Phnom Penh Teo Chew Noodle House

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Haymarket, Australia

Cambodian restaurant· Chinese· Noodles

Phnom Penh Teo Chew Noodle House Reviews | Rating 4.3 out of 5 stars (3 reviews)

Phnom Penh Teo Chew Noodle House is located in Haymarket, Australia on Little Hay St. Phnom Penh Teo Chew Noodle House is rated 4.3 out of 5 in the category cambodian restaurant in Australia.

Address

Little Hay St

Open hours

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D

Damon Baker

Phnom Penh Teo Chew Noodle House is a stayer. It has been dominant in "the survival of the fittest" Asian food court scene for more than 10 years. Its name is deceiving - there aren't any true Cambodian or Teo Chew dishes on the illuminated backlit picture menu which displays some 50 dishes (one dish however is named Phnom Penh noodle soup). The menu features basic soup, rice and braised and wok-fried dishes with variations on the combination of ingredients used - so a fish-ball soup can have noodles, pork and other extras added. Most meals start from 8. There is laksa (which is quite popular), and other dishes include sate chicken noodle soup; braised seafood on rice; chilli seafood on rice; fish ball gow gee noodle soup; and that food court favourite - special-fried rice. With the noodle dishes you can choose from six varieties: thick egg; Hokkien; rice stick; mai funh vermicelli; for-funh vermicelli and thin egg. 'Number 12′ is a dish I always have at Phnom Penh Teo Chew Noodle House. It's the dumpling noodle soup with barbecued pork and I have it with the thick egg noodle. It's a substantial bowl. Chopped Chinese greens and coriander blend with chopped char-siu barbecued pork all floating above chewy thick egg noodles in a light chicken-style flavoured broth (which can be adjusted with the tray of condiments at the counter - try the sate chilli oil and dried chilli). There are four plump little wonton - basic and lightly seasoned with white pepper and wrapped in an egg wonton wrapper. In previous days there were usually five to six wonton but the lack of that extra wonton of by-gone days is well compensated by the almost mountainous serving of char-siu pork (and prices haven't increased for the past few years so there seems to be a bit of give and take). No frills. It's the simple dishes that can be the most unforgiving if not executed well and when a simple stall can make a simple bowl of wonton noodle soup well - the result is spectacular.

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Peter IN

Very good phnom penh noodle soup

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Kevin Staunton-Lambert

Really consistently good laksa here