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At this dim sum restaurant, challenges remain as customers return

Eateries returning to dine-in service may face staffing problems, higher costs and the need to transform their business models — again.

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Golden Unicorn restaurant in New York’s Chinatown serves traditional dim sum. It's trying to adapt to changing conditions and higher costs.
Golden Unicorn restaurant in New York’s Chinatown serves traditional dim sum. It's trying to adapt to changing conditions and higher costs.
Courtesy Darren Liu

After more than a year of empty dining rooms and relying on takeout sales, some restaurants are finally seeing more customers dine in as cities start to lift their pandemic restrictions.

 
Carted dim sum service.
Darren Liu

Golden Unicorn restaurant, in New York City’s Chinatown, serves traditional Cantonese-style dim sum in a banquet hall setting. Darren Liu, whose father owns the restaurant, said it closed its doors last year during the pandemic, which forced management to rethink their business model. 

“Pre-COVID, we would always do carted dim sum service, which is bringing around a cart with steamer boilers on the bottom, where it would constantly heat the dim sum dishes, so when a cart is driven to a table, it’s really fresh and ready to go. And of course, now, we had to retire that just for safety reasons,” Liu said. “We had to just pretty much adopt a new model, which is takeout and delivery, which we never did before because dim sum is not really a type of food that does well when delivered.”

 
The interior of Golden Unicorn
Darren Liu

Liu said that while they have overcome the hurdle of reopening, it’s not all smooth sailing from here. The restaurant is struggling to staff up on chefs trained in Cantonese dishes as well as servers, he said. Although customers are returning, clientele hasn’t reached pre-pandemic levels, straining the original business model of low-cost items sold in high volume.

Costs are up across the board. As a result, “the price of our food has increased pretty dramatically,” Liu said. “Like kitchen dishes probably increased 20% to 30%, but our dim sum dishes have increased 50%.”

Liu said he’s optimistic about the future of the restaurant, which brings in everyone from tourists to local Chinese-American residents. But he anticipates that business operations will change to catch up with the myriad shifting variables.

“In order to sustain a restaurant of our size, there’s going to be a need to be a dramatic shift, which we’re slowly embarking on that journey,” Liu said. “Hopefully, we can have a better story to tell in the coming years.”

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