Tell me a few of your favorites. The ones mentioned below are all places that I have been to more than 3 times and found them pretty good. Most of them are introduced by friends and spread by word of mouth. The ratings on the old and American Yelp are very unreliable! It is recommended that foodies who are new to Silicon Valley start with the following restaurants and gradually find a map of Chinese restaurants in the Bay Area that suits their own tastes
1. Greater Sichuan, next to El Camino Real in Palo Alto, is It's close to my home. The boiled fish and cumin mutton taste good, but there is a bit too much MSG. Because we have been there more than a dozen times, the boss and his wife are very familiar with us. The boss once said that he used to be Chiang Ching-kuo’s imperial chef. I don’t know whether it is true or not.
1.5, El Camino Real in Palo Alto and Aretradero Near the junction of Rd., there is a restaurant called "Suhang Restaurant". I have eaten braised pork dumplings several times. My friends from Jiangsu and Zhejiang especially like it. As a Hunanese, I think these dishes are pretty good.
1.75 There is a Chaozhou XX noodle shop across from the Walmart in Mountain View. It is very cheap. It makes all kinds of noodles. The key is that it is cheap. You can get it for 5 or 6 dollars. I really like the Thai pearl milk tea inside. It is really a blessing in life to buy a glass of iced drink in this hot weather~~~~
2. Queens XXX. I forgot the name, but it’s on Castro Street in Mountain View Downtown. They sell bubble milk tea on the left and Taiwanese beef noodles on the right. The recommendation is the Taiwanese beef noodles, which is highly recommended by my Taiwanese landlady. After eating it, I thought it was pretty good, a little oily, but I was very satisfied after eating it. It had big, big pieces of meat and noodles with good texture
2.5. It’s still the same street. Walk to the end of Castro Street and you’ll see There is a restaurant called Fulinmen, and the dim sum there is very good. The dim sum such as chicken feet in black bean sauce, shrimp dumplings, steamed pork ribs, etc. are much better than what I have eaten in mainland China, and the portions are generous. But there are always a lot of people, the service attitude is poor, and the bowls are not clean.
3. There is a Little Sheep restaurant in Cupertino. Go there one day a week and you can eat all you want for $20.
5. There is a food court near Dahua 99 in Cupertino with many Chinese restaurants. barbecue. There is a restaurant that makes couple's lung slices and white pork with garlic paste that are really good
6. I have been to a few restaurants in San Francisco's Chinatown and found them to be very average. Maybe I have never tasted good food before, but it feels so dirty and bad.