Steam rises from bamboo baskets while Shirley Lee moves through her Irish Channel kitchen with the confidence of someone who’s spent five decades perfecting the dance. At Miss Shirley’s Chinese Restaurant, she greets longtime customers by name, remembers how their children like their egg rolls, and treats every table like family returning home. Retirement lasted about a year before the pull of community proved stronger than the promise of rest.
From Royal China to the Irish Channel
A borrowed-money dream became a 50-year legacy spanning two restaurants.
Lee and her husband, Tang, built their reputation at Royal China in Metairie, opening as newlyweds with money borrowed from their parents. For decades, the restaurant served as both livelihood and community anchor until it was sold in 2021. “I cried… I didn’t want to sell it,” Lee recalled. But retirement felt wrong.
When daughter Carling Lee found a building for sale in New Orleans’ Irish Channel, the family saw their second act. Miss Shirley’s opened in December 2022, bridging the gap between Lee’s Cantonese roots and her adopted city’s appetite for both dim sum and comfort.
A Culinary Matriarch’s Second Act
Personal hospitality transforms a neighborhood restaurant into a gathering place.…