logo
11 underrated Asian dishes (and why you should absolutely be eating them)

11 underrated Asian dishes (and why you should absolutely be eating them)

Tatler Asiaa day ago

2. Brinjal moju (Sri Lanka)
Sri Lanka is perhaps the centre of underrated Asian dishes. Brinjal moju is essentially eggplant but with an edge. Sliced into batons, deep-fried to a caramelised crisp, then doused in a pickled blend of vinegar, mustard seeds, chilli and sugar, brinjal moju hits all the high notes: sweet, sour, spicy, umami. Served as a side dish in rice-and-curry spreads, it often plays second fiddle unfairly. It deserves to be the star of the plate.
Again, Sri Lankan food as a whole is criminally underrepresented abroad, and the word 'moju' doesn't exactly roll off the tongue. But for eggplant sceptics, this dish can be a revelation. 3. Chim chum (Thailand/Laos)
Above (Photo: Takeaway / Wikimedia Commons)
Chim chum isn't just dinner—it's an experience. Diners gather around a clay pot over charcoal, cooking thin slices of pork, leafy greens and glass noodles in a bubbling herbal broth infused with galangal, lemongrass and kaffir lime. It's casual, communal and deeply aromatic. The underrated factor? Chim chum doesn't have the glamour of tom yum or pad thai, and it's rarely seen on Western menus. But its DIY style, perfumed broth and built-in social vibe make it an ideal gateway to Southeast Asian home cooking. 4. Oo-peh-tshiat (Taiwan)
Above (Photo: Rockhsp / Wikimedia Commons)
Translating to 'randomly sliced', this cold platter of blanched meats and offal might not win beauty contests, but it wins on pure flavour. Served with intensely savoury dips like garlic soy or chilli oil, it's Taiwan's answer to charcuterie. The texture is chewy, slippery, tender—sometimes all at once. It may not be getting as much love due to offal being a central ingredient, plus the dish's minimal presentation is hardly social-media friendly. But it's the rest of the world that needs to adjust. For anyone serious about nose-to-tail dining, oo-peh-tshiat is a masterclass. 5. Yuxiang rousi (China)
Translated as 'fish-fragrant pork', though it contains no fish, this Sichuan classic features shredded pork stir-fried with wood ear mushrooms, bamboo shoots and a sauce of chilli bean paste, garlic and vinegar. The result? A sticky-sweet, spicy-sour flavour bomb with absurd depth. As far as Asian dishes go, the name is misleading, and yuxiang rousi often gets overshadowed by better-known Sichuan fare like mapo tofu. But once you understand the poetic misdirection of 'fish-fragrant', a style, not a literal descriptor, you'll understand why locals adore it. 6. Thịt kho tàu (Vietnam)
Comfort food at its most poetic: pork belly and hard-boiled eggs slow-braised in coconut water, fish sauce and caramelised sugar. How is your mouth not watering at that description? The broth turns deep amber, rich yet mellow. Traditionally eaten during Tết (Lunar New Year), it tastes like home, memory and quiet celebration. Unfortunately, it doesn't get the love it deserves, probably because it lacks the immediate pop of herbs and crunch that makes pho, bánh mì or other Asian dishes so camera-ready. But give it a slow hour with steamed rice, and it will reward you with warmth and nostalgia. 7. Stir-fried water spinach (various regions)
Above (Photo: Obsidian Soul / Wikimedia Commons)
Known as kangkong, morning glory or ong choy, this aquatic vegetable has regional flavour variations across Asia. In the Philippines, it's stir-fried with garlic and bagoong (fermented shrimp paste) for a pungent, umami kick. In Thai cuisine, pad pak boong adds bird's eye chilies and soy sauce for a spicier, smokier profile. Meanwhile, in Chinese kitchens, ong choy is often wok-fried with fermented bean curd, offering a creamier, more mellow note.
These shifts in seasoning not only highlight local preferences but also reveal the plant's incredible adaptability—from briny to sweet, bold to delicate—making it a quiet yet essential canvas in Southeast Asian cooking. It's usually seen as too cheap, quick and humble to headline. But ask anyone from Thailand to the Philippines, and they'll tell you: no rice meal should be complete without it. 8. Salted egg yolk crab (Southeast Asia)
Above (Photo: Sanjai Sudheesh / Pexels)
You might argue that salted egg had its moment a decade ago, but only the flavour and not this particular dish. At least not really. Salted egg yolk crab is maximalism on a plate: deep-fried and tossed in a thick, grainy sauce of mashed salted duck egg yolks, curry leaves and butter. It's creamy, funky and dangerously addictive. Found in Singapore and Malaysia, it's a celebration dish that never quite cracked the global seafood scene. Why? Salted egg yolk anything is still niche outside Asia, and cracking crab isn't for the faint of heart. But for fans of bold, savoury decadence, this is it. 9. Popiah basah (Malaysia/Singapore)
A soft spring roll packed with julienned jicama, egg, tofu and sometimes shrimp or Chinese sausage, wrapped in a delicate crepe and drizzled with sweet bean sauce. It's juicy, fresh and perfectly balanced. Unlike its fried relatives, popiah basah is tender and textural, a snack that eats like a meal. Why the low profile? It's tricky to make, perishable and doesn't travel well. That said, it might be one of Southeast Asia's best-kept lunch secrets.
See more: The most underrated Malaysian dishes, according to chefs 10. Douhua (China)
Above (Photo: David / Wikimedia Commons)
A warm or cold tofu dessert that's barely held together, douhua is all about texture. Imagine silken curds bathed in ginger syrup, brown sugar or even savoury sauces in some regions. It's light, calming and deeply nostalgic for many Chinese families. Why it's slept on? Tofu maintains its reputation as a health food or meat substitute. But douhua isn't trying to imitate anything. It's an original, and it's glorious. 11. Dinakdakan (Philippines)
A bold and boisterous dish from the Ilocos region, dinakdakan is made from grilled pig parts—typically ears, face and sometimes brain—chopped finely and tossed with onions, calamansi juice, vinegar and sometimes a touch of mayo for creaminess. It's tangy, smoky and rich, with a delightful chew. Unfortunately, it's one of those Asian dishes whose reputation takes a hit thanks to the innards in the ingredients. But if sisig can get through that hurdle, so can dinakdakan. Those who love lechon and texture will enjoy this culinary gem. It's bold, ancestral and unapologetically local.
Don't miss: 11 classic Filipino dishes everyone needs to try: sinigang, adobo, and more

