Shanghai Restaurant Review: Dodu

By Betty Richardson, March 13, 2017

2 0

The Place

Rotisserie chicken isn't a new thing – kids have been roasting beasts on spits since pretty much the Iron Age. And we mean, literally, kids, whose job back in the Medieval days was to turn the roasting spit over an open fire, a job later designated to dogs on wheels and finally, electric motors like those at Dodu, a new French rotisserie spot on Changshu Lu.

Dodu Shanghai

They've had a rough time since opening in late January. No licenses, lots of people showing up, complaints from the neighbors. Then the authorities stepped in to shut them down, the visa people got involved and the whole thing was a right old mess. After a three-week-long siesta, however, they're finally open again, this time licensed up to the giblets. 

The Food

With such a tiny space at their disposal, Team Dodu have wisely opted to keep things simple, offering just-roasted birds with a concise selection of sides. It's a scientific fact that the constant rotating motion of rotisserie supplies evenly distributed heat throughout your beast or fowl of choice, keeping the meat juicy and the skin evenly crisped. But equally important is the quality of the bird. 

We are told Dodu uses Label Rouge chickens bred on a farm in Taiwan. Established by the French government in the 1960's, the Label Rouge (Red Label) program is a method of farming that insists upon old-fashioned methods that translate to a better-tasting (and more expensive) bird. 

And they are monsters. 

Dodu Shanghai

As far as rotisserie chicken goes, we can't argue with the quality. The breast isn't dry, the skin is crunchy, seasoned with fancy fleur de sel (flaked sea salt) and rosemary, the leg and wing meat is very succulent. It's also RMB108 for a 750g portion that can feed two people. You can do a whole bird for RMB198, or a quarter for RMB58.

Dodu Shanghai

Upgrade RMB20 more, and you get two sides and two sauces to accompany your bird. Potatoes roasted in the rotisserie oven are a natural pairing, flavored with chicken fat dripping onto them. These are good, but would be mesmerizing had they been just a touch crispier.

Dodu Shanghai

Cauliflower cheese gratinée with Emmenthal cheese was velvety and creamy. Green bean salad with pesto was surprisingly refreshing – we loved that they still had a juicy vegetal bite to them – much needed after the chicken and roasted potato indulgence (and more aioli dip than we'd care to disclose.) If you can manage dessert, the RMB28 vanilla cream pots are delicious. 

Food Verdict: 2.5/3

The Vibe

At that price, you can bet your bottom dollar that Dodu is hectic. Despite booking a table for two, we were initially told to wait 30 minutes as a party of four had taken our spot (which they later rectified.) We can't help but think that it's probably better to not accept reservations at all than make people who have booked wait that long. The place is also rather petite, so if you are dining in, make sure your party isn't larger than four. 

Dodu Shanghai

We won't lie, much of the food at Dodu is stuff your mom could rustle up at home. This is cookery not cheffery, but that is no bad thing. Who wouldn't prefer simple, well-executed food like this over an expensive chef ego trip?

Two will comfortably dine for RMB69 per person – you don't need us to tell you that is an absolute steal. 

Vibe Verdict: 1.5/2

Total Verdict: 4/5

Price: RMB69 per person

Who’s going: French expats, locals

Good for: rotisserie chicken, small groups, French cooking


See a listing for Dodu

Read more Shanghai Restaurant Reviews

more news

Shanghai Restaurant Review: Meta American-Chinese Resto in China, Lucky You

The ultimate meta food inception - a Chinese American restaurant in China where patrons eat an American take on what Canto food is.

Shanghai Restaurant Review: 5-Senses Haute Cuisine at Le Coquin

A feast for all 5 sense with French haute cuisine at Le Coquin

Shanghai Restaurant Review: French Natural Wine Bar Blaz

Blaz is breathing new life into the heritage villa on Donghu Lu with all things French fusion food and wine.

Shanghai Restaurant Review: Maiya Rice Canteen

A casual 'rice canteen' for brunch, lunch and dinner, featuring nourishing, locally-sourced East Asian food and rice-based beverages.

Shanghai Restaurant Review: Yongkang Italian Osteria La Baracca

Italian cafe favorites and a stellar lineup of 16 spritzes to choose from. Hello round-the-clock Happy Hour.

Shanghai Restaurant Review: Must-Try Plant-Based Bistro Duli

Shanghai's first plant-based casual bistro for vegans and carnivores alike.

Shanghai Restaurant Review: Food Theory

China's first ever 'food hub,' a restaurant meets cocktail bar meets cooking school meets pastry institute meets coffee bistro —a true identity crisis if we’ve ever seen one.

Shanghai Restaurant Review: Lucky Diner

If small town middle America in the 1950s got mixed up in a time warp with a retro 1970s Tokyo diner, Lucky Diner would be its love child.

0 User Comments

In Case You Missed It…

We're on WeChat!

Scan our QR Code at right or follow us at Thats_Shanghai for events, guides, giveaways and much more!

7 Days in Shanghai With thatsmags.com

Weekly updates to your email inbox every Wednesday

Download previous issues

Never miss an issue of That's Shanghai!

Visit the archives