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Bowl of noodles with chopsticks on a black table at Lagoon.
Photograph: Josh Robenstone

The best Chinese restaurants in Melbourne

Chopsticks at the ready: whether you’re craving dumplings, hot pot or Chinese hamburgers, Melbourne has it all

Lauren Dinse
Written by
Sonia Nair
Contributor
Lauren Dinse
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'Chinese food' is a broad catch-all term for a region that more resembles a continent than a country. China is blessed with countless regional variations of noodles, dumplings, bread and rice dishes that extend far further than Australian-Chinese iterations of honey soy chicken and Mongolian beef. The best part is that you can find many of these dishes right here in Melbourne.

Here’s a list of our favourite Chinese restaurants in Melbourne, spanning from Sichuan and Guangzhou to Shandong and Xinjiang, among many more provinces. 

If all you want are dumplings, we've rounded up a list of the best dumplings in Melbourne. Feel like a drink after dinner? Check out our list of Melbourne's 50 best bars.

Best Chinese restaurants in Melbourne

Flower Drum
  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Melbourne
  • price 3 of 4

Unwavering attention to detail has ensured this high-end Cantonese restaurant has stood the test of time. Traditional Cantonese food is meticulously prepped and wheeled out on trolleys, while Peking duck is prepared at the table with a few quick manoeuvres by expert waiters. It’s practically performance art as you dine. This is not your everyday take-out joint, but a special occasion spot to impress the family or out-of-town guests. 

  • Restaurants
  • Melbourne
  • price 2 of 4

Head to the CBD, where head chef Victor Liong is creating contemporary renditions of traditional Chinese dishes that are sure to impress. Unbridled enthusiasm from the kitchen sees the incorporation of novel ingredients in new and exciting ways, like fake meat substitute Impossible Pork™ folded into chive dumplings and quince combined with hoisin in the lacquered duck dish. This sentiment carries through to the desserts, where custard is infused with jasmine tea and the trifle features rose tea and osmanthus cream. 

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Panda Hot Pot 蜀大侠老火锅
  • Restaurants
  • Asian
  • Carlton
  • price 1 of 4

Extravagantly decked out with a grand sweeping staircase and a suspended steel dragon to boot, Panda Hot Pot is perhaps the most ostentatious backdrop against which to enjoy hot pot in Melbourne. The famous global franchise has wowed Melbourne diners with its signature 12-hour broth, its endless condiment station and a menu boasting close to 100 ingredients – plant eaters need not fret as there are plenty of vegetarian and vegan options, too. If you have space after, there’s a soft serve machine ready to meet all your sweet tooth needs. 

ShanDong MaMa
  • Restaurants
  • Melbourne
  • price 1 of 4

Genuine home-style Shandong cuisine doesn't get better than in this little shopping arcade dumpling den, which now has a mini outpost off Flinders Lane, too. The family-run restaurant is producing food with unparalleled freshness and flavour. Our favourites are the signature fish dumplings (a loose mince of oily mackerel, fragrant with ginger, coriander root and chives), the vegan zucchini dumplings enlivened by fried tofu and spring onion, and the Melbourne dumplings, which combine a medley of seafood with chicken mince, parsley and garlic. 

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Chef David – Melbourne CBD
  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Melbourne
  • price 1 of 4

Searching for Sichuan dishes in a neon-lit atmosphere? Chef David Li is your man with dishes that will tickle your tastebuds with an immense concentration of flavour and spice. The tomato sauce barramundi is greater than the sum of its parts, while the charcoal barbecue section, from which you can take your pick of chargrilled seafood, vegetables, meat and offal, is a highlight. 

Biang Biang is home to springy, long and flat hand-pulled wheat noodles tossed in accompaniments like stewed pork, tomato and egg, slow-cooked beef and a ton of chilli oil. The fact that Biang Biang is perennially packed speaks to its appeal. The namesake noodles are the must-order, but if you’re feeling like something different or can’t process gluten, there are rice noodles served cold as well as vermicelli. 

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With ‘steamed buns’ in the restaurant name, you can’t go past Yulongfu’s xiao long bao – made using an ancestral recipe passed down through co-owner Emily Liu’s family since 1904. Sure you could get the classic pork xiao long bao or you could get it with a flourish of black truffle or the fanciful addition of crab. Afterwards, move on to the pipis in XO sauce or go all out and share the sweet and sour barramundi, drunken chicken and deep-fried ice cream for dessert, of course. 

HuTong
  • Restaurants
  • Melbourne
  • price 1 of 4

From its inception, HuTong was the Melbourne byword for xiao long bao. The competition is running hot now, but this place is still dear to our collective hearts. The Shanghainese soup dumplings with a pork and soup filling have earned a top-notch reputation – saddle up your spoon with threads of ginger and a drizzle of black vinegar, nibble a hole and slurp away while trying to keep any spillage to a minimum. Supplement these with springy wontons drizzled in hot chilli sauce, the wonderfully savoury stir-fried string beans tossed with minced pork, and the soft-textured richness of scallops with eggplant cooked in a claypot with Sichuan peppers.