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

11 underrated Asian dishes (and why you should absolutely be eating them)
11 underrated Asian dishes (and why you should absolutely be eating them)

Tatler Asia

timea day ago

  • Tatler Asia

11 underrated Asian dishes (and why you should absolutely be eating them)

2. Brinjal moju (Sri Lanka) Sri Lanka is perhaps the centre of underrated Asian dishes. Brinjal moju is essentially eggplant but with an edge. Sliced into batons, deep-fried to a caramelised crisp, then doused in a pickled blend of vinegar, mustard seeds, chilli and sugar, brinjal moju hits all the high notes: sweet, sour, spicy, umami. Served as a side dish in rice-and-curry spreads, it often plays second fiddle unfairly. It deserves to be the star of the plate. Again, Sri Lankan food as a whole is criminally underrepresented abroad, and the word 'moju' doesn't exactly roll off the tongue. But for eggplant sceptics, this dish can be a revelation. 3. Chim chum (Thailand/Laos) Above (Photo: Takeaway / Wikimedia Commons) Chim chum isn't just dinner—it's an experience. Diners gather around a clay pot over charcoal, cooking thin slices of pork, leafy greens and glass noodles in a bubbling herbal broth infused with galangal, lemongrass and kaffir lime. It's casual, communal and deeply aromatic. The underrated factor? Chim chum doesn't have the glamour of tom yum or pad thai, and it's rarely seen on Western menus. But its DIY style, perfumed broth and built-in social vibe make it an ideal gateway to Southeast Asian home cooking. 4. Oo-peh-tshiat (Taiwan) Above (Photo: Rockhsp / Wikimedia Commons) Translating to 'randomly sliced', this cold platter of blanched meats and offal might not win beauty contests, but it wins on pure flavour. Served with intensely savoury dips like garlic soy or chilli oil, it's Taiwan's answer to charcuterie. The texture is chewy, slippery, tender—sometimes all at once. It may not be getting as much love due to offal being a central ingredient, plus the dish's minimal presentation is hardly social-media friendly. But it's the rest of the world that needs to adjust. For anyone serious about nose-to-tail dining, oo-peh-tshiat is a masterclass. 5. Yuxiang rousi (China) Translated as 'fish-fragrant pork', though it contains no fish, this Sichuan classic features shredded pork stir-fried with wood ear mushrooms, bamboo shoots and a sauce of chilli bean paste, garlic and vinegar. The result? A sticky-sweet, spicy-sour flavour bomb with absurd depth. As far as Asian dishes go, the name is misleading, and yuxiang rousi often gets overshadowed by better-known Sichuan fare like mapo tofu. But once you understand the poetic misdirection of 'fish-fragrant', a style, not a literal descriptor, you'll understand why locals adore it. 6. Thịt kho tàu (Vietnam) Comfort food at its most poetic: pork belly and hard-boiled eggs slow-braised in coconut water, fish sauce and caramelised sugar. How is your mouth not watering at that description? The broth turns deep amber, rich yet mellow. Traditionally eaten during Tết (Lunar New Year), it tastes like home, memory and quiet celebration. Unfortunately, it doesn't get the love it deserves, probably because it lacks the immediate pop of herbs and crunch that makes pho, bánh mì or other Asian dishes so camera-ready. But give it a slow hour with steamed rice, and it will reward you with warmth and nostalgia. 