Restaurant in Taipei, Taiwan
Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle
150ptsOne dish, decades of refinement, no reservation needed.

About Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle
Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Casual in Asia list three years running, making it the most critically validated street-food stop in Taipei's Ximending district. Walk-in only, street-food prices, and open daily until 10:30–11 pm — the case for going is straightforward. Come for one specific, technically refined bowl; do not expect a menu.
The Verdict
Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle is one of the few street-food counters in Asia with three consecutive years on the Opinionated About Dining Casual in Asia list — ranked #56 in both 2023 and 2024, then #79 in 2025. At street-food prices, it represents the clearest case in Taipei for a meal that costs almost nothing and delivers a technically specific bowl that you will not easily replicate elsewhere in the city. If you are visiting Taipei and want one street-food stop that has genuine critical backing, book this before anywhere else. If you are looking for a special-occasion dinner with a formal room and wine list, this is not that — but it was never trying to be.
What Ay-Chung Does
The kitchen here has spent decades refining a single product: flour-rice noodle (米粉腸), a thick, chewy intestine-cased noodle served in a thick, starchy broth with offal toppings and a sharp, fragrant sauce based on oyster and cilantro. The technical discipline required to maintain that broth consistency and noodle texture across thousands of bowls daily is exactly what OAD's casual list rewards. This is not a menu with ambition across dozens of dishes , it is a kitchen that has mastered one thing and serves it from 8:30 am to 10:30 pm (11 pm on weekends) every day of the week.
That specialisation is worth understanding before you go. Unlike the logy or Taïrroir model, where the kitchen moves through courses and techniques, Ay-Chung's mastery is concentrated. The flavour profile is intensely savoury, slightly gelatinous from the broth, with a herbaceous lift from the garnish. If that combination is not your register , or if you have strong objections to offal-adjacent ingredients , this is useful to know in advance.
Timing and Logistics
The address is No. 8-1, Emei Street, Wanhua District , in the Ximending area, which is one of Taipei's most accessible commercial districts and easy to reach by MRT (Ximen Station). The stall sits on a pedestrian street and draws significant foot traffic, particularly on weekend evenings. For a more manageable experience, weekday mornings from opening at 8:30 am through mid-morning are the lowest-traffic window. Weekend evenings after 8 pm are the most crowded, and while the queue moves quickly by street-food standards, the surrounding pedestrian congestion can make the experience feel rushed.
Hours run Monday through Thursday 8:30 am to 10:30 pm, and Friday through Sunday 8:30 am to 11 pm , a schedule that makes it viable as a late-night option after a dinner elsewhere, or as an early start before Taipei's museum and market circuit. If you are pairing this with other Taipei eating, consider checking our full Taipei restaurants guide for sequencing options.
Practical Details
Reservations: Not applicable , walk-in only, queue at the counter. Booking difficulty: Easy; no advance planning required. Budget: Street-food pricing; expect to spend a small amount per bowl, making this one of the lowest price-per-quality-credential options in the city. Dress: No code; casual street clothes are standard. Hours: Mon–Thu 8:30 am–10:30 pm, Fri–Sun 8:30 am–11 pm. Google rating: 4.0 from 16,823 reviews , a high volume of reviews at a consistent score signals broad, sustained satisfaction rather than a spike from a single press moment.
Special Occasions
This is not a restaurant in the conventional sense, and booking it as a standalone special-occasion dinner would miss the point. Where it works for celebrations is as part of a broader Taipei food day , a considered, intentional stop that shows you have done the research rather than defaulted to a hotel restaurant. Pairing it with a reservation at Le Palais or L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Taipei for dinner creates a day that covers both ends of Taipei's serious eating spectrum. If you are visiting Taiwan more broadly, the same discipline of seeking out OAD-listed street food applies at A Cun Beef Soup in Tainan.
How It Compares
Further Reading
For more on eating and staying in Taiwan: Taipei restaurants, Taipei hotels, Taipei bars, Taipei wineries, Taipei experiences. Beyond Taipei: JL Studio in Taichung, GEN in Kaohsiung, A Gan Yi Taro Balls in New Taipei, Bebu in Hsinchu County. For regional noodle shop comparisons: Khao Soi Mae Manee in Chiang Mai and On Lee Noodle Soup in Hong Kong.
Compare Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle | Opinionated About Dining Casual in Asia Ranked #79 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Asia Ranked #56 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Asia Ranked #56 (2023) | — | |
| logy | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Le Palais | Michelin 3 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Taïrroir | Michelin 3 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Mudan Tempura | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Golden Formosa | Michelin 1 Star | $$ | — |
How Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around a single product — flour-rice noodle served in a thick, starchy broth — and the format offers little flexibility. The intestine-casing is central to the dish, which makes this a poor fit for anyone avoiding pork or offal. There is no documented gluten-free or vegan option, so if dietary restrictions are a factor, this is not the right stop.
Is lunch or dinner better at Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle?
Timing matters mainly for queue length, not for the food itself. Weekday mornings from opening at 8:30 am tend to be quieter than the evening rush. Friday and Saturday evenings see longer waits as Ximending fills with foot traffic; the kitchen runs until 11 pm on those nights if you arrive late. Come at off-peak hours rather than optimising for a specific meal occasion.
How far ahead should I book Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle?
No booking is needed or possible — Ay-Chung is walk-in only with a queue at the counter. The address is No. 8-1, Emei Street, Wanhua District, and it is open every day from 8:30 am. Factor in 10–20 minutes of queue time during peak hours; outside of lunch and evening rushes, turnover is fast.
What should I wear to Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle?
This is a street-food counter in one of Taipei's busiest pedestrian districts, so wear whatever you are comfortable walking around Ximending in. There is no dress code of any kind. Avoid anything you would be upset getting broth on.
What are alternatives to Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle in Taipei?
For sit-down Taipei dining with serious credentials, Taïrroir and Logy both hold Michelin recognition and offer a structured meal format that Ay-Chung does not. Le Palais is the address for Cantonese fine dining with multiple Michelin stars. Mudan Tempura is a strong pick if you want a focused single-product format but in a more formal setting. Ay-Chung is the only OAD Casual Asia-ranked option in this peer group, which tells you the comparison is really about category fit, not quality tier.
Is Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle good for a special occasion?
Not in any conventional sense. There are no reservations, no private space, and no multi-course format — you queue, you eat, you move on. Where it works for a celebratory visit is as part of a broader Taipei food itinerary: three consecutive years on the Opinionated About Dining Casual in Asia list (ranked #56 in 2023 and 2024, #79 in 2025) gives it genuine credibility as a destination stop, just not a dinner-party one.
What should I order at Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle?
The kitchen has spent decades refining a single product: flour-rice noodle (米粉腸), served in a thick starchy broth. There is no meaningful choice to make beyond portion size — order the noodles, add chilli and sauce to taste at the counter. Arriving hungry and ordering one bowl to start, then deciding whether to queue again, is the standard approach.
Hours
- Monday
- 8:30 am–10:30 pm
- Tuesday
- 8:30 am–10:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 8:30 am–10:30 pm
- Thursday
- 8:30 am–10:30 pm
- Friday
- 8:30 am–11 pm
- Saturday
- 8:30 am–11 pm
- Sunday
- 8:30 am–11 pm
Recognized By
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Ay-Chung Flour-Rice Noodle on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


