Restaurant in Shanghai, China
Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan
210Pearl Points24-hour Michelin noodles at street-food prices.

About Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan
A Michelin Plate (2024) noodle shop at ¥ pricing, Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan is one of Shanghai's most accessible Michelin-recognised meals. The yellow croaker noodles with pickled vegetables and shredded pork noodles with scallions are the dishes to order. Open 24 hours, no reservation required — walk in, eat well, and leave having spent almost nothing.
Verdict
If you are in Shanghai and want a bowl of noodles that has earned a Michelin Plate (2024), Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan is the answer — and at ¥ pricing, it is one of the most accessible Michelin-recognised meals you will find anywhere in China. The shredded pork noodles with scallions and the yellow croaker noodles with pickled vegetables are the dishes to order. This is a no-frills, workhorse noodle shop that runs 24 hours a day, which means it works for explorers who eat on their own schedule and are not chasing a reservation window. Book? You almost certainly do not need to. Just show up.
About Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan
Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan sits on Ziteng Road in Minhang District — not the glossiest address in Shanghai, and that is largely the point. The shop reads, from the outside, like hundreds of other lane-side noodle counters scattered across the city. What separates it is the cooking: a focused menu built around authentic Shanghai-style noodles, congee, rice, and snacks, with a few dishes that have become the reason people make the trip out to Minhang specifically.
The three dishes with the clearest reputation are the shredded pork noodles with scallions, the yellow croaker noodles with pickled vegetables, and the deep-fried pork chops. Yellow croaker with pickled mustard greens (雪菜黄鱼) is a classic Shanghainese pairing: the fish is delicate, the greens add a sour-salt contrast, and the broth carries both. It is the kind of dish that rewards a food-focused traveller who wants to eat what locals actually eat, rather than what hotel concierges recommend. The shredded pork noodles are the quieter, everyday option , less dramatic but technically well-executed, with scallions doing real flavour work rather than serving as garnish.
The 24-hour format is not a gimmick. It reflects the shop's role in the neighbourhood: a reliable, consistent destination regardless of the hour. For travellers with early flights out of Hongqiao, late arrivals, or simply an appetite at 2 AM, this is a practical asset that most comparable noodle shops in Shanghai cannot match. Congee is also on the menu, which makes Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan a reasonable choice for a restorative early breakfast or a light late-night meal beyond noodles alone.
Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 is a meaningful signal for a venue at this price point. The Plate is Michelin's designation for restaurants serving food of good quality , it is not a star, but it is not nothing either, particularly for a ¥ noodle counter competing on the same guide as Shanghai's multi-star fine-dining rooms. For context, the Plate puts Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan in the same conversation as other respected Shanghai institutions recognised by the guide, including Ho Hung Kee and 102 House.
Group Dining and the Private Experience
This is not a venue that offers a private dining room or a formal group booking infrastructure. The editorial angle worth flagging for groups is that the shared, counter-style environment of a noodle shop like this one is itself the experience , you are eating alongside neighbourhood regulars, at pace, without ceremony. For a group of food-focused travellers who want to eat well without managing a formal booking, that informality is a feature. Groups of four or more should consider arriving together and being ready to wait briefly at peak meal times, though the 24-hour schedule means off-peak visits are always an option.
If your group wants a more structured sit-down experience with private dining options, Fu He Hui operates at ¥¥¥¥ and offers a vegetarian tasting format with considerably more service architecture. For Shanghainese cuisine with a more formal room, Taian Table and Xin Rong Ji (West Nanjing Road) are both better suited to group occasions requiring a reserved table and a composed menu.
Practical Details
Reservations: Not required , walk-in only, open 24 hours. Dress: Casual; this is a neighbourhood noodle shop, no dress code applies. Budget: ¥ pricing, making this one of the most affordable Michelin-recognised meals in Shanghai. Address: 243 Ziteng Rd, Minhang District, Shanghai. Booking difficulty: Easy , no advance planning needed.
How It Compares
Explore More in Shanghai and Beyond
For more options across the city, our full Shanghai restaurants guide covers the range from ¥ noodle shops to multi-star tasting menus. You can also browse our Shanghai hotels guide, Shanghai bars guide, Shanghai wineries guide, and Shanghai experiences guide for a full picture of the city.