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  • Restaurants
  • Southbank

Neil Perry is a man who needs no introduction in the food world, and so when he turned his hand to Chinese cuisine in 2012, Melbourne's interest was piqued. Would this intimate new (and rather dimly lit) banquet room stand out from the glowing success of his fellow Crown project, the flashy and inimitable steak superstar Rockpool? It depends on who you ask, but Spice Temple boasts far more than meets the eye. Its menu shines a light on China's lesser-known regional favourites, from places like Yunnan, Jangxi, Hunan, Sichuan, Guangxi and Xingjiang, and each dish is a complex, perfectly executed and tongue-tantalising marvel – from the mouth-popping seasonal mud crabs to the famous tea-smoked duck breast. Sure, the intimate space is gorgeous but it's the food that's worth coming for. 

There are 12 million Uyghurs, mostly Muslim, living in Xinjiang in China – they speak their own language, more similar to Turkish than Mandarin, and they’re ethnically closer to people who live in Central Asian nations. Their food is unlike anything you’ll find at a stock-standard Chinese restaurant, but you can give it a try at Footscray stalwart Karlaylisi. Expect läghmän (stir-fried hand-pulled noodles), manti (a type of Uyghur dumpling stuffed with either beef or lamb) and cumin lamb skewers, one of Karlaylisi’s bestsellers. 

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  • Restaurants
  • Melbourne
  • price 1 of 4

The dumplings at Din Tai Fung are folded in a lab-like, glass-walled space, cunningly designed to turn an entire restaurant’s worth of diners into Pavlov’s dogs. The signature xiao long bao – the steamed soup dumplings that are pleated to a perfect 18-fold pucker – are all soupy explosion and juicy pork filling, and must be eaten with the non-negotiable accompaniments of ginger slivers and a slosh of black vinegar. They’re so good that the truffle versions with a sliver of the good stuff are almost redundant.

  • Restaurants
  • Carlton
  • price 2 of 4

Lagoon Dining takes foods from across the world and transforms them into contemporary, Chinese-inspired dishes, all the while drawing upon Japanese and Korean influences too. The venue is clad in black and white tones, with whitewashed brick walls, a black wrap-around bar and a grid pattern that dominates the sides of the walls and greaseproof paper sheets. The food, however, is far from the angular, monochrome interior. Try Lagoon’s welcomed take on the steak tartare, which sees Sichuan influences owing to the peppercorns. In this version, strands of fresh coriander, pickled shallots and the residual spice from the numbing peppercorns dance on your tongue. A showstopping highlight.

 

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  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Prahran

David’s has long been Melbourne’s go-to spot for Shanghai cuisine, first starting as a tea store on Chapel Street before becoming the place it is today. David's signature dishes are inspired by the cuisine of Zhouzhuang, a rural riverside town in Shanghai. Crowd favourites include the luxe crackling pork san choi bao served with seasonal vegetables and a hoisin glaze, and a classic Peking duck served with cucumber and leek. The mapo tofu dumplings and salted duck dumplings are great options if you’re looking to branch out from your usual order of prawn dumplings.

  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Melbourne

Bowltiful serves the Chinese-Muslim style of beef noodle and Bowltiful keeps it as traditional as possible. Choose from nine varieties of hand-pulled noodles that vary in shape and thickness to go into any of the eight dishes available. Beef and lamb offal feature in the noodle soups, whereas ground bean pastes, eggy tomato and a garlic-bomb gravy top dry noodle dishes. A mark of a great hand-pulled noodle is when the gluten in the flour has been worked so hard it produces a bouncy, chewy single noodle, which is the case at Bowltiful. If you opt for the thickest noodle, be warned, it is definitely excellent eating, but you will need to be deft with your chopsticks as it is as thick as a credit card, makes for messy eating and could result in mega splash-back.

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  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Melbourne

This bustling first-floor Cantonese restaurant is renowned for its seafood-forward dishes. Tables are large, so big group catch-ups or extended family gatherings are usually conducted here, with ginger and scallion stir-fried lobster over egg noodles and winter melon soup crowning each table. Yum cha occurs daily, and alongside more traditional dishes you can find wu gok (fried taro dumplings) stuffed with a creamy chicken filling rather than the usual pork gravy, and orange-tinted golden lava buns (steamed buns filled with a sweet-savoury runny salted egg yolk custard).

  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Melbourne
  • price 2 of 4

Secret Kitchen is recognisable by its curved fish tank on the corner of Little Bourke and Exhibition Streets (signifying that it specialises in seafood), but it punches above its weight in the yum cha department, too. Secret Kitchen falls under the China Bar umbrella, and this two-storey Cantonese restaurant is the place to go when you’re in the mood for a big feed. You have to book in for yum cha on the weekends or you will be turned away. All your old favourites are here, but with a twist: sticky har gow with king prawns, siu mai with abalone, and steamed rice rolls with scallops and black truffle.  

