Oct 10, 2010

Lao Dong Beef Noodles 老董牛肉麵


Profile

Address:    台北市羅斯福路四段24巷4號 (公館分店)
Phone #:    02-2369-5198
Website: http://www.olddon.com.tw/
Price Range:   $$
Accepts Credit Cards: yes
Attire: casual
Good for kids: yes
Take out: yes
Waiter Service: yes
Outdoor seating:  no
Alcohol: no

Rating

Food Quality: 4 out of 5
Decor:  3 out of 5
Service: 3 out of 5
Overall: 3.3 out of 5
Recommendation: A bowl of no nonsense beef noodles.

Review

Meandering around the streets and alleyways of Gong Guan, I stumbled upon the Lao Dong Beef Noodle shop right next to the (Gong Guan MRT Exit 4) Starbucks. Beef noodle soup has been a long-time interest of mine, and I have been trying different restaurants for a while now. This chain store has its humble beginnings as a noodle cart operated by a Shanghainese migrant from the mainland. It has a history of around 60 years. In 2006, they won an award for their Consommé Beef Noodle Soup, and in 2010 Lao Dong Beef Noodle was showcased at the Shanghai Expo in the Taiwanese Cuisine Exhibit. Although the store is named Lao Dong Beef Noodle, they offer a wide variety of foods such as dumplings, beef wraps, Chinese tamales, and meat pies. The prices range from 100-240, so you can expect to pay around 150 per person. The beef noodle soup was not particularly impressive, but it is a solid bowl of beef noodle soup with firm noodles, lightly flavored broth, and tender braised beef chunks. This is potentially my "go-to" beef noodle shop in Gong Guan.




When you walk into the store, you will pass this case of flour-based foods where customer's mostly take to go. As I was not so interested in these items, I proceeded to the interior to get a bowl of beef noodle soup. There are many varieties of beef noodle soup to choose from: Consommé, Tomato, Braised, and Curry:



This is half of the menu items shown at the storefront. I didn't feel like barraging the store with pictures, since I'm still trying to get over the little self-consciousness when I point and click in public. Anyway, I have tried the 140 NT braised beef noodle soup and the 150 NT Tomato beef noodle soup. I have yet to muster the bravery to attempt the Curry beef noodle soup, since that sounds really repulsive to my tongue.



The interior was really clean, and I appreciated the individual paper sleeves for each pair of chopsticks provided at each table. There are tables for 2 and 4, but I am sure they can accomodate bigger parties with a little table shuffling. The tables are clean, and the chairs are pretty comfortable. This store uses cushiony chairs instead of using wooden chairs or metal stools commonly provided at low-end places. The store is focusing on getting tradtional flour-based foods of high quality at an affordable price, so I guess they did not want to spend too much on interior design. So, I marked a 3 out of 5 signifying a clean, comfortable decor.



The service was not so good because they may be either understaffed or the workers do not have an efficient handle on customer flow management. The host's attention was divided between servicing take out orders outside, and ringing up dine-in customers. Thus, I had to seat myself and wait a moment before the host rushed back to ring up my bill. I also had to flag down my server to order instead of being asked. Besides these little annoyances, their service was polite and punctual, so they deserve a 3 out of 5 for providing quintessential Taiwanese service.  



The braised beef noodle soup presented is very simple. It has 4 simple elements: stock, meat, noodles, and garnish. Unlike other beef noodle shops, Lao Dong requires you to pay an extra 40NT for vegetables. That fact did not affect my rating of the noodle soup. The stock was on the lighter side of braised beef stock. They probably did not add too much soy sauce,oil, or peppers, which is a refreshing touch as each slurp did not taste too salty or overwhelmingly oily. The chunks of beef were tender and infused with the gravy it was braised in. The noodles were amazingly firm yet chewable. They snap easily with each bite, which is a common characteristic of noodles with a high Q factor. The noodles were seasoned or cooked with the broth long enough to carry on the flavor of the beef noodle soup with each strand. I rarely finish a whole bowl of beef noodle soup. Usually, it's because they provided too many chunks of beef and I just got sick of eating beef chunks. However, this restaurant provided the right amount of high quality beef chunks so that I did not get sick of it by the end of the meal. Also, I do not usually drink the rest of the soup, but I made an exception to this bowl because the broth was refreshing and flavorful. Lao Dong Beef Noodle Soup found a good balance between quality ingredients and reasonable quantity, and serve each bowl with that formula. Try to stay away form the tomato beef noodle soup though, because they used green tomatoes in my bowl. The soup became too acidic without the pleasant flavor of a fresh ripe tomato. Despite that mishap, they deserve a 4 out of 5 in food quality.


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Their tomato beef noodles is amazing, very delicious. I get it every time, and I want some right now.

Anonymous said...

Dude, your address is WAY off! I just arrived at the address you published, which is a good 20 minutes away by taxi from the real location. Only the phone number you've published is correct. Now I have to backtrack and blow $20usd on cab fare that should only have been $5. I should've known not to trust your review when you said that curry beef noodles sounds really repulsive to your tongue.

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