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Archive for Chinese Food – Page 3

Mandarin Plaza Crawl

Sep18

Earlier in the year, Yarom and I hatched and plotted this particular all afternoon mega crawl at the Rowland Heights Mandarin Plaza — partially at least while sucking down some serious hot pot in said plaza. This place is far from LA proper, way out 40+ miles to the east but is in the heart of the “new Chinatown”.

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Restaurant: Leung Kee

Location: 18908 E Gale Ave, Rowland Heights, CA 91748

Date: August 3, 2019

Cuisine: Chinese BBQ

Rating: check: roast pig before noon

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We start at 11am, “meating” (haha) up at the former Sam Woo BBQ, now Leung Kee Chinese BBQ.
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It’s right smack in the middle of this huge mall that contains tons of Asian restaurants, including Chinese, Korean, Thai and more.
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They do a lot of takeout biz, pigs and ducks and the like.
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The space is typical old school SGV.
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Boba must be a new thing.
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The menu.
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Tea comes in a mug!
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And there is free eggdrop soup — which was pretty darn good.
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Macau style roast pork. Must have just been reheated as it landed on our table in 2 seconds, but pretty tasty.
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Crispy beef. Very fried, but very delicious.
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Peking Duck. It wasn’t the best peking duck, maybe a bit soggy, but peking duck is always pretty good.
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Buns instead of pancakes.
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And sketchy extra duck meat — that was actually pretty good.

Overall, just fair. Pretty much what you’d expect. But I like pretty much all (real) Chinese food at a good bit.

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Restaurant: Mandarin Bay Seafood

Location: 1015 S Nogales St, Rowland Heights, CA 91748. (626) 839-7738

Date: August 3, 2019

Cuisine: Cantonese Chinese

Rating: check: Just ok

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Next up, we leave the actual mall and cross the street on foot to:
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Meet up with more people at noon at:
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Cantonese Mandarin Bay Seafood Restaurant.
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The gang (minus yours truly).
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The takeout menu.
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It’s noon, by 1 minute or so, so time for wine.

From my cellar, a touch too dry — bone dry rose sparkling from France.
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Nice.
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Second free soup of the day, hot and sour — this was not good hot and sour. I saved the stomach space.
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Marinated Jellyfish. Vinegary and chewy good.
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Salt and Pepper Shrimp. Salty, crunchy, very tasty.
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Salt and pepper squid — somehow we ended up with the same prep twice. These were good too.
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Ginger and Green Onion frog. Kinda fried, but the sauce was great.

Overall, Mandarin was fine too, but nothing super exciting.

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Restaurant: Spicy Moment

Location: 1015 S Nogales St, Rowland Heights, CA 91748. (626) 581-4966

Date: August 3, 2019

Cuisine: Szechuan Chinese

Rating: check: Surprisingly good, big menu

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Next up we walked 2 doors down.
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To a new style Szechuan place.
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This is what I mean by new style. They still have the ugly drop ceiling, but they have made a tiny effort at decorating.

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The menu is gargantuan.7U1A5046
This is a great wine on any day, and particularly great on a hot day with Chinese.
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Recycled from the Vietnamese crawl.
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Grilled pork jowl with Yunnan sauce. Delicious.
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Fish in pickle pepper soup. This wasn’t spicy, but it was amazing. Really, really delicious. Soft tender fish and very distinct and lovely sour flavor.
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Dry pot pork rib and shrimp. Also filled with potatoes to sop up the sauce. I generally like dry pot and this was particularly delicious. Lots and lots of flavor.
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Black pepper lamb shoulder. Not spicy, but very tasty with a strong onion flavor.
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Eggplant with garlic sauce. Fine rendition.

Overall, I was very pleasantly surprised by Spicy Moment and would totally go back for a full meal. Plus they let us drink our wine on the down low. Menu is huge and execution was good — and interesting. It should be noted, that as of Feb/March 2020 Spicy Moment “rebooted” into a totally different, more homestyle Szechuan place with the same name. I have, of course, already eaten there.

