Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I actually think that Cafe Noodle isn't bad for what you pay... I'm not sure if you'd call it a restuarant as such, but you can certainly eat in! Agree that Chopsticks isn't really that great, it's only redeeming feature is the garden, which is quite nice. Mr Liu's is certainly old school (it reminds me of the sort of Chinese restaurants my parents would take me to when I was young), but I don't really rate it personally.

Gold Lee is the chinese that is on the stretch of shops by Goose Green, previously Hannas.

I would highly recommend it, was only there this Sunday. They do a fantastic all you can eat memu for ?10 pp. Had to wait a bit for the food, but it was hot and tasted freshly cooked. Nice polite service too.

I live near Gold Lee and we've eaten in a couple of times and had take-away from there more times than I can remember! It's very good food IMO, fairly "natural" (not highly flavoured, coloured or full of MSG) and their squid with salt and chilli is absolutely brilliant, melt-in-your-mouth stuff. Recommended. :)



: P

I know this one isn't local but it does do the most amazing food and is packed with Chinese people, always a sure sign of good Chinese cuisine. The Peninsular restaurant is by the eyesore called the 'Millenium Dome', it's part of the Holiday Inn Express hotel so parking is ample. We went there on Sunday and the food was to yummy, reasonably priced and the service was swift.


http://www.mychinesefood.co.uk/home/home1.htm


The only down side was having to sit next to my other half munching his way through chickens feet in black bean sauce (td)

Yes, Gracelands Palace on Old Kent Rd, home of Paul "Elvis" Chan, has now been turned into a Nepalese place. There is still a branch of Gracelands Palace in Tunbridge Wells, when Mr Chan still sings regularly.


I can also vouch for The Peninsular, their dim sum is generally top notch. It reminds me a lot of some of the "neighbourhood" restaurants in Hong Kong.

Did you know that the Chinese Elvis currently starring in Martha Josie and the Chinese Elvis actually lives in East Dulwich. I read a profile on him in which he mentioned the sacred SE22.


His name is Paul Hyu and he used to stand in sometimes at Gracelands Palace. His website is pretty extraordinary.

Me and blokie got a takeaway from Gold Lee last night after being recommended in this thread. Glad to say it was fantastic, we even got drama thrown in as the guys had to deal with probably the ultimate difficult customer while we were there!! Made sure we'd got a menu so will be back.

bawdy-nan wrote :-

"Did you know that the Chinese Elvis currently starring in Martha Josie and the Chinese Elvis actually lives in East Dulwich. I read a profile on him in which he mentioned the sacred SE22.

His name is Paul Hyu and he used to stand in sometimes at Gracelands Palace. His website is pretty extraordinary."


My wife and I with a couple of friends went to see this very enjoyable comedy in Woking about a month ago - it was very good indeed. I never thought much of Maureen Lipman before, but seeing her in this made me realise just what a great actress she is.


On the subject of Mr Liu's, when I first moved to SE22 in 1979 this was a quite pricy French style restaurant.I can't remember what it was called but it was run by a big bearded chap called Nico Ladenis who later became very famous in foodie circles (Chez Nico, Simply Nico etc.)


After he moved it was home to an excellent upmarket burger place called Big Apple - unfortunately it was probably too good for the SE22 of the early 80's - only lasted a couple of years, then came Mr Liu.

Gold Lee is the only Chinese restaurant in ED where I would eat in - it's pretty good, and the service is v friendly. Chopsticks is terrible, gluey tasteless food. We often go for dim sum to Hong Kong City on New Cross Raod, or Peninsular in N Greenwich - sad to say, they're the closest really good chinese food

I went to Chopsticks at the weekend. We hadn't been for ages as we seem to remember not being that impressed when we went when it opened. I'm afraid (IMHO of course) that it hadn't got any better. The portions were enormous but we didn't get close to finishing anything as it just wasn't that good. I'll try and be more specific....


Starter - mixed hor d'oeuvre (spelling?) - ribs were dry and tasteless, seaweed wasn't very crispy and didn't have any of the sweet stuff that I normally like on it, spring rolls were mainly bean sprouts so a little boring (and far too big!). We also had a chicken satay which was okay.


Mains - Beef in black bean, Chicken Chow Mein with crispy noodles, pork and ginger I think and singapore noodles. The noodles were up to scratch but the rest was really tasteless (not bad tasting - just very uninspiring).


I think the restaurant has a lovely ambience, the garden looks amazing, and the staff are very friendly and helpful but the food just isn't good enough to make me bother going back - seems a real shame.


Has anyone been there that really likes it - wondering if it's just my taste in Chinese (although my wife agreed)?

Coming from a chinese background I think I can tell a good chinese from bad. So here are my thoughts on Chopsticks.


We recently moved to ED and had seen Chopsticks from the bus window many times. A few weeks ago my boyfriend and I decided to enjoy one of our sunny evenings and headed into ED for a drink and bite to eat after work. We thought we'd try out Chopsticks because we've been meaning to go for some time.


