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Chinese-American Restaurant

China Garden Menu 2026: Full Dishes, Popular Items & Ordering Guide

Full China Garden menu guide for 2026 — appetizers, soups, classic Chinese-American entrees, rice, noodles, desserts and drinks. China Garden is a widely used name for independent Chinese-American restaurants across the U.S.; menus and prices vary by location. Below: the most popular dishes, dietary options, a full category listing, and answers to common questions.

Independent Chinese-American restaurantsDine-in & takeoutClassic Chinese-American menuVegetarian & vegan optionsBanquet & family-style dining
Sample · $$

Signature items

General Tso's ChickenPrice varies by location
Beef with BroccoliPrice varies by location
Peking DuckPrice varies by location
Pork Lo MeinPrice varies by location
Wonton SoupPrice varies by location
Jump to: Most popular dishes Vegetarian & vegan Dish spotlight Full menu Ordering tips About China Garden FAQ
Quick answers

What to know about China Garden restaurants

The four things people most often search about China Garden — answered in one glance.

Most popular dish
General Tso's Chicken

The most ordered Chinese-American dish nationwide. Battered, fried chicken in sweet-tangy-spicy sauce.

Best for groups
Family-style banquet

Round-table family-style ordering, Peking Duck, whole fish and combination platters for sharing.

Vegetarian-friendly
Yes

Most locations have a dedicated vegetarian section. Tofu, eggplant and vegetable dishes widely available.

Dim sum available
At select locations

Weekend dim sum is common at larger China Garden restaurants in cities with Chinese-American communities. Call ahead.

Dietary guide

Vegetarian, vegan and lighter picks at China Garden

Most China Garden restaurants have a dedicated vegetarian section and can adjust many dishes. The following are the most reliably vegetarian-as-served items across typical China Garden menus — confirm with your specific location, as recipes vary by chef and ownership.

For vegan ordering, the key is to avoid oyster sauce (used in many stir-fries) and egg (used in fried rice). Ask for garlic sauce or black bean sauce substitution when ordering vegetable dishes.

Cross-contact possible. Confirm with the restaurant if you have a serious allergy or strict dietary requirement.

  • Vegetarian starters: Spring Roll, Scallion Pancake, Vegetable Dumplings (steamed)
  • Vegetarian soups: Egg Drop Soup, Hot and Sour Soup (ask — some add pork)
  • Vegetarian entrees: Eggplant with Garlic Sauce, Buddha's Delight, Ma Po Tofu (no pork), Tofu with Vegetables
  • Vegan options: Buddha's Delight (no oyster sauce), String Beans with Garlic, Steamed White Rice, Sesame Balls (red bean or lotus)
  • Vegetarian rice & noodles: Vegetable Fried Rice, Vegetable Lo Mein
  • Avoid for vegan: Oyster sauce (in most stir-fries), egg (fried rice), honey (some sauces)
Dish spotlight

Six China Garden dishes worth knowing

Whether you are ordering for the first time or looking for something beyond the basics, these are the six dishes most emblematic of the China Garden style of Chinese-American dining.

Most popular nationwide

General Tso's Chicken

The definitive Chinese-American specialty — deep-fried battered chicken in a sweet, tangy sauce with dried red chilies and a hint of heat. Invented in New York in the 1970s, now on virtually every Chinese-American menu in the country.

Cantonese classic

Peking Duck

The showpiece dish at upscale China Garden locations: whole roasted duck with lacquered, crackling skin, sliced tableside and served with mandarin pancakes, scallions, cucumber and hoisin. Often requires advance ordering of 24–48 hours.

Sichuan-style

Kung Pao Chicken

Diced chicken stir-fried with peanuts, dried red chilies and scallions in a bold, spicy-savory sauce. One of the most authentic Sichuan-origin dishes that crossed into mainstream Chinese-American menus.

Cantonese staple

Beef with Broccoli

Thin-sliced flank steak stir-fried with broccoli florets in an oyster-sauce glaze. Clean, savory and approachable — one of the most enduring dishes in Chinese-American cooking and a reliable order at any China Garden.

