Dokoufu Tofu Restaurant · Specialties · Dry Pot (International Community Branch)
川菜 · ⭐ 3.7
Annex No. 3, No. 42 Tenglong Avenue

Dishes
Fragrant Chicken CubesA savory dish made with tender chicken cubes stir-fried with vegetables and seasonings, known for its rich flavor and soft texture.
Home-style Crucian CarpA traditional Chinese dish made with fresh crucian carp, simmered with ginger, scallions, and garlic to create a savory and tender meal.
Spicy Pork Intestines Stir-fryDry Pot Pig Intestines is a dish primarily made with pig intestines, stir-fried with various spices and vegetables. First, the intestines are thoroughly cleaned and cut into segments, then stir-fried together with seasonings until golden and crispy. Finally, seasoning ingredients are added and stirred evenly to create a dish that is fragrant and rich in texture.
Dry Pot ShrimpDry Pot Shrimp is a dish made with fresh shrimp and stir-fried with green peppers, onions, garlic, and ginger. After cleaning and marinating the shrimp, it's cooked with the ingredients and finished with a special dry pot sauce to infuse flavor, resulting in tender, aromatic shrimp.
Pork Rib Hot PotA stir-fried dish featuring pork ribs and vegetables, seasoned with spicy and savory sauces.
Pickled Chili Shredded PorkA classic Sichuan dish made with tender pork strips stir-fried with pickled chili peppers, offering a spicy and tangy flavor.
牛肉干锅牛肉干锅以牛肉为主要食材,配以土豆、青椒、洋葱等蔬菜,经过腌制后炒制而成。牛肉切片或切块,与蔬菜一同在锅中翻炒,加入调味料煮至入味,口感丰富。
Salt-fried PorkSalt-fried meat is a Chinese dish made primarily with pork, typically using fatty pork slices stir-fried with doubanjiang, garlic, ginger, and green peppers. The pork is first pan-fried to release oil, then seasoned and mixed with vegetables for a flavorful, tender result.
Bitter Water Tofu PuddingDan Shui Dou Hua is a tofu product made primarily from soybeans, using bile or bile water as a coagulant to solidify soy milk into douhua. The process involves soaking soybeans, grinding them into pulp, filtering out the residue, boiling the mixture, adding bile water, stirring, and letting it cool to form a smooth, delicate douhua with a fresh, tender texture.