummy Yummy I msut go back tomorrow. i wish they open 24 nrs a day. To complement these strong flavoured asian food, water will be the best.
What you pay is what you get. It's very reasonable, but the quality of the food and the service weren't great, either. Our main dish came before our drink and starter. The portion was very small, as well. Not impressed.
Sorry Charmaine and Time Out, but you don't need Yau and a design award to create "a quintessential Hong Kong-style caff" in London.
"Cafe de Hong Kong" on Charing Cross Road does the most authentic HK cafe culture food I have had in London. Where else would you find spam and egg sandwiches alongside preserved salted egg on the menu?? Their "Hawker Noodles" are excellent. And we always stop there for a bubble tea.
Less pretentiousness and more food-lovers in Time Out please!
Really yummy and super value, only thing is staff were very eager to get rid of you (and a lil bit rude, but that could have been a language barrier), which is sort of understandable when the restaurant is designed to have a very quick turn around.
They did a beautiful lychee cocktail, although it actually cost more than my duck main course!
Indifferent food, dreadful service,.
Not a patch on its neighbour Masala Zone.