A Michelin Star in Mongkok

Hong Kong Tim Ho WanServing up pork buns to our enthralled restaurant reviewer for pennies.

It seems an incongruous place to find a rating most chefs would strangle their sous-chefs for. But the gamy Hong Kong district of Mongkok hosts the cheapest starred restaurant in the famed culinary kingdom of the Michelin Guide. It is Tim Ho Wan, a Cantonese eatery that for instance features for just HK$12 (US$1.53) three light, crispy barbeque pork buns filled with a gentle stew of meat chunks swaddled in slightly sweet sauce. These baked buns are largely responsible for not only keeping this restaurant forever busy, but earned it a star that would be the envy of the tens of thousands of chefs in France.

It’s 10.10am on a Saturday, and we’re among 28 other people – a mix of Hong Kong families, elderly friends, and the odd solo diner – sitting at tables and practically inhaling the already-famous dim sum in front of us. Outside the steamed-up glass doors to the small restaurant, another 60 or so people – a few tourists now among them – wait hungrily in line, flipping the large pages of newspapers, hunched over portable gaming consoles or poring over the pages of guide books. One old woman, wrapped up warm in the winter weather, has even brought along a small stool.

We waited an hour and 10 minutes to get in; by the time the outsiders gain entry to the promised land, they will have waited considerably longer. Tim Ho Wan is no longer a secret. Those queues outside the door are as much a feature as those glorious pork buns, and neither will be going away any time soon.

When the Michelin Guide first launched in Hong Kong in 2008, it met plenty of criticism – as the mythically snobbish French guide invariably does when it enters a new city. Four years after it launched in New York, and two years after it first graced Tokyo, the guide – which is feared as much respected by chefs – hit Hong Kong shelves amid cries of elitism and Western bias. Too many of the starred restaurants were to be found in luxury hotels, critics pointed out, which is hardly where most locals go to eat. The only Hong Kong restaurant to receive the ultimate three stars was Lung King Heen in the Four Seasons Hotel, where a meal for one costs in excess of HK$500.

At the press launch for its 2010 edition, the Michelin team were at pains to stress the Chinese cuisine credentials of their anonymous reviewers and the guide is this year loaded with roast goose restaurants, noodle joints and congee shops. Cheapest on the list, and most prominent among the one-star ranks, was Tim Ho Wan, opened in early 2009 by Mak Pui Gor – the former dim sum chef at Lung King Heen.

When Chef Mak shifted his talents across Victoria Harbor from Central to the decidedly more downmarket shopping area of Mong Kok, he took with him his reputation and put fine Chinese dining – albeit in small portions – firmly into the affordable column. Here, cooks flip pastry and stuff dumplings in a narrow and crowded kitchen area behind a tall pane of glass that separates it from the unfussy dining area.

Five waitresses in bright green T-shirts weave in and out of the narrow aisles, bearing steaming-hot pots of chrysanthemum tea and stacks of bamboo baskets as they swerve expertly between the tightly-packed-in tables (there’s seating for exactly 30 people at one time) to deliver the food to expectant, and now super hungry, diners, who order extra dishes to take home in polystyrene boxes.

Squeezed into a tiny cul-de-sac between the door and the first table, a man sits on a stool and busily tallies up new receipts as the extra orders keep flowing in. But while most dim sum restaurants are cacophonous affairs, Tim Ho Wan is today strangely muted as the diners dedicate themselves to wolfing down the fare rather than share in idle chit-chat.

Next to arrive at our table are three beef balls, each the size of a baby’s fist, looking brain-like as they sit in paddling pools of vinegar and soy sauce, wearing capes of bean curd and topped with heapings of coriander. They are thick and succulent, and while firm to the bite they hold together as if they are an organic whole.

They’re quickly followed by some slightly over-moist fried turnip cakes served with chili sauce, before we devour four plump pieces of siu mai, stuffed with chunks of fresh shrimp. In short order, we also relieve the restaurant of four piping hot pieces of har gao, savouring the perfectly steamed shrimp, mixed in with pork fat and scallion and wrapped tightly in dumpling skin. The dim sum here disappears as quickly as it arrives and is the best in its class: simple, fresh and generally light on grease.

