Restaurant in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Teochew Lao Er
290ptsMichelin-recognised Teochew food, everyday prices.

About Teochew Lao Er
A Michelin Plate recipient for 2024 and 2025, Teochew Lao Er has been feeding the Pudu district since its street-stall origins in 1984. At $$ pricing, the third-generation restaurant delivers reliable Teochew classics — braised meat platters, seafood congee, and traditional kueh — with more credential per ringgit than almost anything else at this price level in Kuala Lumpur.
Who Should Book Teochew Lao Er — and When
If you are hunting for a Michelin-recognised Teochew meal in Kuala Lumpur at a price that does not require a second mortgage, Teochew Lao Er in Pudu is the answer. At a $$ price point, this is the kind of place that value-focused diners should bookmark immediately. It rewards both a quick lunch stop and a more deliberate family dinner, though the two experiences are worth thinking about separately before you go.
From Street Stall to Pudu Institution
The story of Teochew Lao Er is a useful frame for understanding what you are actually getting here. The original Lao Er began as a street stall in 1984. By 2011, the third generation of the family had translated that street-food legacy into a proper restaurant in the Pudu district, and the reputation built over those decades has given the venue genuine standing in the neighbourhood. The Michelin Guide awarded a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which is meaningful: the Plate designation signals cooking worth a detour, even if it stops short of a star. For a $$-priced Teochew restaurant in a suburban KL district, that is a credible credential.
The cuisine itself is Teochew — a tradition from the Chaoshan region of Guangdong province, historically associated with seafood, congee, braised meats, and a restrained approach to seasoning that lets ingredients carry the dish. What Lao Er does is apply a slight adjustment to that tradition, softening the flavour profile toward the local palate without abandoning the fundamentals. This is not fusion; it is adaptation, and it is the kind of thing that keeps a multi-generational restaurant relevant across decades.
What to Order
Venue's own record points clearly to three ordering priorities. First, the assorted platter of meat marinated in spiced soy , this is the signature dish and the obvious entry point for first-timers. Second, Teochew congee with pomfret or mackerel, which represents the style's seafood-forward sensibility in a format that works well at both lunch and dinner. Third, traditional kueh, which rounds out a meal and is consistently cited as a popular draw. The menu leans on these pillars, so there is little guesswork involved in ordering well here.
Lunch vs Dinner: Where the Value Sits
This is a Teochew restaurant with a street-stall heritage, which means the format skews more toward everyday dining than formal occasions. At the $$ price range, both lunch and dinner are accessible, but the practical argument for lunch is stronger if you are visiting specifically for the congee. Teochew congee is inherently a daytime dish in the Malaysian Chinese tradition , lighter, often served as a late-morning or midday meal , and the pomfret and mackerel versions here are leading understood in that context. A congee lunch at Lao Er, followed by kueh, is a coherent and satisfying meal for well under what you would spend at any $$$ or $$$$ restaurant in the city.
Dinner at Lao Er shifts slightly toward the braised meat dishes, where the spiced soy preparations benefit from being the centrepiece of a fuller spread. For a group dinner, the assorted platter is the natural anchor, and the format suits families or small groups sharing across multiple dishes. The restaurant's Google rating of 4.3 from 1,160 reviews suggests a broad and consistent satisfaction across both occasions , a volume of reviews that is harder to sustain without delivering reliably across services.
For a special occasion with a large group, the dinner format makes more sense. For a solo or two-person visit focused purely on the Teochew congee experience, lunch is the smarter call , faster, cheaper, and more in keeping with how this style of cooking is meant to be eaten.
Practical Details
| Detail | Teochew Lao Er | Beta (Malaysian, $$$) | Dewakan (Malaysian, $$$$) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price range | $$ | $$$ | $$$$ |
| Cuisine | Teochew (Chinese) | Modern Malaysian | Modern Malaysian |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024, 2025) | Plate recognition | Star-level recognition |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Hard |
| Leading for | Everyday dining, families, value lunches | Modern tasting menus | Destination dining |
| Address | 6, Jalan Brunei, Pudu, KL | Central KL | Central KL |
Getting There and Booking
Teochew Lao Er is at 6, Jalan Brunei, Pudu, 55100 Kuala Lumpur. Pudu is accessible from central KL and is a well-established neighbourhood for Chinese-Malaysian food; this is not a difficult venue to reach. Booking difficulty is rated Easy , walk-ins are likely feasible outside of peak weekend dinner slots, but calling ahead for larger groups is sensible given the restaurant's local reputation. No website or phone number is listed in current records, so arriving directly or checking Google Maps for contact details is the practical approach.