7. Stir-fried water spinach (various regions) Above (Photo: Obsidian Soul / Wikimedia Commons) Known as kangkong, morning glory or ong choy, this aquatic vegetable has regional flavour variations across Asia. In the Philippines, it's stir-fried with garlic and bagoong (fermented shrimp paste) for a pungent, umami kick. In Thai cuisine, pad pak boong adds bird's eye chilies and soy sauce for a spicier, smokier profile. Meanwhile, in Chinese kitchens, ong choy is often wok-fried with fermented bean curd, offering a creamier, more mellow note. These shifts in seasoning not only highlight local preferences but also reveal the plant's incredible adaptability—from briny to sweet, bold to delicate—making it a quiet yet essential canvas in Southeast Asian cooking. It's usually seen as too cheap, quick and humble to headline. But ask anyone from Thailand to the Philippines, and they'll tell you: no rice meal should be complete without it. 8. Salted egg yolk crab (Southeast Asia) Above (Photo: Sanjai Sudheesh / Pexels) You might argue that salted egg had its moment a decade ago, but only the flavour and not this particular dish. At least not really. Salted egg yolk crab is maximalism on a plate: deep-fried and tossed in a thick, grainy sauce of mashed salted duck egg yolks, curry leaves and butter. It's creamy, funky and dangerously addictive. Found in Singapore and Malaysia, it's a celebration dish that never quite cracked the global seafood scene. Why? Salted egg yolk anything is still niche outside Asia, and cracking crab isn't for the faint of heart. But for fans of bold, savoury decadence, this is it. 9. Popiah basah (Malaysia/Singapore) A soft spring roll packed with julienned jicama, egg, tofu and sometimes shrimp or Chinese sausage, wrapped in a delicate crepe and drizzled with sweet bean sauce. It's juicy, fresh and perfectly balanced. Unlike its fried relatives, popiah basah is tender and textural, a snack that eats like a meal. Why the low profile? It's tricky to make, perishable and doesn't travel well. That said, it might be one of Southeast Asia's best-kept lunch secrets. See more: The most underrated Malaysian dishes, according to chefs 10. Douhua (China) Above (Photo: David / Wikimedia Commons) A warm or cold tofu dessert that's barely held together, douhua is all about texture. Imagine silken curds bathed in ginger syrup, brown sugar or even savoury sauces in some regions. It's light, calming and deeply nostalgic for many Chinese families. Why it's slept on? Tofu maintains its reputation as a health food or meat substitute. But douhua isn't trying to imitate anything. It's an original, and it's glorious. 11. Dinakdakan (Philippines) A bold and boisterous dish from the Ilocos region, dinakdakan is made from grilled pig parts—typically ears, face and sometimes brain—chopped finely and tossed with onions, calamansi juice, vinegar and sometimes a touch of mayo for creaminess. It's tangy, smoky and rich, with a delightful chew. Unfortunately, it's one of those Asian dishes whose reputation takes a hit thanks to the innards in the ingredients. But if sisig can get through that hurdle, so can dinakdakan. Those who love lechon and texture will enjoy this culinary gem. It's bold, ancestral and unapologetically local. Don't miss: 11 classic Filipino dishes everyone needs to try: sinigang, adobo, and more

The living legacy of Chinatowns around the world
The living legacy of Chinatowns around the world

