Restaurant in Taipei, Taiwan
Pre-order required. Booking effort justified.

Ming Fu is a Michelin-starred, home-style Taiwanese restaurant in Taipei's Zhongshan District with three consecutive years on the OAD Casual Asia list. Book two to three weeks ahead minimum, pre-order the matsutake and abalone Buddha Jumps Over the Wall soup at reservation time, and go with a group of four or more to get the most from the sharing format. At $$$, it delivers serious cooking at a price well below Taipei's $$$$ fine-dining tier.
Getting a table at Ming Fu takes real commitment. This Zhongshan spot holds a Michelin star, ranks #31 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Asia list for 2025 (up from #26 in both 2023 and 2024), and pulls a 4.4 from over 1,550 Google reviews. Seats at both lunch (12–2 PM) and dinner (6–9 PM) go quickly, and if you want the signature Buddha Jumps Over the Wall soup, you need to pre-order before you arrive. Book well in advance, especially for weekends and special occasions.
Ming Fu, run by chef A Ming, is a home-style Taiwanese restaurant that punches well above its casual classification. The food is built around sharing — large portions designed for groups , and the menu includes items that are genuinely difficult to find elsewhere in Taipei. Mullet tripe and fresh fish maw appear regularly, putting Ming Fu in a different category from the standard Taiwanese dining options around Zhongshan. Think of it as the kind of restaurant where the food is technically accomplished but the atmosphere reads closer to a family table than a fine-dining room.
The kitchen's most discussed dish is the Buddha Jumps Over the Wall soup, and its construction is worth understanding before you book. Where traditional versions of this Cantonese-origin soup rely on pork ribs and taro, Ming Fu's interpretation uses matsutake mushrooms, ginkgo nuts, and abalone. The result is a preparation that signals serious ingredient sourcing and real kitchen ambition. Pre-ordering is mandatory, so factor that into your planning if this is the reason you're going , confirm when you make the reservation.
Ming Fu operates the same hours every day of the week: lunch from 12 PM to 2 PM and dinner from 6 PM to 9 PM. The tight two-hour service windows mean the kitchen is running at full pace throughout, and late arrivals risk a compressed meal. For a special occasion or celebratory dinner, the evening seating is the clearer choice , more time to pace through dishes. If you're after the Buddha Jumps Over the Wall soup, an early dinner booking gives you the leading chance of confirming a pre-order without the additional pressure of a compressed lunch window. Midweek evenings tend to be marginally easier to book than weekend slots, though with a Michelin star and consistent OAD recognition across three consecutive years, no slot should be assumed easy.
Ming Fu's format is sharing-oriented rather than structured as a formal tasting menu, but the progression of dishes across a meal here follows a clear logic. The kitchen moves from lighter preparations toward richer, ingredient-intensive dishes , the kind of arc where the abalone and matsutake soup lands as a late centrepiece rather than an opener. For groups celebrating a birthday, an anniversary, or a significant dinner with family, the format works well: dishes arrive for the table, the pacing is controlled by the kitchen's rhythm, and the portion sizes mean no one leaves underleveraged. For solo diners or couples, the sharing format still works, but ordering range is naturally limited compared to a larger group. A table of four or more gets the broadest experience of what Ming Fu does.
The aroma profile of a meal here is anchored in the kitchen's use of high-grade dried and preserved ingredients , the kind of deep, savoury scent that comes from properly prepared fish maw and slow-cooked broths. If you have eaten at serious Taiwanese banquet restaurants before, the kitchen smell when dishes arrive will read as familiar and credentialling. If this style of cooking is new to you, it signals quickly that the food is substantive rather than decorative.
Reservations: Book as far ahead as possible , minimum two to three weeks for weekend dinners, and further out for groups. Pre-order the Buddha Jumps Over the Wall soup at the time of booking if that dish is a priority. Hours: Daily, 12–2 PM lunch and 6–9 PM dinner. Price: $$$, placing it at mid-to-upper range for Taipei's casual dining tier , below the $$$$ fine-dining restaurants in the city but above everyday Taiwanese options. Dress: No formal dress code is listed, and the home-style, sharing-format atmosphere suggests smart casual is appropriate. Group size: Ming Fu is leading suited to tables of four or more to take full advantage of the sharing format and order across the menu. Couples work, but the experience narrows.