Before long, we take note of the eager faces almost pressed to the glass looking in from the outside. It’s only been 20 minutes, but we feel implicit pressure to vacate our coveted seats. After a few stabs with small plastic forks at a jasmine tea jelly embedded with flower petals, we reluctantly sidle over to the counter in the cul de sac, hand over our paper receipt and fork out HK$90. It’s a tiny price to pay for a small slice of Michelin history.

Tim Ho Wan, Flat 8, Ground Floor, Phase 2, Tsui Yuen Mansion, 2-20 Kwong Wa St, Mong Kok, Kowloon, Hong Kong.


 

By John Lloyd | Restaurants | Related to: , | 25 comments

You might also like:

Roast turkey on Christmas dinner
Make a meal of it
The Best of Singapore – An Ang Mo’s View
Recipe for the Perfect Christmas Roast Turkey
The Perfect Christmas Roast Turkey
Vinexpo logo
One hell of a wine workout
The Christmas Table around the World – Will it be Turkey or Goose?

25 Comments to A Michelin Star in Mongkok | Comments Feed

« Previous12Next »
  • Laura says

    It took me a while to search on the net, only your site unfold the full details, bookmarked and thanks again.

    – Laura

    October 5, 2010
  • Dunay says

    Thanks for sharing this helpful info!

    October 18, 2010
  • Dagny Morabito says

    Reading a number of your blogposts I really found this specific one to be top notch. I have a blog also and would love to repost several snips of your respective articles on my own blogging site. Would it be all right if I do that as long I reference your web blog or create a inbound link to your write-up I took the snip from? Otherwise I am aware of and could not do it with out your approval . I have book marked this particular post to twitter and flickr account for reference. Regardless many thanks either way!

    October 25, 2010
  • Delcie Jakiela says

    My mom and I would like to develop a blogging site similar to this for our web site, I stumbled across your blog hoping to get ideas on the theme and layout. I am taking some coding class while attending college and not certain that I would be able to create a internet site such as this one just yet. Did you code this blog yourself or hire a professional?

    October 25, 2010
  • Christina Hendricks says

    I just added your weblog to my blogroll, I hope you would consider doing the same.

    October 26, 2010
  • Mad Men says

    I really like your wp web template, where do you get a hold of it through?

    October 26, 2010
  • Jamie Chandier says

    My partner and I really enjoyed reading this write-up, I was just wanting to know do you trade featured articles? I am continuously in need of somebody to make trades with and simply thought I would ask.

    October 26, 2010
  • Raymon Orillion says

    I was just examining this post it is extremely well crafted, My organization is searching through the internet trying to find out the correct way to begin this blog site thing and your website definitely is really high quality.

    October 26, 2010
  • Thank you for all the kind words. We will continue to bring our users top quality content in the future.

    If you are interested in content exchange please contact me personally vie email curtisjohn@singnet.com.sg

    For the tech side of things drop my IT chap an email thewanderingpalate@gmail.com

    October 26, 2010
  • Toby Peccia says

    I’ve just put together and this circumstance.

    October 27, 2010
  • Roosevelt Cleckner says

    I have been just analyzing this page it is quite well crafted, My organization is searching on the net looking for just how to begin this weblog thing and your website definitely is quite high quality.

    October 27, 2010
  • Casey Style says

    Where can cronies get one’s hands on supreme guides?

    October 27, 2010
  • Clifton Vena says

    I have been just reading through this post it is extremely well crafted, I’m searching on the internet searching for just how to do this blog site thing and your site is simply extremely impressive.

    October 27, 2010
  • Cherrie Paradis says

    My brother and I have been just discussing this particular very topic, he’s frequently endeavouring to prove me wrong. Your own view on this is perfect and just how I truly feel. I just sent my brother this site to show him your perspective. Right after overlooking your blog I bookmarked and will be coming back to read your posts!

    October 28, 2010
  • « Previous12Next »

    The comments are closed.