Tatler Asia

time3 days ago

  • Tatler Asia

The living legacy of Chinatowns around the world

2. Yaowarat, Bangkok Above Bangkok (Photo: Mike González / Pexels) When King Rama I moved the Thai capital to Bangkok in the 1780s, Chinese traders resettled along the Chao Phraya River. Yaowarat Road became the spine of Bangkok's Chinatown, a gilded stretch of gold shops, shrines and shophouses where commerce and culture intertwined. For over two centuries, Yaowarat has remained vibrantly Chinese yet unmistakably Thai. Temples like Wat Mangkon Kamalawat draw worshippers, while street hawkers serve everything from bird's nest soup to Thai-Chinese fusion dishes with generations of culinary know-how behind them. Throughout the centuries, experts, industry insiders and influencers have made Yaowarat well-known. Gentrification has brought boutique hotels and speakeasies, but Yaowarat's spirit remains thick as fish maw soup. The older generation still sweeps storefronts at dawn, while the younger crowd turns family stalls into branded foodie empires. 3. San Francisco, USA Above San Francisco (Photo: Ricky Esquivel / Pexels) Established in the 1850s, San Francisco's Chinatown is the oldest in the US. Born from Gold Rush dreams and hardened by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the neighbourhood became a fortress against institutional racism. After the 1906 earthquake, the community rebuilt with ornate Chinese-inspired architecture, partly to attract tourists, partly to reclaim dignity. For decades, it was home to Chinese labourers, laundries and secret societies. Today, it's a bustling cultural hub, where Cantonese grandmothers haggle over bok choy and next-gen chefs serve Peking duck in sleek dining rooms. However, encroaching gentrification from tech giants has put immense pressure on the neighbourhood. But Chinatown's residents are reorganising, establishing cultural districts, protecting rent-controlled housing and resisting eviction. Here, the dragon still dances, and it still breathes fire. 4. Flushing, New York, USA Above Flushing (Photo: via Wikimedia Commons) While Manhattan's Chinatown was once the flagship, the real Chinese community boom has shifted to Flushing, Queens. Starting in the 1980s, an influx of immigrants from Fujian, Taiwan and mainland China transformed Flushing into a multilingual megahub. Unlike its Manhattan predecessor, Flushing is less performative and more lived-in. Here, you'll find regional Chinese cuisines rarely seen outside the mainland. Think Lanzhou hand-pulled noodles, Dongbei hot pot and Taiwanese shaved ice. Now, Flushing is rapidly expanding but faces the same gentrification threats as many of the other Chinatowns on this list. Malls, high-rises and luxury condos are appearing at dizzying rates. Still, the community is vocal: demanding infrastructure, transit investment and cultural preservation in the face of displacement. 5. London, Soho, UK Above London (Photo: Artūras Kokorevas / Pexels) The UK's first Chinese enclave started in Limehouse in the 19th century. It was initially home to sailors and working-class migrants. Post-WWII, however, many relocated to Soho, where Chinatown took root amid narrow streets and crumbling postwar buildings. From humbler beginnings, London's Chinatown evolved into a vibrant food and nightlife hub, with Cantonese roast shops, bakeries and later, pan-Asian influences. It's also home to community centres and Chinese-language newspapers that have helped generations settle and eventually thrive. Now, Soho's rise as a nightlife capital and tourist zone has brought soaring rents and a flood of chain restaurants. Yet local organisers are resisting whitewashing, ensuring that alongside the bubble tea and barbecue, the soul of Chinatown remains unmistakably Chinese and defiantly local. 6. Melbourne, Australia Above Melbourne (Photo: Pat Whelen via Pexels) Formed during Australia's 1850s gold rush, Melbourne's Chinatown is the oldest continuously inhabited Chinatown in the Western world. Early Chinese immigrants braved exclusion laws and rigid policies to form tight-knit communities along Little Bourke Street. Over the decades, it evolved from goldfield grit to Art Deco elegance, becoming a cultural landmark for both old and new generations of Chinese-Australians. These days, Melbourne's Chinatown still boasts traditional restaurants and lunar festivals. However, many young Chinese Australians are opening contemporary eateries, fashion boutiques and co-working studios, developing a stylish intersection of heritage and innovation.

These cities have the best skylines in the world—which one are you travelling to?
These cities have the best skylines in the world—which one are you travelling to?

Tatler Asia

time05-06-2025

  • Tatler Asia

These cities have the best skylines in the world—which one are you travelling to?

6 Asian cities are in the top 10 list of cities with the best skylines. Which one will you choose for your next adventure? Hong Kong's skyline is iconic—and we don't need to be on any list to know that. But it does feel good that our beloved city's skyline has been officially recognised as among the very best in the world, according to a recent study by Slingo. The company scrutinised the world's most iconic skylines, analysing social media data, the number of skyscrapers each city boasts, and how closely they match the 'golden ratio'—which in archeological term means a mathematical constant which is used to create well-balanced structures. New York, which has 318 buildings which are more than 150m tall, clinched top spot among the world's best skylines, while from Asia, several cities nabbed places in the top 10: Dubai at 2nd spot, Mumbai at 4th, Shanghai at 5th, then Hong Kong, Bangkok and Singapore at 7th, 8th and 9th respectively. Which one will you be flying to next for the best Instagram-worthy views of iconic skylines? Also read: Art-inspired journeys: 8 travel destinations that capture the spirit of famous masterpieces

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store