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Restaurant: Hunan Restaurant

Location: 1015 S Nogales St, Rowland Heights, CA 91748. (626) 964-8458

Date: August 3, 2019

Cuisine: Hunan Chinese

Rating: check: Solid

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Then we popped back to this spot:
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Located in between the Mandarin Bay and Spicy Moment.
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Hunan is more old school than Spicy Moment, but it also has a vast menu:
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Vast menu.
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More sweet wine.
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And a rhone blend.
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Peanuts.
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Shredded minced pork with corn and pickled vegetable. Super tasty — pork really helps a veggie. Sure to make things really move along later.
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Sautéed lamb. Tasty.
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Crispy pork ribs with garlic and chilies. Lots of flavor, not so much meat.
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Fish filet with fire cracker salt. Very delicious boiled fish with garlic and chilies.
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Spicy pickled cucumbers. Also delicious. Generally a fan fave.

Overall, Hunan was also very good. Sort of a blend of (more old school) Szechuan AND Hunan, but who cares. It was excellent. While the pictures above cover what we ate during the crawl, I’ve also been to this place my specifically, and a more detailed write up can be found here.

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Restaurant: Happy Tree House BBQ

Location: 18904 E Gale Ave, Rowland Heights, CA 91748. (626) 581-9886

Date: August 3, 2019

Cuisine: Chinese Skewers

Rating: check: hmmm

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When I was spotting during the hot pot night, this place seemed intriguing.
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Happy Tree BBQ. It’s a new style skewered meats place.
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Very snazzy new interior.
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Real coals.
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And this warmer thing on the table where they put your skewers.

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Powders.
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Seaweed salad. Tastes like it looks.

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Spicy octopus salad. Ok, but the sauce tasted a lot like Sriracha.
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Beef skewers. Not bad.
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Shrimp skewers. You eat shell and all.
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Hot dogs. Well they didn’t call them that, but they basically are.
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Chicken skin skewers. Crispy!
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Lamb skewers. Pretty good too.
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Chicken wing skewers. Just so so.

Overall, we were kinda disappointed in Happy Tree. Chinese skewers aren’t nearly as good as good Yakatori. They’re fine, but not super exciting. This place looks good, and is probably packed with young people on dates in the evening, but it just doesn’t feel as “Chinese” somehow. I’m not really sure where in China this kind of food is actually from.

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Restaurant: Silk Road Garden

Location: 18904 E Gale Ave, Rowland Heights, CA 91748. (626) 581-9886

Date: August 3, 2019

Cuisine: Uyghur Chinese

Rating: check: great

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So our final place is all the way west.
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And merely across the parking lot next to the first spot.
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It’s Uyghur Chinese like Dolans and has the decor to match. Very cute and intimate.
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Being Uyghur doesn’t mean their menu is any smaller! They have skewers here too — I bet they would be better.
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Garlic pickles. Nice crunchy garlicky cucumbers.
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Yellow noodle with cumin lamb. Delicious tender cumin lamb on top of spaghetti-like noodles.
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Meat and Vegetables in Homemade pastry. A giant golden meat pie. Extremely hot on the mouth, but tasty.

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Special homemade noodle with minced beef. A western Chinese bolognese — tons of flavor. Nice thick al dente noodles.
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Manti, meat and onion filled dumplings. These were superb, with really delicate skins. They could have used a dipping sauce though.
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They had a little freezer of ice cream macarons.
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Overall, I was also very pleasantly surprised by Silk Road. First rate execution. Small, intimate, and clearly cooked with precision. The dishes are typical of the region — half way between Shaanxi and Afghan — focused on lamb, and delicious.

In Summary, we only hit 6 of the perhaps 20+ restaurants in Mandarin plaza, and we “only” had 8 people, but we dined like Emperors on a cross China trek! Seriously, so much variety of style. The far SGV (aka Rowland and Hacienda Heights, Dimond Bar, etc) is where a lot of exciting culinary growth is.

For more LA dining reviews click here.

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Chevy and Mary may have skipped the first place (the BBQ) but they made up for it by getting shave ice and boba tea!
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Related posts:

  1. Chicken Crawl – Dong Nguyen
  2. Chicken Crawl – Side Chick
  3. Chicken Crawl – Tasty Food
  4. Chicken Crawl – Red Chicken
  5. Broiling Pit is the Pits – Crawl part 3
By: agavin
Comments (3)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, crawl, food crawl, hedonists, Hunan Cuisine, Mandarin Plaza, Rowland Heights, SGV, Sichuan, Szechuan cuisine, Uyghur Cuisine, Wine

Q by Peter Chang

Jan04

Restaurant: Q By Peter Chang

Location: 4500 East West Highway #100, Bethesda, MD 20814.  (240) 800-3722

Date: November 20, 2018

Cuisine: Szechuan Chinese

Rating: Great food, but flavors not as strong as in Szechuan

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Any excuse to go to a Chinese restaurant is a good excuse in my book — and that goes doubly so for Szechuan Chinese.
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So back in DC visit my parents and friends we were drawn to “famed” (in Washington) chef Peter Chang’s flagship: Q.

