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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    Great China

    400pts

    Serious Chinese cooking, East Bay prices.

    Great China, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About Great China

    Great China in Berkeley earns back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024–2025) at $$ pricing, with Chef James Yu's tea-smoked duck and an unusually strong Burgundy and Riesling wine list as the core draws. Shared-plate Chinese cooking at a quality-to-price ratio that is hard to match in the wider Bay Area. Closed Tuesdays; book ahead for weekend dinner.

    Verdict

    Great China is the answer when you want serious Chinese cooking in the East Bay without paying San Francisco fine-dining prices. At $$, with a Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025 and a place on the Opinionated About Dining Casual North America list, this Berkeley institution on Bancroft Way earns its reputation on substance rather than hype. If you are driving over from San Francisco, the Berkeley location is the draw, not a compromise. Book here before you default to a pricier option across the Bay.

    About Great China

    Great China has spent years as the kind of restaurant that regulars protect quietly and newcomers discover with genuine surprise. It sits on Bancroft Way in Berkeley, close enough to the UC Berkeley campus to draw students but experienced enough to hold a room full of food-focused diners who have made the trip specifically for the cooking. The $$ price range is not a concession to the neighbourhood — it reflects a kitchen that has never needed to dress up the bill to justify itself.

    The culinary focus is Chinese with a meaningful seafood thread running through it. Chef James Yu's tea-smoked duck is the dish most cited in the venue's own awards notes, and it is the clearest argument for why Great China holds Bib Gourmand recognition year after year. Tea-smoking is a technique that requires patience and precision: the aromatics need to penetrate without overpowering, the skin needs texture, and the finish needs to be clean. When it works at this price point, it is the kind of dish that recalibrates what you expect from a $$ Chinese restaurant.

    What sets Great China apart from most restaurants in its price tier is the wine program. The list skews heavily toward Burgundy and Riesling, and the pricing is structured to encourage ordering rather than to maximize margin. That combination — serious Chinese cooking and a wine list built around aromatic whites and Pinot Noir , is unusual enough to matter. Riesling's acidity and stone-fruit profile sit well alongside tea-smoked proteins and seafood preparations; Burgundy's earthy register handles the richer, more umami-forward dishes. For a food and wine enthusiast, this pairing philosophy is a genuine reason to visit.

    The menu is structured around shared dishes, which suits both the food and the format. Sharing plates allow the kitchen to show range across a meal, and at $$ it means two to four people can cover a lot of ground without the bill becoming an issue. The format also rewards the explorer who wants to move through several preparations rather than commit to a single plate. If you are coming as a pair, plan to order three to four dishes; groups of four can comfortably cover five to six and still feel the value.

    As a neighbourhood anchor for Berkeley's dining scene, Great China occupies a position that few restaurants manage: it is accessible enough for a Tuesday lunch but substantive enough to draw people who treat food as the point of the evening. The Bancroft Way address places it in a part of Berkeley that blends university energy with a residential seriousness about eating well. That tension , between casual and considered , is exactly what the Bib Gourmand recognises. Michelin's Bib Gourmand designation is specifically for places that offer good cooking at moderate prices, and two consecutive years of recognition (2024 and 2025) confirms this is not a one-cycle anomaly.

    The hours are worth noting for planning purposes. Great China is closed on Tuesdays. Lunch runs 11:30 am to 2:30 pm Wednesday through Sunday, with Monday lunch also available. Dinner runs from 5:30 pm on weekdays and 5 pm on weekends, closing at 8:30 pm on weeknights and 9 pm on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. The earlier dinner start on weekends makes it a workable option before or after other Berkeley plans, but the 8:30 pm weeknight close means you need to be seated by 7:30 pm at the latest if you want time to move through a full shared-plate meal without feeling rushed.

    Booking is rated Easy, which is one of Great China's practical advantages over comparable-quality options. You are not competing for a table months in advance. That said, the combination of a loyal local following and consistent Michelin recognition means weekend dinner fills faster than the easy-booking rating might imply. Mid-week lunch is your lowest-friction entry point; weekend dinner requires more lead time than you might expect for a $$ room.