See the comparison section below for how Ming Fu sits against Taipei's other serious restaurants.
For more Taiwanese cooking in Taipei, Mountain and Sea House focuses on ingredient sourcing and classical Taiwanese preparation. Shin Yeh Taiwanese Signature offers a more formal banquet-style Taiwanese experience. Golden Formosa and Mipon are worth considering for different Taiwanese formats, and Fujin Tree Taiwanese Cuisine and Champagne in Songshan takes a more contemporary approach. For Taiwan beyond Taipei, JL Studio in Taichung and YUENJI in Taichung offer contrasting perspectives on what Taiwanese cooking can be. In Tainan, A Cun Beef Soup on Baoan Road is a different register entirely , essential for the south. Elsewhere in the region, GEN in Kaohsiung and Ang Gu in Hsinchu County round out a picture of serious Taiwanese dining outside the capital. If you want Taiwanese cooking in the United States, 886 in New York City is the reference point. For planning the rest of your time in Taipei, see our full Taipei restaurants guide, our Taipei hotels guide, our Taipei bars guide, our Taipei wineries guide, and our Taipei experiences guide. For something further afield and nature-focused, Volando Urai Spring Spa and Resort in Wulai District is worth the trip, and A Gan Yi Taro Balls in New Taipei is a classic detour for something casual and distinctly local.
Book at least two to three weeks ahead for a standard dinner reservation, and further out for weekend slots or groups of four or more. Ming Fu holds a Michelin star and has appeared on the OAD Casual Asia list three years running, which means demand is consistent rather than seasonal. If you want the Buddha Jumps Over the Wall soup, pre-order at the time of booking , it cannot be ordered on the day. At $$$, this is mid-to-upper range for Taipei casual dining, and the combination of Michelin recognition and a loyal local following keeps tables scarce.
No formal dress code is listed, and the home-style, sharing-focused format points toward smart casual. Ming Fu is a Michelin-starred restaurant in Taipei's Zhongshan District, so the neighbourhood and the price point both suggest you would not arrive in beachwear , but a jacket is not required. The vibe is closer to a serious family restaurant than a white-tablecloth fine-dining room. Dress as you would for a high-quality dinner with people you want to impress, without overthinking it.
This cannot be confirmed from available data. Ming Fu's menu is built around traditional Taiwanese ingredients, including offal items like mullet tripe and fish maw, and the signature soup contains abalone and shellfish-adjacent ingredients. If you have significant dietary restrictions, contact the restaurant directly before booking to confirm what is possible. Given the sharing format and the pre-order requirement for certain dishes, advance communication is practical regardless of dietary needs.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ming Fu | Taiwanese | $$$ | Hard |
| logy | Modern European, Asian Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Le Palais | Cantonese | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Taïrroir | Taiwanese/French, Taiwanese contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Mudan Tempura | Tempura | $$$$ | Unknown |
| de nuit | French Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
How Ming Fu stacks up against the competition.
check the venue's official channels before booking — Ming Fu's menu leans heavily on seafood and offal-based dishes like mullet tripe and fresh fish maw, which are central to the format rather than optional. The signature Buddha Jumps Over the Wall requires advance pre-ordering and contains abalone, matsutake mushrooms, and ginkgo, so ingredient substitution at this level is unlikely. If your group has serious dietary restrictions, this sharing-plate format may not be the right fit.
Book at minimum two to three weeks out for weekend dinners — more if you're visiting in peak season or bringing a group. Ming Fu holds a Michelin star and ranks #31 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Asia 2025 list, which keeps demand consistently high. If you want the Buddha Jumps Over the Wall, pre-order that at the time of booking: it is not available on the night without prior arrangement.
Ming Fu is classified as a casual restaurant — OAD lists it in its Casual Asia category — so there is no formal dress requirement. Clean, neat everyday clothes are appropriate; this is a neighbourhood Zhongshan spot serving home-style Taiwanese food, not a white-tablecloth tasting menu room. Overdressing is unnecessary, but the Michelin star means the room draws a mix of locals and international visitors, so smart casual is a reasonable default.
Ming Fu is primarily known for Taiwanese in Taipei.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.