Why Vancouver Has the World’s Best Dim Sum (and Where To Find It)

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ViatorTravel
Published in
2 min readSep 10, 2021

Heritage Asian Eatery owner and chef Felix Zhou dishes on Vancouver’s dim sum scene.

You’d be forgiven for not immediately connecting Vancouver with the rice rolls and egg tarts of dim sum. After all, some 6,000 miles (1.5 million hectares) of Pacific Ocean stretch between China — the traditional home of the morning meal — and the Canadian city. But friendly immigration policies, a high quality of life, and the ’97 handover of Hong Kong from Britain to China, brought Chinese people to the BC capital in huge waves in the 1990s. Especially those from Hong Kong and the Guangdong province, “where dim sum is almost a religion,” as Felix Zhou, owner and chef of Vancouver’s Heritage Asian Eatery, notes.

What is dim sum?

Sometimes called yum cha — which means “drinking tea” in Cantonese — dim sum consists of several small courses of bite-size dishes (think pork buns and sticky rice) served with tea. People in Vancouver “take the food very seriously and that shows not only in the number of dim sum restaurants in the city, but also by the quality of the food,” Zhou says. That means the barbecue pork and seafood dumplings have gotten so good that many believe it rivals the places serving the same stuff back in China and Hong Kong.

Why is dim sum so good in Vancouver?

That’s in part because almost half a million of the Vancouver area’s 2.5 million people are of Chinese descent, with many of them coming from well-off, dim-sum savvy families who migrated from Hong Kong prior to the handover to China in 1997. Great Chinese chefs found a welcoming audience among not only the immigrants and first-generation folks, but among all Vancouverites, who found the selection of dim sum options in Chinatown to be a point of pride for the city. While much of the best dim sum has migrated to the suburbs, a few restaurants still hold out there.

There’s still good dim sum to be found in Vancouver’s Chinatown, if you know where to go. Photo: Mike Kane / Viator

Want to know more about dim sum in Vancouver? Head to Viator for the full article.

Author: Naomi Tomky

Seattle-based writer Naomi Tomky explores the world with a hungry eye, digging into the intersection of food, culture, and travel. She is an Association of Food Journalists and Lowell Thomas award-winner, and her cookbook, The Pacific Northwest Seafood Cookbook, was declared one of 2019’s best by the San Francisco Chronicle. Follow her culinary travels and hunger-inducing ramblings on Twitter and Instagram.

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