If the noodle-and-congee format appeals and you are travelling elsewhere in the region, Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle in Hong Kong is the closest peer in terms of format and Michelin recognition. For something further afield, Khao Tom Thanon Di Buk in Phuket operates in a similar late-night, no-frills register. Elsewhere in China, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou, and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing are worth consulting depending on your itinerary.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan?
There is no bar at Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan — this is a neighbourhood noodle shop, not a drinking venue. Seating is casual and communal in format. The draw is the food: Michelin Plate-recognised noodles at ¥ prices, available around the clock.
Can Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan accommodate groups?
Groups can eat here, but there is no private dining room or formal group booking infrastructure. This is a walk-in noodle shop, so larger parties should arrive at off-peak hours to avoid a wait for adjacent seating. For groups that need a reserved space, Yè Shanghai or Fu He Hui are better-suited options in the city.
Does Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan handle dietary restrictions?
The menu centres on pork and fish-based noodle dishes — shredded pork noodles, yellow croaker noodles with pickled vegetables, and deep-fried pork chops are the signatures. Congee, rice, and snacks round out the offering, which gives some flexibility, but this is not a venue with a structured allergen management process. Vegetarians and those avoiding pork or seafood will find limited options.
What are alternatives to Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan in Shanghai?
For other Michelin-recognised noodle or congee options at low price points, Shanghai has several comparable street-level spots, though few match Ding Te Le's 24-hour availability. If you want to step up in format and price, Yè Shanghai covers Shanghainese cuisine with a full dining experience, and Fu He Hui is the reference point for upscale Chinese vegetarian in the city.
What should a first-timer know about Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan?
The address is 243 Ziteng Road in Minhang District — not central, and the setting is intentionally plain. The shop earned a Michelin Plate in 2024 on the strength of its food, particularly the shredded pork noodles with scallions and the yellow croaker noodles with pickled vegetables. Come hungry, bring cash, dress casually, and do not expect a polished dining room.
How far ahead should I book Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan?
No booking needed — Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan is walk-in only and open 24 hours a day. To avoid queues, aim for off-peak hours rather than standard lunch or dinner rushes. The ¥ price point and Michelin Plate recognition mean it draws a crowd at peak times.
Location
243 Ziteng Rd, Minhang District, Shanghai, China, 201101
Compare Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan | Noodles and Congee | Easy | |
| Fu He Hui | Vegetarian | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Ming Court | Cantonese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Royal China Club | Chinese, Cantonese | Unknown | |
| Scarpetta | Italian | Unknown | |
| Yè Shanghai | Shanghainese | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Fu He Hui, Vegetarian, ¥¥¥¥
- Ming Court, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Royal China Club, Chinese, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Scarpetta, Italian, ¥¥¥
- Yè Shanghai, Shanghainese, ¥¥
At the ¥ end of Shanghai's dining spectrum, Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan sits in a different conversation from most of its comparison set. Yè Shanghai at ¥¥ is the closest in price, but it operates as a full-service Shanghainese restaurant with a broader menu and a more formal room, better suited to a group dinner with structure, but not the right choice if you want a late-night bowl of noodles at 1 AM. Ding Te Le's 24-hour schedule and walk-in format give it a practical flexibility that no ¥¥ or above venue in Shanghai can match.
Ming Court and Royal China Club both operate at ¥¥¥ in the Cantonese register, if your priority is a composed, sit-down Cantonese meal with strong service, either is a better fit than a noodle counter. Scarpetta at ¥¥¥ is Italian and serves an entirely different purpose. None of these venues compete directly with Ding Te Le on format or price.
Fu He Hui at ¥¥¥¥ is the clearest contrast: a vegetarian tasting menu with private dining rooms, full service architecture, and a price point roughly ten times higher per head. It is the right call for a special-occasion group dinner. Ding Te Le is the right call when you want the most flavour per renminbi, maximum scheduling flexibility, and a genuine neighbourhood eating experience with Michelin-recognised cooking behind it. These two venues serve entirely different decisions.
Recognized By
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