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CuisineChinese
Executive ChefTian Yong
LocationTemple City, United States
Michelin
LA Times
Opinionated About Dining

Bistro Na's occupies a strip-mall address on Las Tunas Drive in Temple City, but the dining inside is grounded in Qing dynasty imperial court tradition. Chef Tian Yong's Peking duck, a three-day process requiring advance reservation, has drawn a Michelin Plate and back-to-back Opinionated About Dining top-ten rankings. For royal Manchu cuisine at a $$ price point, the value proposition is difficult to argue with.

Bistro Na’s restaurant in Temple City, United States
About

Imperial Tradition in a San Gabriel Valley Strip Mall

The San Gabriel Valley has long been the gravitational center of serious Chinese cooking in Southern California, and Temple City sits within that broader ecosystem of regional specialists, family-run institutions, and increasingly ambitious kitchens. Bistro Na's at 9055 Las Tunas Drive is one of the more instructive examples of how far that ambition can travel. The shopping block exterior off Rosemead Boulevard gives nothing away — a facade that reads like dozens of others along this corridor. Inside, the room opens into something more considered: red, gold, and blue across an expansive floor plan, a space designed to echo the aesthetic register of the Qing dynasty courts that the kitchen formally references. The menu arrives bound like an ancient text, a presentation that signals intent before a single dish appears.

The tradition Bistro Na's is working within is not mainstream Chinese-American cooking, nor is it the Cantonese seafood or Sichuan peppercorn formats that dominate much of the Valley's dining conversation. Royal Manchu cuisine, which emerged from the imperial courts of China's last dynasty, is a narrower category with few practitioners at any serious level outside China itself. Globally, the handful of restaurants that engage this tradition at table-service depth occupy a niche peer set. Chef Tian Yong's kitchen works from that tradition with a menu that moves through luxury ingredients, elaborate preparations, and dishes that would not have been out of place in Qing-era banquet settings. For context on how seriously the American dining establishment has taken this, Bistro Na's earned a Michelin Plate in 2024 and appeared on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants list the same year, ranked 94th. Opinionated About Dining, one of the more rigorous casual-dining ranking systems in North America, placed the restaurant at number five in 2023, seven in 2024, and seven again in 2025.

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Technique, Heat, and the Logic of the Menu

Editorial angle that matters most here is technique, and specifically the relationship between Chinese high-heat cooking and the imperial register it serves. Wok hei, the breath of the wok, is the quality produced when protein and vegetable hit a seasoned pan at extreme temperature — the Maillard reaction accelerating at a pace that Western kitchen equipment rarely matches. The battered shrimp that appears at most tables in this dining room illustrates the principle precisely: fried with their tender shells intact to an airy crispness, the result depends on oil temperature control and timing that tolerates almost no margin. The diced black pepper Angus beef follows a similar logic, the crust and interior texture a direct function of heat management. These are not complicated dishes in concept; their quality is entirely a product of execution.

Peking duck operates at a different register of technique altogether. The LA Times described the process accurately: three days of marinating, scalding the skin, hanging and drying the bird multiple times before the final roast. The finished duck arrives whole at the table, the skin the color of warm honey, each piece shattering before it yields. The service includes gossamer chun bing for wraps and a third course of either soup or deep-fried bones. The soup is the wiser choice, a calming interval inside a meal that moves through considerable richness. The duck requires a reservation and must be pre-ordered one week in advance , a logistical commitment that filters for genuine intent and allows the kitchen to execute without compromise.

Elsewhere on the menu, pork feet jelly and golden soup with seafood represent the luxury-ingredient side of the Manchu tradition, dishes where the substance is in the sourcing and the patience of the preparation rather than the drama of the fire. The shrimp lacquered with sweet hawthorn and dried chiles works both registers: the glaze is a slow process, the frying is not. Group dining is the format that makes most sense here, both economically and editorially , a table of four or more can move across the menu in a way that a couple cannot, and the experience is proportionally richer for it.

Where Bistro Na's Sits in the Broader Dining Conversation

The price point is $$ , mid-range by any California standard , which places this kitchen in a different competitive tier than the restaurants that typically carry Michelin recognition and OAD rankings. The American fine dining circuit runs through a handful of well-documented addresses: Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Providence in Los Angeles, Addison in San Diego, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, The Inn at Little Washington, and Emeril's in New Orleans. Bistro Na's is not competing in that format , it operates at a price tier and in a physical context that those restaurants do not occupy. What the OAD rankings indicate is that the cooking merits attention independent of room or price, which is a narrower and arguably more instructive credential.

The more meaningful comparison set is other Chinese restaurants in the United States working at similar technical ambition. Mister Jiu's in San Francisco approaches Chinese tradition from a Californian-ingredient perspective; Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin interprets Chinese and Southeast Asian technique through a European fine-dining lens. Bistro Na's is doing something different from both: it is working directly from a historical Chinese culinary canon with minimal mediation for Western palates. That specificity is exactly what the OAD rankings reward, and it is the reason the restaurant draws regulars from well beyond Temple City.

Nearby in Temple City, Dai Ho represents the Taiwanese side of the Valley's Chinese dining range, illustrating how broadly the category distributes across a few square miles. For a fuller picture of what the area offers, our full Temple City restaurants guide maps the range. The surrounding area's other options are covered in our Temple City hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

Planning a Visit

Bistro Na's runs a consistent split schedule seven days a week: 11am to 2:30pm for lunch, and 5pm to 9pm for dinner, with no days off. The Peking duck reservation requires one week's advance notice, and that commitment should be treated as mandatory for a first visit , it is the dish that most fully demonstrates what the kitchen is attempting. The restaurant sits at 9055 Las Tunas Drive, Suite 105, in a shopping block that is direct to reach by car from central Los Angeles, roughly 20 miles east. Google reviewers rate it 4.2 across more than 1,100 reviews, a volume that indicates sustained local engagement rather than a single wave of attention. For a group that wants to cover the menu , shrimp, beef, duck, and the soup courses , the $$ pricing means the bill remains well below what comparable technical ambition commands in other formats and cities.

Frequently asked questions

Address & map

9055 Las Tunas Dr #105, Temple City, CA 91780

(626) 286-1999

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