Peter Chang is an award winning chef specializing in Szechuan cuisine who has cooked for restaurants throughout cities in the American southeast and the DMV area. Chang was born in Hubei Province and trained in China, and cooked a meal for former Chinese president Hu Jintao. He moved to the United States to work as the chef at the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C. In the past, Chang has disappeared and left restaurants, inspiring a group of fans to follow his movement in Internet discussion boards, such as DonRockwell.com and Chowhound.
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The interior has a decidedly nice build out in the modern Chinese style — done in a way that doesn’t look garish to Western sensibility.
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From my cellar: 2011 Selbach-Oster Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Riesling Kabinett. VM 87. Fresh bouquet of pear and apple blossom. Delicately sweet on the palate, offering a nice interplay of apricot flavor and luscious citricity. A lovely kabinett to drink now.
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The menu. Authentically long.
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Vegetable Dumpling (steamed).
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Flounder Fish with sour cabbage soup. My mom didn’t “trust” that I had over ordered and got an extra soup for herself. Lol, we had at least two dishes barely touched.
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Dipping sauces.
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Scallion Bubble Pancake. A unique and delicious take on the standard scallion pancake — basically crossed with one of those puffy Indian breads.
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Fresh Lily Dan Dan Mein. Had a touch of numbing flavor, and actually fairly authentic in taste profile. Not the super nutty kind. More like a typical Chengdu dan dan.
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Sichuan Chili Wonton. The typical “numb taste wonton”. Flavor was pretty typical, not super spicy. Wonton type was a bit different than usual, closer to a dimsum.
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Bought this champagne off the list.
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Dragon eggplant with spicy garlic sauce. Pretty much eggplant in fish sauce — which is a dish I love. This version had good flavor and really lovely plating. The eggplant was cut in this interesting spiral. Disadvantage was that it was hard to get just some out, as the vegetable was all connected. It also emphasizes the slippery texture of the eggplant — I like it better mushed up. But still a nice dish.
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Jade shrimp with crispy rice. Gluten free rice dome.
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I think this dish might be related to the Westlake style tea shrimp? Not sure. Very unusual. The sauce was pesto-like, but with a cilantro flavor. The crispy rice was neat too. Never actually seen this combination.
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All their rice is pink rice (with the red bean).
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But we didn’t realize that it came with, so we also ordered egg fried rice with green onion.
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AND Emperor’s fried rice. Alaska king crab leg with shredded scallop. So we had a LOT of rice.
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Mapo tofu. An okay version of the classic. Needed more mala and maybe some more meat. Maybe it didn’t even have meat.
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Braised kale noodles with lobster. Unusual too. Very mild in flavor.
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Peking duck. A couple people at the table had never HAD peking duck. They loved it of course. Everyone does.
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The traditional condiments plus a red horseradish sauce that was unusual.
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Hot and Spicy Fish in Clay Pot. The classic fish filet in chili oil. Pretty nice version of the dish.
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Cumin Lamb Chop. A more modern lamb chop version of regular cumin lamb. Excellent.
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Plain lo mein.
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Green pepper beef with leek. A sort of cross between the green pepper fish (but with beef) and the fatty beef in golden sour soup dishes. Very hot actually and quite good although we were all very full by the time it came.

I was surprised to find actual Szechuan food in Bethesda — and fancy at that! There are a lot of classic dishes here and somewhat updated takes on others. Decor and service are very updated. The modern updates on the dishes are mostly good (like the cumin lamb chops). But I would like slightly stronger more brazen Szechuan flavors — the elements are there but they are toned down a bit for the setting. Still, quite excellent.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

Related posts:

  1. Chang’s Garden
  2. Hop Woo is Hop New
  3. Huolala Hot
  4. Hip Hot
  5. Spicy City!
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Bethesda Maryland, Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, Peter Chang, Q, Q By Peter Chang, Sichuan, Szechuan Chinese, Szechuan cuisine

