

Tray Kitchen: Touted to be Korean dimsum, just opened a few days ago. Seriously, this is like going to Sunday dinner at Lola's (grandma's) house. Filipino style dimsum, with perfectly portioned dishes to try and share - lumpia, pancit, adobo, dinguan, etc. Isla Manila (FlipSum): Northgate area, plenty of parking. If you willing to branch out of regular ol' dim sum, then check out: Personal favorite dimsum joint in all of Seattle - I feel like the quality is higher, wider variety of dishes, and huge parking lot. Pretty busy, so carts have a high turnover and are stocked frequently. Best part? They open at 6 am - I have no shame when it comes to an early morning dim sum craving! Dim sum for the single person - they charge by the piece, which is ~60 cents for a big, juicy shu mai.

Chinese Restaurant International District 41 tips and reviews. 707 S King St (at 7th Ave S), Seattle, WA. The line is worth it, but call ahead to get a bit of a jump on the walk ins. Additionally, not really traditional dim sum - DTF specializes in the renowned soup dumplings.ĭim Sum King: Chinatown, half a block up from Bank of America on Jackson St. Daniel Plemmons: Fantastic Dim Sum for a great price. Portions are on the large side, so best if you have a voracious appetite, or splitting with a group of friends. Quality is meh during the day, but it definitely tastes better when it's steamed to order at night/willing to trade off quality to satisfy intense dimsum craving.ĭin Tai Fung: U-District or in Bellevue mall parking lot. IIRC, there's a small steaming fee, or the price is quite comparable to Chinatown prices save for 25-50 cent difference. They steam to order outside of dimsum hours, so great if you have a hankering for dimsum at night. Bamboo Village: Greenlake/Wallingford area private parking lot.
