Best chinese in Troy in my opinion. My go to is spicy sesame chicken. so tasty. Always good and the portion size is just right!
Cecily Z.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Troy, MI
This is my family’s to go place and we have dined and taken out from this place many times. I’ve taken my coworkers to this place couple of times and they all loved it. I wouldn’t say their menu is super authentic but it’s delicious and you should check them out. My to go dishes are the braised beef with daikon radish, the pork in garlic sauce or eggplant in garlic sauce, the house special stir fry, and fried pork chops. I’m getting hungry just thinking about them!
Wayne E.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Farmington, MI
Super good food, enjoy the quick service too. Ate the beef brisket with shrimp wonton and rice noodle, Chinese broccoli with black bean and mushroom hot pot.
Brittany L.
Évaluation du lieu : 4 Auburn Hills, MI
Okay, this was a last minute stop for dinner. It wasn’t that great. It was no different than any other no-name carry-out.
Jose G.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Troy, MI
This is a home style type of food, we have become regulars here and recommend it to our friends and family. Menu is quite big but if you still can’t find what you like they will make it for you. Quality, flavor and service are outstanding, you got to try it.
Curtis B.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Troy, MI
Excellent Chinese(authentic) food There are new owners for the past year and a half or so, and I would guess that the 3 ½ star rating are for the previous owners. We’ve been eating here weekly for about a year and have found the food to be excellent, the restaurant to be clean and the servers to be pleasant. Some of our favorites: The garlic deep fried pork chops Half steamed chicken with ginger and green onion, Chicken Hot Pot, Beef brisket hot pot, beef brisket with curry hot pot, deep fried fish and tofu hot pot, pork belly and stir fried cabbage, beef with ginger, onion and mushroom, House special stir fry with spicy XO sauce. We haven’t tried any of the«american Chinese» dishes, but I would expect them to be of the same excellent quality as the more authentic Chinese dishes that we’ve enjoyed. It is a fairly small restaurant, but could handle a few tables of 10 and several smaller tables of four.
Asianzing S.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Novi, MI
Excellent Spicy Fried Calamari, Wonton Noodle Soup with Beef Brisket is Amazing. Great Jasmine Tea. Highly Recommended!
Neko L.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Macomb, MI
This is definitely one of my favorite place, I go there to eat Shui Zhou Rou pian every time, awesome for the people who like meat, spicy and Chinese food
Jessica X.
Évaluation du lieu : 4 Stanford, CA
Terrific food but awful service. The waitress looks pissed most of the time. The food comes out very fast and in big portions. It is very authentic and tastes really good. I don’t think you can go wrong ordering anything. I usually get some type of noodle soup and it’s never been a miss. It’s a good deal for how cheap it is.
Nicholas W.
Évaluation du lieu : 4 Grosse Pointe, MI
This is perhaps one of the most unassuming Chinese restaurants that I’ve been to. It’s tucked into the corner of a strip mall, and from the outside, you wouldn’t think that it’s an authentic Chinese place. The sign advertising Thai, Vietnamese, Sichuanese, and Cantonese food all in one place would normally be a red flag as far as authentic Chinese restaurants are concerned. The interior is simple, with only eight spartanly furnished tables making up the seating area. The food, however, is excellent. The huntun mian(wonton noodle soup) is the best that I’ve had yet in this area. It truly brought back memories of my time in Hong Kong. The jielan was tender, and the wontons themselves were light and flavorful, without too much salt. The noodles were chewy and had a nice bite to them. The soup, while good, could have been a little more flavorful in my opinion, and that’s the only reason why I don’t give China chef a 5 star rating.
M C.
Évaluation du lieu : 4 Detroit, MI
Went back for the fourth time, finally ordered some dish I don’t care for. I love their fried rice and decided to try fuzhou fried rice, big mistake! It came in flat round dish with fired rice at bottom and wet ingredients on top? When it’s mixed the texture of rice is really weird, wet ingredients doesn’t taste good either. The jindo pork chops taste like ketchup, pork chop is not tough but fattening. Good for fried pork chop but not mix with sauce. I will still be back in the future, but probably won’t venture from my usual safe list.