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  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Melbourne

Arguably the overlord of malatang in Melbourne, Dragon Hot Pot has franchised aggressively over the past few years, with 11 stores now open between Springvale and the city. Chief among them is this snug Russell Street outpost that's open late every night. Choose any combination of meat, seafood, noodles, tofu and vegetables to be cooked in broths ranging from the signature malatang to the 12-hour-steeped bone marrow broth or the vegan malatang. 

  • Restaurants
  • Melbourne
  • price 1 of 4

Tina’s Noodle Kitchen is part of the Dainty Sichuan group and owner Tina Li's CBD noodle shop. If you're at all familiar with the original Dainty Sichuan restaurants, you will be well aware that these guys don't shy away from the spice. So get that icy cold glass of water ready and prepare yourself for some delicious chilli heat, Sichuan style. If lunch time queues at the CBD branch are any indication, Tina's noodle soups are worth the wait. It's a quick and easy affair once you find a seat though, the giant bowls of still simmering noodles covered in chilli oil will hit the table almost as soon as you get your drink. Don't be scared of the unfamiliar ingredients – the ruffles of black mushroom and konjac jelly are actually very healthy traditional ingredients. All the more reason to tuck into their famously fiery fried chicken.

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Simon's Peiking Duck
  • Restaurants
  • Box Hill South

Head here for some Peking duck in Melbourne that compares deliciously to what you'd find on the streets of Beijing. You can get the crispy-skinned goodness served up every which way; with hand-made noodles, wrapped in a pancake with hoisin, stir fried with bean shoots, or just order one whole to be carved at the table. They do have other dishes on the menu, but you're really going there just for the duck.

  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Southbank
  • price 2 of 4

Crown Melbourne’s upmarket Chinese restaurant is a go-to for many a special family occasion. With a focus on locally sourced meats and fresh seafood, Silks serves up high-quality dishes such as dim sum, barbecue, multi-regional noodle and rice dishes, as well as some seriously tasty desserts. The baked crab shell with parmesan cheese is a rich and indulgent way to begin your meal, as are the black truffle mushroom spring rolls. The roasted black cod with osmanthus honey is a smoky, ingenious take on char siu pork and the tender Valley Black Angus beef tenderloin with honey and black pepper sauce is a house specialty. Finish your meal on a special note with the sesame crème brûlée served with a sesame tuile and refreshing mango sorbet.

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  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Restaurants
  • Chinese
  • Aberfeldie

From the same people that brought Melburnians the much-loved St Kilda institution, Lau’s Family Kitchen, comes Benyue Kitchen. The word is out that some of Melbourne’s best suburban Canto can be found behind this unassuming brown brick façade in Aberfeldie. Many of Lau’s favourites are on the menu, from the lamb spring rolls and the siu mai made with Queensland prawns to the salt and pepper squid – a lesson in the beauty of a clean fry. 

22. Dumpling King

For almost three decades, family-owned Chinese restaurant Dumpling King has been serving heartwarming, authentic dishes to the Box Hill community. More of an IYKYK type of establishment than a place that shouts its wares from the rooftops, this locals' gem is a go-to for traditional and crowd-pleasing favourites like kung pao chicken, Shanghai spicy pork wonton soup, peking duck, noodles, pan-fried pork dumplings and more. There's no shortage of great Asian food in Box Hill, but if you're after a classic Chinese restaurant experience without bells and whistles, check this one out. 

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  • Restaurants
  • Box Hill

One of the first restaurants to introduce Box Hill to north-western Chinese fare was the family-owned Shaanxi-Style Restaurant. The use of sweet and earthy spices is a common part of Shaanxi cuisine and punctuates meat-centric dishes such as the pancakes with ground cumin beef, lamb noodle soup and skewers of chicken wings. It also serves the region-specific rou jia mo, otherwise known as Chinese hamburgers – rounds of crisp, grilled wheat bread that are split in half and stuffed with your choice of meat.

  • Restaurants
  • Melbourne
  • price 1 of 4

It’s been a while. Maybe 35 years. Maybe 36. Maybe more. The exact figure is lost to the mists of time. When it comes to putting a date on Supper Inn, let’s just say it threw open its doors around the time when Malcolm Fraser was prime minister, which means it’s reached the restaurant year equivalent of the Qing dynasty. The menu is long, but make a beeline for the chicken congee flecked with ginger and accompanied by Chinese doughnuts, the soothing minced pork, eggplant and salted fish hotpot, or the glistening roast meats. 

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Dainty Sichuan Food
  • Restaurants
  • South Yarra
  • price 1 of 4

Cult institution Dainty Sichuan Food has been a must-visit on Melbourne's food scene since 2003 and two things remain steadfast: the chilli is hot and the Sichuan pepper is tinglingly, numbingly fresh. Don’t leave without trying the boiling fish in golden basin (surrounded by a sea of Sichuan peppers), the deceptively named fish flavour eggplant (it’s vegan), the fiery mapo tofu and the delicately piquant cumin lamb slices. It’s way up there with the best Sichuan we’ve ever had the pleasure of burning our mouths on. 

This way for late-night eats

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