Hours
| Saturday | 11:30 AM–2:30 PM |
| Sunday | 11:30 AM–2:30 PM |
| Monday | Closed |
| Tuesday | 11:30 AM–2:30 PM |
| Wednesday | 11:30 AM–2:30 PM |
| Thursday | 11:30 AM–2:30 PM |
| Friday | 11:30 AM–2:30 PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 9148 E Las Tunas Dr, Temple City, CA 91780
Phone: (626) 291-2295
Menu Photos
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Dai Ho – Temple City – a MICHELIN Guide Restaurant
Dai Ho Restaurant – Restaurant
Dai Ho – Review – Temple City – Los Angeles – The Infatuation
Reviews
I love that the Lu Wei (braised delicacies) is served as its own standalone dish. You can really taste the mastery of seasoning in every bite of the beef and tofu.
To round it all out, you have to order the Radish Chicken Soup. It’s crystal clear and carries that perfect, natural sweetness from the daikon. It’s the ultimate palate cleanser after the tingly heat of the beef noodles. Perfectly balanced and so comforting!
Pushing through the door at **Dai Ho Restaurant** on Valley Blvd in Alhambra feels like a portal to my childhood Taipei nights—steamy windows, fluorescent hum, and that unmistakable aroma of braised beef and Sichuan spice wafting from the open kitchen . This unpretentious Taiwanese powerhouse (Bib Gourmand since forever) packs a no-frills room with red lanterns and vinyl stools, where locals and food pilgrims elbow in for the real deal. It’s chaotic in the best way: chopstick clacks, Mandarin banter, and zero pretense.
The **dan dan noodles** are pure nostalgia porn—slippery wheat strands tossed in a fiery sesame-peanut sauce that’s equal parts numbing mala heat and creamy umami, crowned with minced pork, pickled veggies, and crushed peanuts that crunch like autumn leaves ️ . One slurp, and I’m 10 again, sneaking seconds at grandma’s table. It’s not watered-down Americanized; the spice builds slow, leaving lips tingling and heart full.
But the **beef noodle soup**? The crown jewel. A massive bowl of tendon-laced shank braised 8 hours in star anise-scented broth, arriving bubbling with hand-pulled noodles that hold their shape like warriors. The beef melts off the bone—rich, collagen-deep, with bok choy and cilantro cutting the intensity just right . It’s hearty winter armor, portioned for sharing but selfishly solo-devoured.
Service? Brisk auntie efficiency—orders fly out in under 10 mins, waters refilled without asking. Value’s unbeatable, and the add-on fried chicken is a salty-sweet bonus. Only docking 0.5 because the AC battles the steam (pro tip: summer layers), and reservations? Ha, it’s walk-in roulette on weekends. Dai Ho isn’t fancy—it’s family. I’ll brave the line monthly for that dan dan hug and beefy comfort. 626’s soul food anchor.
Dai Ho has the best beef noodle I’ve had in the Los Angeles area. The beef was extremely tender, and the broth was very flavorful. The dan dan mian was pretty good, a good blend of creaminess and spiciness.
Parking is difficult in this plaza, they only have a couple spots available. Otherwise, you would need to find street parking.
But beware that this restaurant only opens from 11am-2:30am
So remember that if you craving some really good comfort food.
Their sample platters you can choose a variety of toppings so if there’s something on the menu you don’t like you can ask to change it.