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Traditional Cantonese Zi Char

Google: 4.5 · 4,015 reviews

← Collection
CuisineCantonese
Executive ChefZander Gatta
Price$$
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCasual
NoiseLively
CapacityMedium
Michelin

Teksen, George Town delivers Cantonese and Penang-style Chinese cooking at a value-driven fine casual pace. Must-try plates include Deep-fried homemade tofu in an egg white glaze with prawns and dried scallops, Home Recipe Double Roasted Pork, and stir-fried kang kung with sambal and prawns. The kitchen blends classic Cantonese techniques with bold local seasonings like assam tumis and sambal, producing crunchy, silky, and savory-sweet contrasts. A MICHELIN Guide Bib Gourmand signals outstanding quality for the price. Expect a lively, no-frills dining room with red tablecloths, Chinese couplets, warm aromas, and often a queue at peak hours—arrive early for the most authentic Penang table experience.

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Teksen restaurant in George Town, Malaysia
About

Red Tablecloths and Sixty Years of Cantonese Habit

On Lebuh Carnarvon, one of George Town's older commercial streets, the visual grammar of Teksen is immediately familiar to anyone who has eaten in a traditional Chinese kopitiam: red tablecloths, paired couplets on the wall, a room that communicates occasion through colour rather than architecture. The space is clean and without ornament, which focuses attention where it belongs — on the food and the rhythm of a dining room that has been running in some form since 1965. That six-decade continuity is not incidental. It places Teksen in a category of George Town institutions that predate the city's UNESCO listing, the food tourism wave, and the current generation of Michelin surveyors.

Where Teksen Sits in the Cantonese Tradition

Cantonese cooking, as practised in peninsular Malaysia, occupies a specific register distinct from Hong Kong banquet houses or the refined tasting-menu format now associated with venues like Forum or T'ang Court in Hong Kong. Those rooms trade on precision, luxury ingredient, and formal service. The Malaysian Cantonese tradition, by contrast, is rooted in the daily table: soups that require hours of preparation but arrive without ceremony, tofu dishes that use local pantry staples to achieve a depth that more elaborate cooking rarely matches, and a general philosophy that technique should be invisible rather than theatrical.

Teksen works within that tradition and extends it through what its record describes as fusion creations with a local twist — a phrase that in George Town means the absorption of Malay, Peranakan, and Hokkien ingredient logic into an otherwise Cantonese framework. This is not fusion in the contemporary sense of deliberate genre-crossing. It is the organic culinary creolisation that defines Penang's food culture and sets its Chinese cooking apart from equivalent traditions in Kuala Lumpur or Singapore. Compared to Cantonese addresses in other Asian cities , 102 House in Shanghai, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, or Le Palais in Taipei , Teksen operates in an entirely different register: lower price point, neighbourhood context, and a menu shaped by decades of local adaptation rather than classical purity.

Tea as the Default Setting

In a room like Teksen's, tea is not a programme or a pairing concept. It is the structural baseline of the meal, as automatic as chopsticks on the table. Traditional Cantonese dining in Malaysia defaults to Chinese tea service , typically a pot of Chinese tea, often Pu-erh or a simple oolong, delivered before the first dish and present throughout. This is the opposite of the curated tea pairing philosophy you might find at a contemporary Taiwanese table; it is instead tea as palate maintenance, the bitter-dry quality of a good Pu-erh cutting through the oil of a fried dish and resetting the mouth between courses.

The specific pairing logic becomes relevant when considering Teksen's standout items. Deep-fried tofu prepared with dried local anchovies , ikan bilis , and finished with soy sauce delivers concentrated umami alongside the fat of frying. A moderately astringent Chinese tea, whether a roasted oolong or a well-steeped Pu-erh, counters both elements. Equally, double-boiled soups, which are slow-extracted and typically clear, have a delicate intensity that strong teas would overwhelm; lighter variants like a mild chrysanthemum or a pale oolong serve those soups without competition. The tea culture at a place like Teksen requires no menu consultation. It runs on institutional memory, the same memory that has kept this kitchen producing consistent food since the mid-1960s.

George Town's Bib Gourmand Cohort

The Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded to Teksen in both 2024 and 2025, recognises good cooking at moderate prices. In George Town's context, that designation now covers a range of cooking styles and formats, from hawker stalls to sit-down restaurant rooms. What connects the Bib Gourmand cohort in this city is not a price ceiling or a cuisine type but a shared standard of ingredient handling and preparation rigour. Teksen's position in that cohort, held across two consecutive years, reflects the kind of consistency that is genuinely difficult to sustain in a kitchen that has been operating across six decades of changing ingredients, supply chains, and customer expectations.

For context, George Town's broader dining culture sits across a wide spectrum. At the street food end, places like 888 Hokkien Mee on Lebuh Presgrave and Tho Yuen represent the dim sum and noodle traditions. At the Peranakan end, Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery and Richard Rivalee serve the Straits Chinese table in different registers. For European contemporary cooking, Au Jardin operates at the $$$ tier. Teksen occupies the $$ middle tier with a focus on traditional Cantonese fare, making it a reasonable representative of the city's most enduring cooking tradition. If you are planning beyond dining, our full George Town hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the broader picture, and our full George Town restaurants guide maps the city's dining categories in detail.

The Dishes That Define the Kitchen

Two items from Teksen's kitchen carry particular weight in the venue record. The deep-fried house-made tofu with dried local anchovies is listed as a defining preparation: the tofu is made on-site, fried to order, and finished with soy sauce and ikan bilis. The result is a dish that is simple by description but demanding in execution , the tofu must hold structure through frying while remaining soft within, and the anchovies need to retain their crispness and their concentrated salinity without overwhelming the base. That the dish relies on soy sauce alone as seasoning is an argument for ingredient quality over complexity.

The double-boiled soup of the day operates on a different logic. Double-boiling extracts flavour through extended low heat, producing broths that are clear but intensely savoury. The specific preparation changes daily, which means repeat visitors encounter a rotating inventory of Cantonese medicinal-culinary logic: ingredients chosen as much for their tonic properties as for flavour. Asking about that soup is not just a practical suggestion , it is an invitation into a preparation tradition that most casual visitors to George Town encounter only in abbreviated form at hawker stalls.

Beyond George Town, Malaysia's broader food scene offers comparable anchors of local culinary identity. Bee See Heong in Seberang Perai represents a cross-strait counterpoint, while Dewakan in Kuala Lumpur operates at the progressive fine dining end of Malaysian cooking. And for reference points further afield in the region, The Planters at The Danna in Langkawi represents the resort dining counterpart to George Town's heritage food culture. You can also browse our George Town wineries guide for context on the city's wider hospitality range.

Planning a Visit

Teksen sits at 18 Lebuh Carnarvon in the heart of George Town's heritage core, within easy walking distance of the main conservation zone. The price range is $$, placing it among the more affordable sit-down Cantonese options in the city while remaining above the hawker stall tier. Hours are not confirmed in available data, so checking ahead before an evening visit is advisable. Given the venue's sustained Bib Gourmand recognition and a Google rating of 4.5 across more than 3,700 reviews, the room fills with a mix of regulars and visitors who have researched before arriving.

Signature Dishes
double roasted porksignature tofudeep-fried tofu with prawns
Frequently asked questions

Peers Worth Knowing

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Classic
Best For
  • Family
  • Group Dining
  • Casual Hangout
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityMedium
Service StyleCasual
Meal PacingStandard

Clean, simple no-frills room with red table cloths, buzzing with efficient service and happy crowds.

Signature Dishes
double roasted porksignature tofudeep-fried tofu with prawns