Location: Bing Bing Dim Sum is on E Passyunk Avenue in South Philly, on a triangular plot at the intersection of 12th street and Morris Street. Soup Dumplings (Infatuation) Caterpillar Bread (Infatuation) Dim Sum Garden (Philly) What people are saying Popular Items Trending Restaurants Top Dishes Near Me Top Cuisines Near Me Trending Categories Nearby. Specialty cocktails, draft beer and a late night dining menu to satisfy your thirst and hunger cravings Established in 2016. An extensive happy hour menu run daily from 5-7pm in our bar & lounge. Private dining rooms available in beautiful Old Shanghai inspired decor. Below are some embedded urls to pictures in the Infatuation’s article on Bing Bing. Specialties: Dim Sum House offers a wonderful selection of Shanghai style Dim Sum and Cantonese style Dim Sum. The lighting at the bar at Bing Bing was not great and so my pictures did not come out well. The bun bread and the stuffing were delicious. Our easy-to-use app shows you all the restaurants and nightlife options in your city, along with menus, photos, and reviews. style finely shredded or pulled pork, cooked in a Chinese style BBQ sauce. Menus, Photos, Ratings and Reviews for Dim Sum Restaurants in Philadelphia - Dim Sum Restaurants Zomato is the best way to discover great places to eat in your city. Instead of cut pieces of pork that fill a traditional Chinese BBQ pork bun, the Caterpillar Bread filling was a Southern U.S. It appears that they make a long baked loaf of fluffy Chinese style bread stuffed with BBQ pork, and then cut slices off the loaf for each serving. I also tried the Caterpillar Bread which was essentially an open ended baked BBQ pork bun. I almost, almost, forgive them for charging $10 for only four of these dumplings. The dipping sauce was also really good, usually I find the traditional black vinegar based sauce to be sharp and acrid, but at Bing Bing the vinegar sauce is smoothed and mellowed. They packed a lot of unctuous soup into these dumplings and the pork filling was delicious, savory and slightly sweet. They were cooked perfectly, which you rarely see in the U.S., so the wrappers maintained their integrity and kept the soup contained. However, the pork soup dumpling were among the best I have had in a long time. The filling was a wad of overcooked greens with a slightly bitter cabbage flavor. The Dumplings: The Scarlet Dumplings, which are filled with Swiss shard, tofu and crispy garlic, were way over cooked. Overall the prices at Bing Bing seemed high for what they served. The eggplant mapo tofu was solidly tasty, but not worth the $16 they charge for it. The Dan Dan Noodles was great veganized, with shiitake mushroom pieces filling in for the traditional pork, and perfect al dente springy chewy noodles. The menu includes a handful of vegan items and they are willing to veganize some of the other items. Bing Bing Dim Sum is a hipster Chinese-fusion restaurant in South Philadelphia with a limited small plate menu that does not really rise to the title of Dim Sum.
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