    For visitors staying in San Francisco and considering the trip across the Bay, the calculus is direct: Great China offers a quality-to-price ratio you will not replicate at the same spend in San Francisco proper. The Bib Gourmand, the wine list, and the tea-smoked duck together make the BART or drive worthwhile if Chinese cooking and well-priced Burgundy are your priorities.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 2190 Bancroft Way, Berkeley, CA 94704
    • Price range: $$ (Michelin Bib Gourmand value tier)
    • Cuisine: Chinese, Seafood , shared-plate format
    • Hours: Mon, Wed–Fri 11:30 am–2:30 pm and 5:30–8:30 pm; Sat–Sun 11:30 am–2:30 pm and 5–9 pm; Fri dinner until 9 pm; Closed Tuesday
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , mid-week lunch is walk-in friendly; book ahead for weekend dinner
    • Wine program: Burgundy and Riesling-focused; priced to encourage ordering
    • Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025; Opinionated About Dining Casual North America (2023 Recommended, 2024 #650)
    • Google rating: 4.4 from 1,537 reviews
    • Group format: Shared plates , works well for 2–4 people; order 3–4 dishes for two, 5–6 for four

    Explore More in the Bay Area

    Great China is one reference point in a deep regional dining scene. For a fuller picture, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide, our San Francisco hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. If you are planning a wider California trip, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg and The French Laundry in Napa represent the region's upper tier. For serious seafood-forward cooking at a different price point, Providence in Los Angeles and Le Bernardin in New York City are the national benchmarks. Diners interested in how Chinese culinary techniques translate into a fine-dining context should look at Benu in San Francisco.

    Compare Great China

    How Easy to Book: Great China vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Great ChinaSeafood, Chinese$$Easy
    Lazy BearProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Atelier CrennModern French, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    BenuFrench - Chinese, Asian$$$$Unknown
    QuinceItalian, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    SaisonProgressive American, Californian$$$$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Great China?

    Start with the tea-smoked duck — it's the dish most cited in connection with Chef James Yu and the one the awards record explicitly calls out. Beyond that, the menu is built around sharing plates, so bring at least two or three people to cover more ground. The wine list leans Burgundy and Riesling, and bottles are priced to be ordered, not just admired.

    Does Great China handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is seafood-forward with Chinese cooking at its core, so pescatarians are well covered. Specific dietary accommodation details aren't in the public record for this venue, so call ahead or flag restrictions when booking — particularly if anyone at the table avoids shellfish or meat, given how central both can be to shared Chinese menus.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Great China?

    Dinner gives you the fuller experience: Friday and Saturday service runs until 9 pm and likely draws the more complete menu and wine list. Lunch runs 11:30 am–2:30 pm Wednesday through Sunday and is a practical option if you want the same kitchen at a lower-pressure pace. Note that Great China is closed Tuesdays, so plan accordingly.

    What are alternatives to Great China in San Francisco?

    Great China sits in Berkeley, not San Francisco proper, which already makes it a different trip. In the East Bay at a comparable price point, it holds a clear edge on wine depth and award recognition. If you want Chinese cooking in San Francisco itself, R&G; Lounge in Chinatown is the closest comparable for seafood-forward Cantonese at accessible prices, though it lacks Great China's Burgundy program.

    Is Great China worth the price?

    At $$, it's one of the stronger value cases in the Bay Area dining scene — Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen delivers above its price tier. The wine list is the unexpected upside: Burgundy and Riesling at prices that encourage you to actually order a bottle rather than treat the list as decoration.

    Can Great China accommodate groups?

    The shared-plate format makes it a natural fit for groups of four to six, which is the sweet spot for covering the menu properly. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels — no private dining details are on record, but the sharing-driven menu structure suggests the kitchen is set up for table-wide ordering rather than individual plates.

    Is Great China good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. This isn't a white-tablecloth occasion restaurant — it's a Bib Gourmand spot with a serious wine list and a kitchen that punches above its price range. For a birthday or anniversary where you want real cooking and a bottle of good Burgundy without a three-figure-per-head bill, it works well. If formality matters, look elsewhere.

    Hours

    Monday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–8:30 pm
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–8:30 pm
    Thursday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–8:30 pm
    Friday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–9 pm
    Saturday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5–9 pm
    Sunday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5–9 pm

    Recognized By

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