Noodle staple

Pork Lo Mein

Thick egg noodles stir-fried with BBQ pork, cabbage, bean sprouts and scallions in a soy-sesame sauce. Lo mein is almost universally available; the pork version (with char siu) is the most requested build.

Fan favorite appetizer

Crab Rangoon

Crispy wonton wrappers filled with cream cheese and imitation crab, sealed into triangles and deep-fried until golden. Served with sweet-and-sour or sweet chili sauce. A Chinese-American invention that is one of the most ordered appetizers at any China Garden restaurant.

Browse the menu

Jump to a category

All ten China Garden menu categories with item counts.

Full menu listing

Every dish on the China Garden menu (by category)

All categories below list the dishes most commonly found at China Garden restaurants. Because China Garden is an independent restaurant name, the exact menu and preparation at your location may differ.

About prices. China Garden is a common name shared by many independent, separately owned Chinese-American restaurants across the United States. There is no central corporate price list. Prices are not shown on this page because they cannot be centrally verified and vary significantly by city, state, and individual restaurant. To find prices for your local China Garden, check the restaurant's own website, call directly, or search for it on DoorDash, Uber Eats or Grubhub.
Ordering tips

How to order well at China Garden

Family-style

Order to share

Chinese-American dining at China Garden restaurants is typically family-style: a table of four might order four entrees, a shared soup, and a shared appetizer platter. One entree per person is the usual ratio, all placed at the center of the table.

Spice control

Request your spice level

Many China Garden chefs will adjust spice levels on request. Kung Pao, Mapo Tofu, and Szechuan dishes are typically medium-spicy as prepared. Ask for "mild" or "extra spicy" when ordering — most kitchens are happy to accommodate.

Banquet dishes

Call ahead for Peking Duck

Peking Duck is a multi-hour preparation. Most China Garden restaurants that offer it require advance notice — often 24 to 48 hours. Call the day before. Whole fish and some other banquet items may also require advance order.

Delivery

Check your delivery app

Most China Garden restaurants are listed on DoorDash, Uber Eats or Grubhub, which also display the actual local menu and current prices. Search "China Garden" and your city to find your nearest location with live pricing.

Vegetarian

Ask about sauce substitutions

Oyster sauce is used in many stir-fries. For vegan or shellfish-free orders, ask for garlic sauce or soy-ginger sauce substitution. Most Chinese-American kitchens can accommodate without charge.

Dim sum

Go early for dim sum

If your local China Garden serves dim sum, peak service is Saturday and Sunday from 10 AM to 1 PM. Arrive early for the best selection; many items sell out before noon. Some locations stop dim sum service at 2 or 3 PM.

About China Garden restaurants

One name, many independent restaurants across the U.S.

China Garden is one of the most common names for independent Chinese-American restaurants in the United States, used by hundreds of separately owned, unrelated businesses from coast to coast. There is no parent company or franchise — each China Garden is its own establishment, with its own ownership, menu and pricing.

Most China Garden restaurants serve a classic Chinese-American menu shaped by Cantonese immigrants who arrived in the U.S. in the 19th and 20th centuries and adapted their regional cooking to local tastes and ingredients. This produced the dishes now recognizable as Chinese-American: General Tso's Chicken, Beef with Broccoli, lo mein, fried rice, egg rolls and wonton soup. Many locations also offer more traditionally Cantonese preparations — whole steamed fish, Peking Duck, banquet seafood — alongside the American-style favorites.

The best way to learn about your specific local China Garden — its hours, menu and prices — is to call ahead or look it up on a delivery platform.

100sIndependent U.S. restaurants
50+States represented
$$Typical price range
10+Menu categories
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Common questions

China Garden menu — frequently asked questions

Quick answers to the questions people most commonly ask about China Garden restaurants, their menus, vegetarian options and ordering tips.

What is China Garden restaurant?

