Most great cities boast Chinatowns, enclaves of Chinese culture, commerce, and cuisine. While none were necessarily planned or follow a template, all share fascinating histories and repay curious travelers with ebullient architecture, fire-cracking festivals, and delectable food.
Each of these eight Chinatowns – testaments to the questing, cosmopolitan spirit of their founding cultures – is a worthy destination in its own right. However, give your visit an epicurean dimension, and you’ll appreciate the wisdom of the venerable Chinese maxim, “to the ruler, the people are heaven; to the people, food is heaven.”
Singapore
In a city obsessed with food, Singapore’s Chinatown is a teeming, steaming standout. While its past of opium dens and triads has been tidied up, you can still get a sense of the layers of history and modern life that exists here by wandering through the warren of low-rise buildings hiding time-worn temples set against streets spattered with urban art, bustling bars, and restaurants blending mod cons with traditional architecture.
Delve deeply into its fascinating history at the Chinatown Heritage Centre before heading to foodie haven Chinatown Complex, where you’ll find Hong Kong Soya Sauce Chicken Rice & Noodle, a hawker stall so good it’s earned a Michelin star. Proprietor Mr. Chan Hon Meng serves up bronzed soy-sauce chicken and crispy sweet char siew pork to lines of barbecue-lovers that start forming well before the shutter rolls up.
San Francisco, USA
San Francisco is home to the USA’s biggest, oldest, and most storied Chinatown. The California Gold Rush of 1848 drew hundreds of thousands to the once-tiny Pacific settlement, among them Chinese fortune-seekers streaming across the seas to delve into the legendary “Gold Mountain”.
In the grid of streets behind the iconic Dragon’s Gate (gifted by Taiwan in 1970), you’ll find teeming alleys full of dumpling houses, clinker-brick survivors of the devastating 1906 fire, and a profusion of cultural sanctuaries like the Chinese Historical Society Museum.
When hunger calls, explore how California’s restless search for novelty and delight has influenced the Chinese food at stylish Mister Jiu’s, where local chef Brandon Jew teams Devil’s Gulch pig’s head with seasonal Dungeness crab steamed with aromatic Cantonese herbs and spices.
Melbourne, Australia
Melbourne owes its deep-rooted Chinatown to the riches of the earth, with the first Chinese immigrants arriving in the fledgling city after gold was discovered in 1850. Consequently, Melbourne’s Chinatown is one of the oldest in the southern hemisphere, enriched by the city’s cultural diversity with Indonesian, Korean, Malaysian, Thai, and other Southeast Asian eateries now peppering the district.
This pan-Asian syncretism meets Melbourne’s famous bar culture at Seamstress, an atmospheric Victorian warehouse serving Chinese-fusion dishes such as Baked trout wrapped in a lotus leaf served with crispy coconut rice, green papaya salad, and chili jam.
Of course, links to the motherland remain vital and can be seen through the plate-glass windows of the Hu Tong Dumpling Bar, where expert ex-pat chefs work their magic. It’s impossible to walk past the xiao long bao without stopping in for a bite; nibble the top from these silken pouches of steamed pork, suck out the juice, and imagine yourself in the alleys of Old Shanghai.
Manila, Philippines
Manila’s Binondo district is recognized as the world’s oldest Chinatown, with a pedigree stretching beyond its official establishment by the Spanish colonists in 1594. It’s also one of the world’s largest – a seething hub of business, culture, and, naturally, food. Primarily descendants of southern Hokkien-speakers, its Filipino-Chinese denizens love seafood, mushrooms, and dishes flavored with restraint, allowing fresh ingredients to shine.
Quik Snack on Carvajal St (also known as Amah Pilar’s, or Grandma Pilar’s) is a great place to see how Hokkien staples have been given Filipino and even Spanish accents. Try the ku-tsai-ah (Chinese empanadas) or the misua guisado (stir-fried vermicelli with pork, veggies, or fish).
Lima, Peru
The historic heart of Peru’s 1.5-million strong ethnic Chinese diaspora, the largest in Latin America, is Lima’s Barrio Chino. Its numerous chifas (Chinese restaurants) throng with the descendants of some 100,000 Cantonese immigrants who arrived in the country to take on mining and sugar plantation jobs that were left vacant when slavery was abolished in 1854.
Chifa classics include Peruvian adaptations of Chinese food such as lomo saltado (beef stir-fry) and pollo tipakay (sweet and sour chicken). With portions as hefty as its extensive menu, Wa Lok is one of Barrio Chino’s best chifas; try the pa kap sun, “taco-style” minced pigeon in lettuce, washed down with a lemon-verbena flavored Inca Cola.
Paris, France
While Paris’ oldest and largest Quartier Chinois in the southeastern 13th arrondissement dates to the 1920s, the high numbers of Vietnamese, Cambodian, and Laotian descendants date France’s wider colonial connections to Indochina back to the 1800s.
At La Chine Masséna, you’ll find excellent Chiuchow cuisine, from the eastern part of Guangdong. Light on seasoning and driven by the freshness and flavor of its ingredients, this style of Chinese food is a natural fit for the French palate and hasn’t needed much adaptation. Try the turbot – a pearly-white flat fish native to the Mediterranean and North Atlantic – steamed à la minute with ginger and spring onion.
Toronto, Canada
Toronto has a number of Chinese enclaves, but it’s at the junction of Spadina Ave and Dundas Street that you’ll find the largest, oldest, and most vibrant. Definitely worth seeking out is Mother’s Dumplings, a little redoubt of foodie bliss from Shenyang in China’s northeast.
Chef Zhen’s mother, from whom she learned the art of pastry stretching, hails from this dumpling heartland. Try the lamb shui mai – puckered, flower-shaped dumplings whose ovine stuffing reflects both their Mongolian origins and the predilections of Canadian carnivores.