
3741 Geary Blvd. (at 2nd), San Francisco
Inner Richmond
PH: 415.668.5888
Open daily 11 a.m. to midnight (till 3 a.m. Friday, Saturday)
No reservations, cash only
The chilly weather always makes me go hunting for soup noodles. And I love all kinds, especially Asian noodles from Japanese ramen to Chinese won ton mein. The Northern Chinese are especially good with warming your bones by creating dishes with lots of spicy meat and comforting noodles that stick to your ribs.
My recent hunt brought me to the fairly new San Dong House on the busy Geary Boulevard strip. Away from the more crowded Clement Street nearby, San Dong looks like any non-descript ethnic restaurant with the basic awning and utilitarian wooden tables and chairs.
When I visited for lunch on a recent Saturday, the restaurant seemed nearly empty except for a family sitting at a round table near the back under the flat-screen TV. After checking the menu, I began hearing the thumping sound coming from the back and quickly took my camera to catch all the action.

I sat down and out came a side dish of green onion pancakes ($3.99) that I ordered. I generally wouldn’t eat these pancakes because they can be oily when pan fried, but I always remember the intoxicating aroma I smelled as a child when we would visit a Northern Chinese restaurant and these freshly made pancakes were at the window.


I thought maybe the waitress heard me wrong (most of the servers speak Mandarin but also know English), but as I ate the noodles a customer walking by looked at my bowl of noodles and asked another server what I had ordered, and she said “dan dan mein.” So I guess I wasn’t wrong.

I returned last Friday night for dinner, and again the restaurant was nearly empty. I’m starting to think that noodles are more popular in the late evening, especially since San Dong is opened till 3 a.m. on the weekends. This time the weather was definitely chilly, so I knew I wanted soup noodles.

The soup didn’t taste as much as beef stock as it did of mushroom, so in a way this seemed like a healthy version of beef noodles soup. The noodles, again, was just wonderful, with the same chewy texture and soft center like the first time I tasted it (that says a lot about consistency). Even during dinner, I could hear the noodle chef pounding away making more fresh noodles.
After I ate the whole bowl of beef noodles, my order of xiao lung bao came out. These Northern-style dumplings are known for their delicate skin with a bit of soup wrapped in with the filling.

The waitress explained that the xiao lung bao takes about 15 minutes to make so that’s why it ended up coming after my beef noodles. But luckily she only ordered me a half order ($4.99), which came out to just six dumplings in a steamer – perfect for just myself and after eating a whole bowl of noodles.

The filling had a nice bit of minced pork that was sitting in a pool of rich broth that had a rust color, giving it a real deep flavor. I enjoyed both the meat and the broth, which made these some of the better xiao lung bao I’ve had in the Bay Area.
San Dong has BBQ in its name because they have a section on meat skewers, but pretty much everyone goes there for the hand-pulled noodles. And why not when they’re so good? San Dong looks like it’s been in the neighborhood for years, but the fresh noodles say there’s a new kid in town.
Single guy rating: 3.5 stars (Comforting noodles)
Explanation of the single guy's rating system:
1 star = perfect for college students
2 stars = perfect for new diners
3 stars = perfect for foodies
4 stars = perfect for expense accounts
5 stars = perfect for any guy's dream dinner

More Northern cuisine:
Bund Shanghai: "Hearty Northern Chinese Cuisine Done Right"
Shan Dong: "What's All the Fuss Oakland Lunchers?"
I love hand-pulled noodles. I wrote a story for the Mercury News years ago about some of the places in the South Bay that serve them. The Merc photographer and I got to go back in the kitchen to see the chef make the noodles. He did it so fast -- turning a blob of dough into thin strands without every touching a knife -- that the photographer had to ask him to do it again because she'd missed most of the shots. Too funny!
ReplyDeleteCool. I take the bus on Geary and I noticed that there were not many people at night, so I keep on wondering if this restaurant is any good or not. It's good that they actually make their own noodles. You being the witness. Now, I really have to get in there and try it one of these days! Thanks for the review!
ReplyDeleteYou discovered another place in the City that serves Xiao Long Baos! And pulled noodles! Ahem, why aren't you contacting me and Foodhoe to accompany you to these places! ;) I do not have much experience with dan dan mein either, but I believe mine always had a drier sauce (not soupy). But every Chinese household has a different version of dan dan mein. Also, you found quite a gem--a place with non-oily scallion pancakes!
ReplyDeletehmph, yes that's what I was just wondering too... Two visits in one week? Even if this is not the noodle place you were talking about, we really had better set something up soon, this chilly weather is making me crave noodles in soup!
ReplyDeleteDo I need to take along a Mandarin speaker? Were there any meat-less options?
ReplyDeleteI've actually never had hand-pulled noodles before but have been wanting to try it after watching a segment about it on Food Network. I LOVE Xiao Lung Bao though, must be the Shanghai girl in me!
ReplyDeleteFoodhoe/Passionate Eater: We definitely should go back to San Dong. You guys maybe can order the stinky tofu specialty!
ReplyDeleteKim, there are vegetarian options. I saw vegetarian dumplings and vegetarian noodles. And of course, those green onion pancakes! You don't need to speak Mandarin. The menu is in English and you can always point! ;-) Actually, since the Examiner and SF Weekly reviewed this place, a lot of non-Chinese have been visiting!
I have a soft spot for noodles, soup and dumplings, so this post makes me want to hop on a plane to SF and try out these dishes!
ReplyDeleteWow--I have to get to this place--pronto. It sounds amazing. Hand-pulled noodles? Yeah.
ReplyDeleteThe xiao long bao are item #1 under dim sum heading, green onion pancakes is #5. Also not many people like stinky tofu, this version is not for newbies. First timers should start elsewhere, with a less pungent version.
ReplyDeleteLC, that's odd. I was looking under the dumplings section and didn't think of looking under the dim sum section. Thanks for the tips!
ReplyDelete