China Garden is one of the most common names used by independent Chinese-American restaurants across the United States. There is no single national chain — hundreds of separately owned, unrelated restaurants operate under this name from coast to coast. Most serve a classic Chinese-American menu: fried rice, lo mein, General Tso's Chicken, Beef with Broccoli, egg rolls and wonton soup, with many also offering Cantonese banquet dishes, dim sum or regional Chinese specialties depending on the ownership.

Does China Garden have a full menu with prices?

Because China Garden is an independent restaurant name shared by many unrelated businesses, there is no single unified menu or price list. Prices vary significantly by location, city, and the specific restaurant's ownership. To get accurate pricing, visit the restaurant's own website, call ahead, or check a delivery platform (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub) for your specific local China Garden. This page lists the dishes most commonly found at China Garden restaurants, without prices, as a general guide to what you can expect to find.

What are the most popular dishes at China Garden?

The dishes ordered most often at Chinese-American restaurants called China Garden are: General Tso's Chicken (sweet, tangy, spicy battered chicken), Beef with Broccoli (flank steak in oyster sauce), Kung Pao Chicken (spicy chicken with peanuts), Pork Lo Mein (stir-fried egg noodles), and Shrimp Fried Rice. Wonton soup, egg rolls and Crab Rangoon are the most common appetizers. Peking Duck and dim-sum items appear at higher-end China Garden locations.

Is General Tso's Chicken available at China Garden?

Yes — General Tso's Chicken is virtually universal at Chinese-American restaurants called China Garden. It is one of the most searched and most ordered Chinese-American dishes in the country: deep-fried battered chicken pieces tossed in a sweet, tangy, slightly spicy sauce with dried red chilies and scallions. Sesame Chicken (sweeter, milder, garnished with sesame seeds) is a close variant and is also nearly always on the menu.

Are there vegetarian options at China Garden?

Most China Garden restaurants offer a dedicated vegetarian section or can prepare many dishes without meat. Common vegetarian items include Vegetable Lo Mein, Vegetable Fried Rice, Eggplant with Garlic Sauce, Buddha's Delight (mixed vegetables and tofu), Tofu with Vegetables, String Beans with Garlic and Ma Po Tofu (ask for no pork). Soups: Egg Drop Soup and Hot and Sour Soup are typically vegetarian-as-served. Confirm with your specific location, as recipes vary.

Does China Garden serve dim sum?

Some China Garden restaurants serve dim sum — typically on weekend mornings and middays — but it is not universal. Full dim sum service (cart service with har gow, siu mai, char siu bao, turnip cake, etc.) is more common at China Garden locations in cities with large Chinese-American communities. Call ahead or check the restaurant's social media before visiting for dim sum specifically, as hours and availability vary widely by location.

Is China Garden good for large groups or family dinners?

Chinese-American restaurants operating under the China Garden name are generally well-suited for group dining. Most offer family-style ordering, large round tables for groups, and banquet menus (often requiring advance booking). Dishes like Peking Duck, whole steamed fish, Happy Family, and combination platters are designed for sharing. Call ahead to confirm the private dining room, minimum spend and advance-order requirements for large parties.

Does China Garden offer delivery or takeout?

Most independent China Garden restaurants offer takeout directly, and many are listed on DoorDash, Uber Eats or Grubhub for delivery. Search your delivery app for "China Garden" and your city or ZIP code to find the specific location nearest you. Some independent China Garden restaurants also run their own websites with online ordering. Hours and delivery radius vary by location.

How is China Garden different from P.F. Chang's or Panda Express?

China Garden restaurants are independent, locally-owned businesses — menus, prices and quality vary by owner and region. P.F. Chang's is a national sit-down chain (~200 locations) with a standardized contemporary-Chinese menu and cocktail program. Panda Express is a fast-food chain (2,400+ locations) with a short, highly standardized menu. China Garden locations typically offer a much longer menu with more traditional Cantonese and regional Chinese dishes, Peking Duck, whole-fish preparations and dim sum — things you won't find at either national chain.

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