Unknown parties have been posting fake closure notices on the windows of at least one of the restaurant's locations — and when a Reddit user spotted the sign at the Monterey Boulevard outpost and shared it online, the post spread fast enough that the owner had to issue a correction.
The owner, whose name was not confirmed in available reports, operates multiple locations: the Monterey Boulevard shop, a second location on 14th Street, and a third on Balboa Street in the Outer Richmond. He told the community directly that the Monterey location will be closed temporarily and is set to reopen June 1.
The restaurant has been a fixture for dumpling-focused Cantonese and Shanghai-style cooking, drawing regulars who describe it as a household staple — the kind of place you bring family, not a reservation. It's an immigrant-run operation that doesn't maintain a heavy social media presence, which may be part of why a fake sign was able to travel so far before anyone caught it.
Who posted the signs and why isn't clear. What is clear is the confusion caused real harm: customers who saw the post mourned the loss of a restaurant that hadn't actually closed, and the owner had to spend time correcting the record instead of running his business.
The incident is a reminder of how quickly misinformation moves through neighborhood food communities — and how much weight a piece of paper on a window still carries, even now.