
Crazy Asian Express, a counter-service Chinese spot, quietly opened in Katy on Feb. 7, slipping into the Katy Fort Bend Road retail strip with cafeteria-style combo plates and quick made-to-order staples. The shop is serving egg rolls, lo mein and fast combo meals for walk-up customers, as well as takeout and delivery, giving local diners another low-cost option for Chinese-American comfort food, as reported by Community Impact.
On the menu
The cafeteria-style line lets diners choose sides such as lo mein, fried rice or hand-prepared egg rolls, then pair them with meats including hot pepper chicken, Mongolian beef and black pepper chicken. Its “crazy combo,” described as two entrees plus a side and billed as the signature value play, was listed at $10.49, according to Community Impact. The deal is aimed squarely at lunch crowds and families looking to feed a group without wrecking the budget.
Hours, address and ordering
Crazy Asian Express lists its address as 1111 Katy Fort Bend Rd, Ste. 320, with daily hours of 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. on its website. The site also offers online ordering and a phone number for call-ahead takeout, according to Crazy Asian Express. The Katy location is taking orders for pickup and delivery through major apps, along with walk-in counter service.
Build-out and pricing notes
A Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation project filing shows the Katy unit underwent a first-time interior build-out in 2025 with an estimated $200,000 cost and lists the tenant as Melina Dong, signaling fresh investment in the strip center. That filing is available from the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.
Delivery listings show higher prices for some items compared with the counter. For instance, DoorDash has the Crazy Combo at $14.99, which serves as a reminder that app pricing and in-store pricing do not always match. DoorDash orders and local takeout options are currently available.
Where it fits in Katy
The opening adds to a recent burst of Asian restaurant activity in the Katy-Fulshear corridor, part of a broader wave of Asian restaurant growth in Fort Bend County highlighted by Hoodline. For now, Crazy Asian Express is trying to carve out a niche with low-cost combo plates aimed at commuters, families and office lunch runs.