How It Compares
Further Reading
For more options across Kuala Lumpur, see our full Kuala Lumpur restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
If you are interested in the Teochew tradition elsewhere in the region, Imperial Treasure Fine Teochew Cuisine (Orchard) in Singapore represents the formal, premium end of the category, while BM Yam Rice in Seberang Perai offers a comparable everyday Teochew experience in Penang. For broader Malaysian dining beyond KL, consider Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery in George Town, Christoph's in Penang, or The Dining Room at The Datai Langkawi for a resort-dining contrast. In the Petaling Jaya area, Lavo and Lavo Gallery is worth a look for a different register entirely. Other Michelin-tracked venues in the region include BM Cathay Pancake in Seberang Perai and The Dining Room, The Datai Langkawi in Pulau Langkawi.
Compare Teochew Lao Er
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Teochew Lao Er | In 1984, Lao Er started out as a street stall. In 2011, the third generation opened a restaurant and established itself as a household name in Pudu district. Teochew classics are given a slight tweak to cater to the local palate. The signature dish, meat marinated in spiced soy, is a great hit – try the assorted platter. Teochew congee with pomfret, mackerel, and traditional kueh are also popular.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | $$ | — |
| Dewakan | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Beta | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| Molina | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| DC. by Darren Chin | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Aliyaa | $$ | — |
A quick look at how Teochew Lao Er measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Teochew Lao Er worth the price?
At the $$ price point with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, Teochew Lao Er is one of the stronger value propositions in Kuala Lumpur's Chinese dining scene. You are getting a third-generation family restaurant with a 40-year lineage in Pudu, not a dressed-up tourist version of the food. If you are comparing on value, it sits well above what you would spend at DC. by Darren Chin or Dewakan for a fraction of the price — though the format and ambition are entirely different.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Teochew Lao Er?
Teochew Lao Er is not a tasting-menu restaurant. The format is casual, order-driven dining rooted in street-stall heritage — go in expecting à la carte Teochew classics, not a structured progression of courses. If a tasting-menu experience is the goal, DC. by Darren Chin or Beta are the right call in KL.
What should I order at Teochew Lao Er?
Start with the assorted platter of meat marinated in spiced soy — it is the signature dish and the clearest argument for a visit. Teochew congee served with pomfret or mackerel is a second ordering priority, and traditional kueh rounds out the meal. These three are the items the venue's own record highlights, so anchor your order around them rather than ranging too widely.
Can I eat at the bar at Teochew Lao Er?
No bar seating is documented for Teochew Lao Er. It operates as a sit-down restaurant that grew out of a street-stall format, so the setup is table-based. Seating configurations are not detailed in available venue data, so arriving early is sensible if you have a specific preference.
What should a first-timer know about Teochew Lao Er?
The restaurant is in Pudu at 6, Jalan Brunei — a well-established KL Chinese dining neighbourhood, not the city centre, so factor in travel time. The menu leans toward Teochew classics with local adaptations rather than pure-regional purism, which makes it accessible if you are new to the cuisine. Order the assorted spiced soy platter as your anchor dish and build around it. Hours and booking details are not publicly documented, so showing up earlier in a service is the lower-risk approach.
Is Teochew Lao Er good for a special occasion?
It depends on what the occasion calls for. Teochew Lao Er is a Michelin Plate neighbourhood institution with a genuine multigenerational story — that context gives it meaning beyond a casual lunch stop, and the $$ pricing makes it easy to order broadly. But the setting is casual and rooted in everyday dining rather than celebration formats. For a milestone dinner requiring a formal room and wine service, DC. by Darren Chin or Dewakan are more appropriate; for a food-focused meal where the cooking does the talking at an accessible price, Teochew Lao Er holds its own.
Recognized By
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