Restaurant in Alameda, United States
Shared-Plate Burmese

Burma Superstar's Alameda location on Park Street is the East Bay's most accessible entry point for Burmese cooking, with tea leaf salad and rotating seasonal preparations anchoring a reliable, mid-range menu. Easy to book, practical for weeknights, and better suited to a casual dinner than a special occasion. If you've been once, the move is to push past the standards and ask what's rotating seasonally.
If you're choosing between Burma Superstar and a generic pan-Asian spot on Park Street, pick Burma Superstar. The Alameda outpost of the Bay Area's most-recognized Burmese small chain delivers a menu that most diners in this part of the East Bay won't find replicated nearby. It's a reliable, approachable weeknight option and a reasonable first introduction to Burmese food for someone who's never tried it. It is not, however, a special-occasion destination — for that, look elsewhere in the city's dining mix.
Burma Superstar's Alameda location at 1345 Park St sits on a stretch of Park Street that has become a genuine dining corridor for island residents. The Burma Superstar name carries weight in the Bay Area — the original Richmond and Inner Sunset San Francisco locations built the brand's reputation over decades on tea leaf salad and rainbow salad, dishes that have become shorthand for accessible Burmese cooking in Northern California. The Alameda outpost inherits that template: a mid-range, family-friendly dining room with a menu that rotates around Burmese staples calibrated for a broad audience.
If you've been once and ordered conservatively, the practical move on a return visit is to work outward from the dishes you already know. The tea leaf salad is the obvious anchor , it's what most regulars keep returning for , but the seasonal vegetable preparations and noodle dishes tend to shift in emphasis depending on what's available. In the cooler months, richer, more warming preparations tend to come forward; spring and early summer are when lighter salad-forward options feel most appropriate. Coming in during those shoulder seasons, and asking what's new or freshly rotating, is a better strategy than defaulting to the same order every time.
The atmosphere sits in the casual-but-intentional range: not a drop-in counter, but not a room that requires conversation management either. Noise levels are manageable at lunch and during early dinner seatings. By mid-evening on a weekend the room fills, and the energy picks up noticeably. If a quieter meal matters to you, aim for an early dinner slot on a weeknight.
Booking is easy , this is not a difficult reservation to secure, and walk-ins are realistic at off-peak times. It is a practical neighborhood restaurant, not a destination that requires weeks of lead time. For context on how it sits within the broader Alameda dining picture, see our full Alameda restaurants guide. If you're also planning around a visit, our Alameda hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are worth checking.
For diners curious about how Burma Superstar fits into a wider Bay Area dining week, the contrast is useful: the technical ambition of Lazy Bear in San Francisco or the precision of Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg represent entirely different categories of investment and experience. Burma Superstar is not competing in that tier, and it doesn't try to. What it offers is consistent, accessible Burmese cooking in a neighborhood that has limited alternatives in this cuisine.
Other Alameda restaurants worth knowing for comparison: Ceron Kitchen, Chong Qing Noodles House, East Ocean Seafood Restaurant, Fikscue, and Hang Ten Boiler each cover different parts of the price and cuisine spectrum on the island.
Quick reference: 1345 Park St, Alameda , easy to book, casual atmosphere, leading visited early evening on weekdays for a quieter experience.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Burma Superstar | — | |
| Spinning Bones | $$ | — |
| Utzutzu | $$$$ | — |
| Fikscue | — | |
| St. George Spirits | — | |
| Ceron Kitchen | — |
How Burma Superstar stacks up against the competition.
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