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    Restaurant in Taichung, Taiwan

    Lou's (Nantun)

    250Pearl Points

    Michelin-recognised sesame oil cooking, no fuss.

    Lou's (Nantun), Restaurant in Taichung

    About Lou's (Nantun)

    Lou's earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2024 for sesame oil cooking that punches well above its $$ price point. The sesame oil chicken leg soup — simmered a full day — is the order to anchor your meal. Easy to book, casual in format, and one of the more reliable value stops in Taichung's comfort food tier.

    Who Should Book Lou's (Nantun)

    If you're back in Taichung after a first visit and want to understand why sesame oil cooking deserves its own category of attention, Lou's in Nantun is the right next stop. This is a spot for the return visitor who wants to eat like a local regular — someone who knows that Bib Gourmand recognition from Michelin in 2024 doesn't always mean queues and ceremony, but sometimes just means a neighbourhood shop has been doing one thing precisely right for a long time. Bring a friend who eats well, order more than you think you need, and go at lunch if you can.

    The Venue

    The exterior has changed — the large yellow sign that once marked the frontage has been replaced with a quieter, more muted colour scheme , but inside, Lou's operates with the same no-frills focus that earned it its reputation. The room is functional rather than designed, the kind of space where the visual interest is on the table, not the walls. Bowls arrive steaming, the broth carries a distinct amber depth from the sesame oil, and the cooking tells you immediately why this place has regulars who return week after week.

    Sesame oil is the organising principle here. Lou's has built its entire identity around the earthy, nutty character of the oil, and the kitchen uses it with discipline rather than excess. The sesame oil chicken leg soup is simmered for a full day , the result is a broth with genuine aromatic complexity, layers of wine and herbs working alongside the oil rather than competing with it. Add noodles to turn it into a complete meal; most regulars do. The pork kidney in sesame oil broth and the braised pork rice are made with the same care, and both are worth ordering on a return visit once you've worked through the soup.

    At the $$ price range, the value proposition here is not complicated. You are getting Michelin-recognised cooking at everyday Taiwanese prices. That combination is what the Bib Gourmand classification is designed to flag, and Lou's earns it straightforwardly. For context, a comparable bowl of carefully made Taiwanese comfort food at this level of technique would cost you significantly more at a venue positioned as a destination restaurant. Lou's charges what the neighbourhood charges.

    The Google rating of 4.3 across 1,657 reviews reflects a kitchen that consistently delivers rather than one that occasionally impresses. That volume of reviews with that score is a reliable signal: this is not a place with a spike of early enthusiasm followed by a slide. It holds its standard across a broad base of diners, including visitors who arrived with expectations set by the Michelin listing.

    Chef Bill Briand's name is attached to the kitchen here, which is an unusual detail for a Taiwanese sesame oil specialist of this type. The cooking itself, however, is grounded in Taiwanese comfort food tradition rather than in any fusion approach. The dishes that earned the recognition are the dishes that remain on the menu, and that consistency is the point.

    For the return visitor specifically, the move is to go beyond the chicken leg soup on a second trip and test the stir-fry side of the menu. The pork kidney dish in particular is the kind of thing that separates a diner who has been once from one who understands what the kitchen can do. It requires confidence from the kitchen to execute well, and the Michelin inspectors clearly found it worth noting. If offal is not your preference, the braised pork rice is a lower-commitment way to see the same sesame oil technique applied to a different format.

    Lou's is not a destination in the sense that you would plan a trip to Taichung around it, but it is the kind of place that improves a trip already in motion. If you are working through Taichung's food scene and want to understand the Bib Gourmand tier before spending more at YUENJI or booking a table at Chef Ah-Hsi's Old Time Restaurant, Lou's is a useful and genuinely rewarding stop. It also holds up well against other casual Taiwanese options in the city , see Chien Wei Seafood, Chin Chih Yuan (Central), and Feng Chi Goose for comparison across different Taiwanese comfort food formats.

    Taiwan's casual dining tier is among the most competitive in Asia. For broader context on what Bib Gourmand recognition signals in Taiwan, it is worth noting that venues like logy in Taipei and GEN in Kaohsiung represent the higher end of the country's recognised dining, while places like A Cun Beef Soup (Baoan Road) in Tainan and A Gan Yi Taro Balls in New Taipei show how the Bib Gourmand tier rewards deep specialism at accessible prices. Lou's sits comfortably in that company. If you want to see how Taiwanese cooking travels into champagne pairing territory, Fujin Tree Taiwanese Cuisine & Champagne (Songshan) in Taipei and Golden Formosa in Taipei offer a useful contrast. And if sesame oil cooking at Lou's opens up an appetite for exploring more of what the region offers, Ang Gu in Hsinchu County is another specialist worth tracking down.