So Many Palaces, So Few Sundays

Dec24

Restaurant: Monterey Palace Restaurant

Location: 1001 E Garvey Ave. Monterey Park, CA 91755. Phone number (626) 571-0888

Date: November 11, 2018

Cuisine: Cantonese Chinese

Rating: Tony always gets great stuff out of the kitchen

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Tony Lau’s Cantonese dinners are some of the best Chinese dinners of the year. He always manages to get the best out of these old school Cantonese kitchens.
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Monterey Palace is definitely one of these old school 80s Cantonese Palaces on Garvey.
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The interior is the usual somewhat overdone, slightly Chinese wide space.
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We had a nice private room.
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They specialize in roasting so there were pigs and ducks in the window.
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Peanuts on the table to begin with.
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Suckling Pig. Of course we had to. This was pretty typical of good SGV suckling pigs. Crisp skin, nice porky meat and the light hoisin sauce.
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Garlic shrimp. Crispy fried/baked. Not sure how they get them exactly like this.
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With roe too and WAY better than the similar steamed “bug” dish at Newport Seafood. This had a lot of flavor. You could munch on the shells if you like too.
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Scallops, pea pods, and sea cucumber. Very light sauce. A totally different sea cucumber prep than I had in China. But good. The scallops and pea pod part of the dish reminded me of velvety dishes I’d get at Chinese places in my youth (early 80s).
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Beef with mushrooms. Simple, but nice tasty beef actually.
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Sizzling pork. It came first in a bowl.
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Then they transferred to the hot skillet to finish it off. Much like the old “sizzling war bar.”
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Cantonese roast duck. This is close to Peking Duck, but not as crispy. Basically roast duck. Served with the heavier buns.
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And the usual condiments. Not nearly as good as a great Peking Duck, but still excellent.
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Lobster steamed with garlic. This simple prep is often one I get for crab. Just steamed, over glass noodles, and with lots and lots of garlic. Actually turned out to be excellent with lobster as it played up the moist and tender meat.

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Mushrooms, veggies, and pan fried meat (can’t remember which type). This was a slightly different dish and nice.

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Some ancient dessert wine for my gelato.
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My son’s favorite and his birthday pick: Triple Chocolate Cloud Gelato – the base made with Valrhona 63% Satilla Chocolate and then layered with Dark Chocolate Creamcheese Ganache and house-made Valrhona brownie cubes — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato — #SweetMilkGelato #gelato #SummerTime #TripleChocolate #chocolate #valrhona #javara #brownies #icecream #dessert #FrozenDessert

There was also a tiny bit of Saffron Pistachio Gelato – Persian Saffron infused milk and Pistachios from Bronte Sicily — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato — #SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #saffron #pistachio #nuts #sicily
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The restaurant brought fruit.
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Overall, this was a great meal. Monterey Palace is a pretty dated old school Cantonese place and I bet that if you just went and ate dinner it would be fairly middling (although enjoyable enough). However, Tony Lau always manages to get the very best out of them. This meal wasn’t my favorite Chinese style, I like a somewhat more varied, spicier, and more “Chinese” Chinese food style personally. In some ways it actually reminded me of what we had in Guilin China (which isn’t that far from Canton). You can see a lot of examples from China itself below in my Chinese dining guide.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews here and in China, click here.

Wines jumbled below:
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Related posts:

  1. Lincoln Seafood Restaurant
  2. NBC Seafood – Best Ever?
  3. SGV Nights – Seafood Palace
  4. Cui Hua Lou – Szechuan Shed
  5. Day of the Dumplings
By: agavin
Comments (2)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Cantonese Chinese, Chinese Food, Gelato, hedonists, Monterey Palace, Monterey Palace Restaurant, Monterey Park, SGV, Tony Lau

Szechuan Impression West

Dec01

Restaurant: Sichuan Impression

Location: 11057 Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90025. (310) 444-7171

Date: October 10 and November 6 & 30th and December 17 & 19, 2018 and Jan 9 & 30 and April 21, 2019 and July 16, 2019

