Shandong is owned by chef Henry Liu.[7] In 2015, Liu and business partner Vo Chien opened Shandong's Sichuan-focused sister restaurant Kung Pow! in northwest Portland, offering a spicier version of Shandong's menu.[1][8]
Shandong operated via takeout and delivery at times in 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]
Reception
The restaurant's interior, 2021
Pork soup dumplings
In his 2011 review of the restaurant, Portland Mercury's Tony Perez complimented the mu shu chicken, noodles, and shrimp dumplings, but was disappointed by the bean sauce and spicy peanut sauce. He summarized, "Shandong is a step up in some ways—it's not the all-too-familiar gut-bomb experience of some of its greasier MSG-laden brethren, and the high points demonstrate some clear skill in the kitchen—but it's not joining the upper echelon either. If you're craving some Chinese staples, by all means, go... just manage your expectations better than I did."[5] In her 2014 book Food Lovers' Guide to Portland, Oregon, Laurie Wolf wrote:
When we first ate at Shandong, we were so happy to find an excellent example of the cuisine of Northern China, one of my favorite areas for culinary delights. Dumplings and wontons are crisp and perfectly fried, not greasy, and the sweet and sour soup was the best I have had in PDX. The beef and pork dishes were also excellent, and we totally loved the house-made noodles, done just right. The service is attentive and the place is modern, clean, and comfortable.[9]
In 2015, Eater Portland's Danielle Centoni called Shandong "one of Northeast Portland's most popular Chinese restaurants".[7] The website's Nathan Williams included the restaurant in a 2022 list of fourteen "standout" restaurants in the "eclectic" Hollywood District.[10] In 2016, Willamette Week's Matthew Korfhage said Shandong serves a "subdued, better-than-most ode to its titular province".[2] The newspaper included Judy's Noodles in a 2018 list of "our favorite noodle bowls and plates in Portland for less than $15" and said, "Among the many chopstick-thick, fresh-made noodles at Northeast Broadway's Shandong, the best by far are the simplest."[6] The business ranked second in the Best Chinese Restaurant category of the newspaper's annual Best of Portland readers' poll in 2024.[11]
Clarissa Wei included Shandong in CNN's 2017 list of the fifty best Chinese restaurants in the U.S., writing:
Shandong offers 'a new look at classic dishes' in a pleasant though simple dining room. The ginger-infused, hand-rolled pot stickers are large and one of the best-selling items. There are also freshly hand-pulled noodles and a unique deep-fried pork dish cooked in a cherry and ginger sauce. Cheap happy hour appetizers, such as pan-Pacific wontons, Chilean rock crab and shiitake dumplings, are available from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Is this the cutting edge of Chinese cuisine? A growing number of devotees think so.[12]