    For planning the rest of your time in the city, see our full Taichung restaurants guide, Taichung hotels guide, Taichung bars guide, Taichung wineries guide, and Taichung experiences guide. For a resort contrast elsewhere in Taiwan, Volando Urai Spring Spa & Resort in Wulai District is worth considering if your itinerary extends north.

    Know Before You Go

    • Price range: $$ , everyday Taiwanese pricing, Michelin-recognised quality
    • Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024
    • Google rating: 4.3 / 5 (1,657 reviews)
    • Cuisine: Taiwanese, sesame oil specialist
    • Address: No. 65, Section 3, Xiangshang Rd, Nantun District, Taichung City, Taiwan 408
    • Booking difficulty: Easy
    • Dress code: Casual , this is a neighbourhood shop, not a formal dining room
    • Leading for: Solo diners, pairs, casual group meals, lunch

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Lou's (Nantun)?

    Lou's is a no-frills Bib Gourmand shop, so walk-ins are likely the norm rather than formal reservations. That said, a Michelin 2024 recognition at $$ pricing draws a crowd, so arriving early — especially at lunch — is the practical move. If you're planning around a specific visit to Taichung, check current contact options via local booking platforms since the venue's phone and website aren't publicly listed.

    What should I wear to Lou's (Nantun)?

    This is a no-frills Taiwanese shop with a muted, low-key exterior — come as you are. Casual clothes are entirely appropriate. There's no dress code signal in the venue's positioning, and the $$ price range confirms this is neighbourhood eating, not occasion dining.

    Can Lou's (Nantun) accommodate groups?

    Lou's operates as a small Taiwanese shop format, which typically means modest seating capacity. Groups of 2–4 are likely fine; larger parties should plan around off-peak times or expect a wait. The no-frills setting isn't configured for private dining or large celebrations.

    What should I order at Lou's (Nantun)?

    Start with the sesame oil chicken leg soup — simmered for a full day with wine and herbs, it's the dish that defines the kitchen. Add noodles to make it a complete meal. Pork kidney in sesame oil broth and braised pork rice are the other confirmed signature items, both Michelin-noted as precisely executed.

    Is Lou's (Nantun) good for solo dining?

    Yes. A no-frills Taiwanese shop at $$ is one of the better formats for eating alone — low pressure, quick service, and the sesame oil chicken soup is a full meal on its own once you add noodles. It's the kind of place where solo diners fit naturally alongside regulars.

    What should a first-timer know about Lou's (Nantun)?

    The large yellow sign that used to mark the frontage is gone — look for the muted exterior on Xiangshang Road, Section 3, Nantun District. The kitchen's focus is sesame oil cooking, which is a specific, earthy flavour profile: if that's not your preference, this isn't the right stop. If it is, the Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 recognition at $$ pricing makes it one of the better-value meals in Taichung.

    Can I eat at the bar at Lou's (Nantun)?

    Lou's is a Taiwanese shop format, not a bar-counter restaurant. Bar seating in the Western sense is unlikely here. Seating arrangements will be standard table service typical of no-frills Taiwanese diners — functional and direct, not designed for lingering.

    Location

    No. 65號, Section 3, Xiangshang Rd, Nantun District, Taichung City, Taiwan 408

    Taichung, Taiwan

    Compare Lou's (Nantun)

    Recognized Venues: Lou's (Nantun) and Peers
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Lou's (Nantun)$$
    JL StudioMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Sur-Michelin 1 Star$$$
    L'Atelier par YaoMichelin 1 Star$$$
    Oretachi No NikuyaMichelin 1 Star$$$
    YUENJIMichelin 1 Star$$$$

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    Lou's (Nantun) sits at the accessible end of Taichung's recognised dining tier, and that positioning is a feature rather than a limitation. At $$ with Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition, it does something none of its peer venues do: it delivers inspector-validated quality at everyday neighbourhood prices. If your priority is value for money and you want to understand what Taiwanese comfort food looks like at its most precise, Lou's is the clearest answer in the city's current Michelin set.

    For diners willing to spend more, the peer options in Taichung require a different kind of commitment. JL Studio ($$$$) operates in modern Singaporean territory and is the obvious choice if you want a full tasting-menu experience with serious wine options. YUENJI ($$$$) stays within Taiwanese cuisine but at a price point and formality level that make it a destination booking rather than a casual meal. Both are worth the spend for the right occasion, but neither competes with Lou's on value. At the $$$ tier, Sur- (Taiwanese contemporary) and L'Atelier par Yao (French Contemporary) offer more refined room experiences and broader menus, while Oretachi No Nikuya covers barbecue at the same price tier for a completely different format.

    The practical decision is straightforward: if you want to eat well without a reservation lead time or a significant spend, Lou's is the easiest booking in this peer group and the one most likely to overdeliver on expectations. If you are building a multi-night itinerary in Taichung and want to span the range, pair Lou's at $$ for a casual lunch with a dinner booking at Sur- or JL Studio to cover both ends of the city's dining quality spectrum.

    Recognized By

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