Tien Q.
Évaluation du lieu : 4 Madison Heights, MI
PEOPLE, PAYATTENTION, this restaurant no longer offer Vietnamese noodle, aka Phở. Their crispy chicken also different and not anywhere as good as the very original owner, who’s now working at Motor City Casino. THISISNOW A FREAKINGCHINESERESTAURANT, WHOCATERONLYTOCHINESEPALATE. And no, don’t expect to get Chinese chop suey crap cooking here. Understand that, and you will get better experience. The waitress is very nice, and attentive. The food is very much Cantonese style and cater more to the Cantonese palate, not the chinese-american chop suey. The food generally very good and consistent, much better than other Chinese restaurants in the area. These are my recommend dishes: deep fried fish fillet hotpot w/tofu, deep fried pork chop w/pepper, salt fish and chicken fried rice, steam chicken w/ginger, fish maw soup, and wonton noodle. ANDNO, DONOTTTT order the crispy chicken, you been warned.
Susana C.
Évaluation du lieu : 4 Plymouth, MI
I have been searching for a good bowl of noodle soup and China Chef did not disappoint me at all. I will definitely return for more.
Bill B.
Évaluation du lieu : 2 Sterling Heights, MI
We tried carry out from here when our usual Chinese restaurant was closed unexpectedly. The veggie menu leaves much to be desired. The food was bland. I also felt a bit unwelcome as I was waiting for my food. As I checked out the more Chinese part of the Chinese menu, the person behind the counter said something like, «you don’t need to look at that, it’s the Chinese menu.» It was printed in Chinese AND English. How would they know what I do and don’t want? It wasn’t quite racial profiling but it did feel a bit icky. People behind the counter did not seem nice. I’ll be choosing another alternative Chinese restaurant if needed.
Tim T.
Évaluation du lieu : 1 Troy, MI
This place blows now. No more good Phở. It is just some crappy run of the mill chinese restaurant. Get your sweet and sour ____here. And they royally fudged up crispy chicken. It is now soggy POS with no flavor. It use to be so golden and crispy with lots of flavor. Tip: do not eat here. I will not return. So disappointed.
Molida K.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Utica, MI
I’m beginning to lose count how many times China Chef has changed owners but I believe it’s all for the best. The latest owners are serving only Chinese food, so no more phở or Vietnamese dishes guys!!! We came here on Tuesday for dinner and it got packed quickly. Of course there are only 8 tables in the restaurant with 3 of the tables being the big round ones that hold 6 people. We ordered the BBQ pork noodle soup, shredded chicken and shrimp lo mein, and also the special dinner #2: salty and spicy pork chop and fish in black bean sauce. The special dinners are all in Chinese characters so please ask your server to translate. I didn’t and scoured the entire menu until I eventually matched the characters to their dish lol. Our dishes came out one by one, typical of any Asian restaurant you go to. The lo mein was excellent with plenty of fresh, crisp veggies and lots of chicken and shrimp. The BBQ pork noodle soup was cooked perfectly and the broth was great with lots of ginger in it. The hubby slurped the entire bowl of broth! My special dinner with the pork chop and fish was also delicious. The pork chop was cut up and deep fried to perfection with plenty of garlic, salt, and chili peppers on top. The fish was steamed and cooked in a black bean sauce with red and green bell peppers. There was only one waitress but boy she worked her butt off and made sure everyone got the correct food without waiting too long. I can’t wait to come back!