Like every one else says the look of the place is great, the staff are friendly and the place is clean, although I found the seating quite uncomfortable, on to the food. Well, first word to leave my mouth was...dreadful. We left most of the food we ordered (which wasn't cheap either) but out of politeness we asked to take the food home not that we had any plans to eat it again. Unfortunately that night both myself and my boyfriend were up all night with extremely bad dehydration and felt awful the next day. :(


So no your taste in chinese is excellent, you were right to think the food wasn't great. And the only reason why the portions seem large is because its filled with chinese greens which bulk up the dish, I don't recall having much lamb or chicken on either of the dishes we ordered.


I have to say I still haven't found a decent chinese in the ED area, but after reading reviews I will try out Golden Lee (we got a leaflet thro the door the other day) and Mr Liu's. At the moment whenever we get a delivery take out we only ever order a curry. And I have to recommend Spice Republic, delicious!:))

I never understood why the place is called Chopsticks when they set out a knife and fork by default - that kind of tells you wether they are expecting people who know real chinese food or not


Been to Mr Liw twice and enjoyed both times but can't vouch for it being authentic or ESPECIALLy good


Has anyone tried Dragon Castle - the big new(ish place) next to Elephant? They have 2 menus - one "regular" and one "real"

Well i did try some exceedingly authentic chinese out in Macau and most of the dishes scared the willies out of me I'm desperately ashamed to say (I like to think I'm game for most things short of a witchetty grub) so I'll make do with our anglocised version.


Having said that I pretty much agree with Nuttynat's review. A pity as it *is* attractive and friendly and should really be a jewel in LL's crown. I reckon they need to pull their socks up a bit as I'm partial to a bit of chinese and would love a good purveyor of such in LL.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • So top of Lane. Local Sainsbury, middle Co Op and M and S and bottom Tesco Express…..now everyone should be happy except those that want a Waitrose as well…0h and  don’t forget M and S near ED Station….
    • Direct link to joint statement : https://thehaguegroup.org/meetings-bogota-en/?link_id=2&can_id=2d0a0048aad3d4915e3e761ac87ffe47&source=email-pi-briefing-no-26-the-bogota-breakthrough&email_referrer=email_2819587&email_subject=pi-briefing-no-26-the-bogot_-breakthrough&&   No. 26 | The Bogotá Breakthrough “The era of impunity is over.” That was the message from Bogotá, Colombia, where governments from across the Global South and beyond took the most ambitious coordinated action since Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza began 21 months ago. Convened by The Hague Group and co-chaired by the governments of Colombia and South Africa, the Emergency Conference on Palestine brought together 30 states for two days of intensive deliberation — and emerged with a concrete, coordinated six-point plan to restrain Israel’s war machine and uphold international law. States took up the call from their host, Colombian President and Progressive International Council Member Gustavo Petro, who had urged them to be “protagonists together.” Twelve governments signed onto the measures immediately. The rest now have a deadline: 20 September 2025, on the eve of the United Nations General Assembly. The unprecedented six measures commit states to:     Prevent military and dual use exports to Israel.     Refuse Israeli weapons transfers at their ports.     Prevent vessels carrying weapons to Israel under their national flags.     Review all public contracts to prevent public institutions and funds from supporting Israel’s illegal occupation.     Pursue justice for international crimes.     Support universal jurisdiction to hold perpetrators accountable. “We came to Bogotá to make history — and we did,” said Colombian President Gustavo Petro. “Together, we have begun the work of ending the era of impunity. These measures show that we will no longer allow international law to be treated as optional, or Palestinian life as disposable.” The measures are not symbolic. They are grounded in binding obligations under international law — including the International Court of Justice’s July 2024 advisory opinion declaring Israel’s occupation unlawful, and September 2024’s UN General Assembly Resolution ES-10/24, which gave states a 12-month deadline to act. UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory Francesca Albanese called them “a momentous step forward.” “The Hague Group was born to advance international law in an era of impunity,” said South Africa’s Foreign Minister, Ronald Lamola. “The measures adopted in Bogotá show that we are serious — and that coordinated state action is possible.” The response from Washington was swift — and revealing. In a threatening statement to journalists, a US State Department spokesperson accused The Hague Group of “seeking to isolate Israel” and warned that the US would “aggressively defend our interests, our military, and our allies, including Israel, from such coordinated legal and diplomatic” actions. But instead of deterring action, the threats have only clarified the stakes. In Bogotá, states did not flinch. They acted — and they invite the world to join them. The deadline for further states to take up the measures is now two months away. And with it, the pressure is mounting for governments across the world — from Brazil to Ireland, Chile to Spain — to match words with action. As Albanese said, “the clock is now ticking for states — from Europe to the Arab world and beyond — to join them.” This is not a moment to observe. It is a moment to act. Share the Joint Statement from Bogotá and popularise the six measures. Write to your elected representative and your government and demand they sign on before 20 September. History was made in Bogotá. Now, it’s up to all of us to ensure it becomes reality, that Palestinian life is not disposable and international law is not optional. The era of impunity is coming to an end. Palestine is not alone. In solidarity, The Progressive International Secretariat  
    • Most countries charge for entry to museums and galleries, often a different rate for locals (tax payers) and foreign nationals. The National Gallery could do this, also places like the Museums in South Kensington, the British Library and other tax-funded institutions. Many cities abroad add a tourist tax to hotel bills. It means tourists help pay for public services.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...