Cuisine: Szechuan Chinese

Rating: SGV on the Westside

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I’ve been waiting all summer for Sichuan Impression — one of my favorite SGV haunts — westside branch to open up and so it was that Yarom, Keong, and I descended on them at 11am opening day! Plus returned twice a month later for more updates.
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They took up residence in the old Jin Jiang which I used to eat at all the time in the old Flektor days. Right above Hamasaku. Only problem with this location is the lousy parking (the lot’s always full).
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The interior is newly redone — except the icky bathrooms.
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Crowded on a Friday night.
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There is some patio space too. Never see that at Chinese!
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The menu is posh.
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Yarom with the chef from Chengdu and the owner Kelly (on the right).
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For my 11/6/18 lunch Liz brought this perfect light (low alcohol) Riesling. 2016 Peter Lauer Ayler Kupp Riesling Spätlese Faß 23. VM 93. This “two-star” auction lot is more northerly in fruit personality than the corresponding Fass 7, prominently featuring grapefruit and white peach laced with fresh lime and garlanded in apple blossom and honeysuckle. The lusciously fruited palate is buoyant, glossy and subtly creamy, but at the same time almost electrocharged in its expression of brightly juicy citrus. The vibrantly sustained finish gains mouthwatering appeal from a suffusion of mineral salts and invigorates with an impingement of grapefruit zest, peach fuzz and stone.
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Juicy Steamed Chicken in Chili Sauce (10/10/18). This classic cold appetizer was excellent here. Not absolutely perfect. The sauce was great, but the chicken maybe could have been slightly better. But still very strong.
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Impressive Bean Jelly (10/10/18). Green bean jelly, crushed peanuts, scallion. This actually was impressive. First of all, it’s cut in Chengdu street style instead of the longer noodles (which I also like). It’s cold, with the jello-like texture and the awesome tangy/spicy chili sauce. 10 out of 10 for this fabulous dish.

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On our second and third visit (11/6/18 & 11/30/18) the dish was cut more like noodles. I actually preferred the slab version slightly although it was still great.
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Bamboo shoots in chili sauce (1/30/19). This is a simple dish, possibly just steamed bamboo shoots with chili oil on top, but I liked it a lot. Nice crunch. Some real heat — and kinda healthy!
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On 2/10/19 a version of the bamboo shoots with sauce on the side.
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Cold Noodles (11/30/18). This is the worst dish I’ve had here. Cold, chewy, an not much flavor.
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Szechuan French Fries (11/30/18). A little soggy but great flavor.
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Eggs and tomatoes (2/10/19). A Chinese home classic.
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Wonton’s in chili oil (11/6/18). Could have used a bit more chili oil, but the wontons were delicious. I just dipped it in the noodle sauce.
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Impressive Sausages (4/21/19). Very good cold Chinese Sausages. Spicy and Sweet and Salty at the same time.

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Shredded Pork with Garlic (11/6/18). Cold bacon-like pork with garlic and cilantro. I was actually expecting the pork in fish sauce but this was a great dish too. Not as hot as at Gu Yi.
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Twice Cooked Pork (7/16/19). An excellent example of the classic Szechuan Dish. Tender meat, lots of salty/pork flavor, offset by the big strips of green onion.
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Steamed Pork with Rice Flour (10/10/18). Marbled pork, pumpkin, scallion. I’ve never had this dish before. The meat was very fatty and very soft and had a moist texture from the rice flour — not to mention an interesting almost almond-like taste. Quite comforting and nice, if a touch “weird” to American standards.
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MaPo Tofu (10/10/18). 10 out of 10 version of this classic dish. Salty, but not too salty, with lots of mala.

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Everything hot pot (11/30/18). This had tripe, spam, shrimp, veggies, and some kind of scary dark organ meat. It was delicious though, particularly the spam.
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Fish filet with green chilies (11/30/18). Really nice version of this dish. Thick soft fish and lots of green heat. Very delicate and flavorful.
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Fish filet in golden sour soup (11/30/18). Photo is after it was mostly eaten. Awesome fish dish. The soft fish complemented perfectly with the mild tangy soup/sauce.
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Tea Smoked Pork Rib (10/10/18 & 11/30/18). Pork rib, dry chili, scallion, minced peanuts. This was a moderately contentious dish in the group, but I loved it as always. The meat is super tender, melt from the bone, with a dry and nutty heat.
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Sweet and Sour Shrimp (10/10/18). Super garlicky, spicy, tangy. Really like this dish too.

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Sizzling chicken with chilies (11/6/18). Nice version of this dish. Not as heavy on the peppers and aromatics but I liked the celery (coated in chili bits).

