The Bay Area’s Night Market features Hong Kong-style street food
Hong Kong’s famous night markets come to life in an unlikely place nearly 7,000 miles away: South San Francisco, “the industrial city.”
At the Night Market, a large, open space has a Hong Kong bus stop painted inside the entrance. At night, neon signs light up, replicating Hong Kong’s famous cityscape. Patrons sit at little blue, red and green plastic stools around round folding tables, just as they would in Hong Kong.

The exterior of the Night Market in South San Francisco, Calif., on Nov. 10, 2022.
Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATECustomers choose from a variety of street snacks, skewers, dim sum, desserts, boba drinks, wok-tossed rice plates, congee and cart noodles.
“I am really in love with Chinese street food,” owner Kevin Lee said. “It’s a sensory overload every second from the moment one sets foot on a sidewalk full of open kitchen stalls.”
My bowl of comfort

(Left to right) Chef Yang and Chef Fung make a noodle wonton soup at the Night Market in South San Francisco, Calif., on Nov. 10, 2022.
Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATELee was born and raised in San Francisco, and his parents are originally from Hong Kong. They ran a hobby shop on the South City property when he was young. When Lee took over the reins in 2016, he opened Spruce Cafe & Patisserie, one of the first third-wave coffee shops in South San Francisco. He then opened the Night Market next door in 2017, closed it in 2018 for a remodel and then reopened it in 2020.
Called dai pai dong (“big license stall”) in Cantonese, the food stalls date back to Hong Kong’s post-World War II era. They were a reliable stop for cheap eats among hungry patrons, students and night owls on a budget.
Still, the dai pai dong have been in decline in Hong Kong since the 1970s, as its government modernized. Places like the Night Market have become increasingly important in preserving a distinct part of Hong Kong’s culture.

Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE

Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE
Steamed dumplings at the Night Market. (Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE)
Although I’m tempted by everything I find at the Night Market on a recent Thursday afternoon, especially as I spent many a drunken night myself at such stalls in Hong Kong, I’m here on a mission: to eat dumplings.
All of the dumplings at the Night Market were once made in-house. Today, with the kitchen short-staffed, a well-known restaurant in Millbrae (which Lee is mum about) makes most of the market’s dumplings and delivers them fresh, to be cooked on-premises. The wontons and a sweet dumpling called tang yuan, however, are still made here.
Wontons have their own identity, separate from Northern China’s jiaozi dumplings. The Cantonese version is smaller, in a thinner square wrapper, and made with a base of ground pork with one-third to one-half of a shrimp.
At the Night Market, Lee’s head chef, who prefers to go by Chef Fung, has more than 40 years of restaurant experience. He can deftly make hundreds of wontons by hand in one session, and he does just that, folding ground pork and shrimp into a square wonton skin effortlessly.

Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE

Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE

Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE

Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE
Chef Fung makes fresh wontons. (Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE)
His secret ingredient is a canister of brown powder. It’s ground flounder, made from dried fish bought whole in Chinatown and then ground in the kitchen. Another canister was full of white sesame seeds, also ground in-house. These are key to giving the wontons their distinct flavour.
Wonton noodles are an iconic street food in Hong Kong, simple and straightforward. Chef Fung, however, treated the creation of each bowl as if it were meant for royalty, tenderly turning thin, fresh egg noodles boiling in chicken and beef bone broth with a pair of tongs every so often to get an even cook. He boiled the wontons simultaneously.
When they were finished, he handed me a bowl topped with Chinese yellow chives. While the wontons were the size of a small jawbreaker candy when raw, they nearly doubled in size after being boiled,

