Din Tai Fung is a restaurant originating in Taiwan, specialising in xiaolongbao (steamed dumplings) and Huaiyang cuisine. Outside Taiwan, Din Tai Fung also has branches in Australia, Mainland China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Macau, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, the United States, Thailand and UAE.
Video Din Tai Fung
History
Founder Yang Bingyi was born in Shanxi, China, but moved to Taiwan in 1948 as a result of the Chinese Civil War. After working 10 years at Heng Tai Fung (???), a cooking oil retailer, he found himself unemployed when the store closed. Together with his Hakka wife, Lai Penmei, he founded Din Tai Fung (also a cooking oil retailer) in 1958. The name was a combination of his previous employer's company name "Heng Tai Fung" and his new supplier's company name "DinMei Oils".
Around 1970, tinned cooking oil became prevalent, and business diminished drastically. In order to survive, Yang and his wife turned over half the shop to making and selling steamed buns (Xiaolongbao) by hiring chefs from Shanghai where the Xiaolongbao is originally from. The buns were so popular that the store stopped selling oil altogether and became a full-fledged restaurant in 1972. The original restaurant is located on Xinyi Road in Taipei.
In 1996, the first international location opened in Tokyo, and the first North American store opened in Arcadia, California in 2000. The first European branch is slated to open in London in mid-2018.
Maps Din Tai Fung
Reputation
Din Tai Fung is known internationally for its xiaolongbao. It was named one of the top ten restaurants in the world by The New York Times on 17 January 1993. In November 2009, the restaurant's first Hong Kong branch at Tsim Sha Tsui, Silvercord Branch (???), was awarded one Michelin star by the Hong Kong and Macau 2010 edition of the Michelin Guide. In December 2010, the restaurant's second branch in Hong Kong at Causeway Bay, Yee Wo Branch (???), was also recommended by the Michelin Guide, as well as Hong Kong's Silvercord Branch in 2013.
See also
- List of Chinese restaurants
- List of restaurants in China
- List of restaurant chains in Australia
References
External links
- Din Tai Fung official website (Global) (in Taiwanese Mandarin)
- Din Tai Fung official website (Global) (in English)
- Din Tai Fung official website (USA) (in English)
- Din Tai Fung official website (Australia) (in English)
Source of the article : Wikipedia