So I haven/t been here in a while, so I was surprised to learn that it was under new management. I came at around 8, and the place was fairly empty. The old pictures of food were off the wall, which made the place a little more bland. As I looked at the menu, I saw that prices were cheaper, so I thought, Hm, that’s great. But where was the phở? I thought it was on the menu, but maybe I just didn’t see it, so that’s what I ordered. But I was very sad when the waitress told me that they don’t serve phở! What the fudge… so I ordered the wonton noodles, something that they are known for. It was only 6.50, compared to the old price of 8 or so. But I was very sad at what I got. A small bowl, about 5 wontons, and some veggies. It’s supposed to have pork, and baby bok choi! Comon’! Excuse my emotion, but when it comes to food, I’m very emotional. Maybe I came at a bad time, but to not have phở, AND to serve me a lackluster dish is like cutting me and throwing salt on the wound, and squeezing some lemon on it for good measure. It just hurts. But it didn’t taste bad. The wontons were quite good, but the dish as a whole was lacking. I’d rather pay more to get good food then pay less to get ok food. I’m sad, and probably won’t be coming back.
Richard F.
Évaluation du lieu : 2 Bloomfield Hills, MI
Three of us met for a quick bite before a business meeting. I was pleased to see Phở on the menu. That was the good news. The bad news was that the Phở and the rest of the meal was pretty mediocre. But first, let me describe the place. China Chef is situated on the east side of Rochester Road, north of Big Beaver, by a mile or so. It is located in a strip mall. It is a small place with just a few tables and some of them are large round ones so you could get a pretty good sized group or family at one of those. The first signal I got that this might not be a stellar experience was the signage on the outside of the restaurant. It said Cantonese, Szechwan, Thai, Phở, … And it was in a strip mall with lots of Korean businesses. You get the idea. I think it is at least atypical for a tiny restaurant like this one to be masters of all Asian Cuisines. Still, the opportunity to have a new Phở place was intriguing. Well I ordered the«Large Phở with Medium Rare Beef and Tendon.» The small was $ 7 and the large was $ 8, so I figured that going for the large was the smart thing to do. The large bowl was pretty large, and it came out with the usual plate of bean sprouts and Thai basil. Also on the plate was a wedge of lime and that was it. Now normally I would have expected to at least see some fresh sliced hot peppers for the after-burn, but they were absent. The«medium rare» beef came out a as a small scant congealed blob of well done beef. That is to say instead of slices of beef, it looked like they had pre-sliced the already cooked beef and just placed in in the soup without separating the slices. The beef tasted OK, but it was hell to separate the slices with chopsticks and a metal spoon. The tendon came out in two large hunks instead of the more typical bite sized morsels. They too tasted OK, but cutting the golf ball sized and anatomically obvious pieces were difficult to reduce to bite sized with no surgical tools. The broth was OK, but nothing like the rich broth served at other real Phở houses like Thuy Trang for example. The rice noodles were fine and the bean sprouts and Thai basil were fresh. So on a scale of 1 to 10, I’d rate this Phở as a solid 3. My wife ordered the Singapore noodles. I didn’t try those, but she said that they were good and mentioned that they were not as greasy as she had experienced at other places. It was a big plate which cost around $ 9 and she ended up bringing half of it home with us. Our other business friend ordered some kind of Kung Pao plate that included fried rice and an egg roll. He said it was«OK.» He might have been polite. To me it looked like something I could imagine from having a bad dream about Chung King frozen dinners. The lunch bill came to around $ 28 without tip, which isn’t bad. but I would gladly have paid more for a good meal and when we left we agreed that we would not be rushing back any time soon.
Irene L.
Évaluation du lieu : 4 Chicago, IL
I’ve been coming here for years for phở and it is always consistent and satisfying. I get the smalI phở tai and appreciate that they give a pretty darn generous portion of gristle-free beef. I always leave full of soupy, noodly goodness. Sure, there’s better phở to be slurped in SE Michigan, but this place is so close to my parents’ house that I’m pretty sure I’ll be a customer for life. Bonus: phở is a great when you’re hungover… or so I hear.