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Pig trotters (11/30/18). Chewy, but lots and lots of flavor.
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Kung Pao Chicken (11/30/18). Fabulous. Very much Chengdu style with the heat, sweetness, and tangy quality.
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Kung Pao Shrimp (12/19/18). Not only did it have the same goodness (and lots of ginger) but there were tons of succulent shrimp!
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Griddle Style Shrimp (11/30/18). Really nice flavor.
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Frog hot pot (11/30/18). Not our favorite. The frog meat was good, if boney but it was a bit overcooked and the sauce more flat.
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Ginger Rabbit (4/21/19). Rabbit was meaty and had minimal bone for rabbit. The sauce had a nice ginger flavor and was HOT — very hot for mortals.
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Spicy Hot Free Range Chicken (1/9/19). This dish was one of the hottest dishes I’ve had here, with a searing green/red almost Hunan style heat. Nice flavor and a lot of good garlicky burn.
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Griddle Cooked Squid (4/21/19). Great griddle cooked flavor. Hot but not too hot. Nice chewy squid. Crunchy vegetables. Excellent dish.
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Cumin mutton (11/6/18). Super tender. Awesome version of this Szechuan classic.

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Mustard Greens (11/30/18). Really delicious. Crunchy with lots of garlic.
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Lettuce (11/30/18). Also very good.
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Crunchy veggies and egg with tomato (11/30/18). Boring stuff for vegetarians.
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Rice cake with syrup and peanut dust (11/30/18). Interesting gooey/chewy texture and pleasant flavor. Mild though like most Chinese desserts.
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Natural Bubblegum Gelato made by me for @sweetmilkgelato (11/30/18) — turns out you can simulate bubblegum with a bunch of fruits and vanilla! — #SweetMilkGelato #gelato #bubblegum #weirdflavors #natural
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Pina Colada Sorbetto — just like the cocktail with Thai coconut milk, pineapple, a touch of lime and dark rum — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato (11/30/18) — #SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #PinaColada #CocktailIceCream #pineapple #coconut #lime #rum

Service was nice but very slightly confused as this was the opening hour for the entire restaurant. The owner Kelly was super nice. They have one of their chefs in from Chengdu for the opening, and the food was extremely tight, extremely authentic, and as good as the SGV branch. He will head home at some point, and so it will be interesting to see where it goes. The menu is big and interesting with all sorts of non-American favorites like intestines and kidneys and rabbit. Yum!

Super excited to have this on the westside — and they have a liquor license too so we will be coming back for a wine dinner in November.

I have heard that the lines are quite bad at dinner time and the staff hasn’t totally figured out how to service the demand yet — but they seem committed to figuring it out. I’m happy it’s busy too because that means it will do better and last longer! Because this is real Szechuan food (or as close as we come in America).

My second lunch on 11/6/18 was medium crowded. They took a bit of time to take our order but it came fast and everything was still delicious. It maybe was 5% less on point than the first time, probably because the Chengdu chef returned home, but it was still really really solid and about the same as the SGV version.

Third dinner on 11/30/18 was very good. A few dishes were off like the cold noodles but most were great. They had a bit of a tough time (although they tried) with the complex two table ordering and were bringing things out a bit fast. But they also had the best bus boy ever!

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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Papa Limor 83rd bday!7U1A2414
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High acid, fruit hiding a bit, but very nice.
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Tasted like a pinot. VERY fruit forward.
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Great with the spice.
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Related posts:

  1. Cui Hua Lou – Szechuan Shed
  2. GuYi — Szechuan in Brentwood?
  3. Eating Chengdu – Szechuan
  4. Hop Woo is Hop New
  5. Szechuan Everywhere
By: agavin
Comments (2)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, chili, Chinese Food, Gelato, hedonists, mala, mapo tofu, opening day, Sichuan, Sichuan Impression, Skylar, spicy, Szechuan Impression, West LA

Derek moved to China Red

Nov20

Restaurant: China Red

Location: 855 S Baldwin Ave, Arcadia, CA 91007. (626) 445-3700

Date: September 30, 2018

Cuisine: Chinese

Rating: Very good Cantonese, has some DM though

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Another Sunday, another Chinese. In this case we came to China Red because our friend Derek, former manager of Elite and World Seafood has moved here.
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For some reason I’ve been on a run of places on the slightly more “Eastern” half of the main SGV. Slightly more annoying drive too as it’s 10-15 minutes further.
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The interior is typical midsized Cantonese. There is some DM (deferred maintenance). This is very Chinese, but the place is only a couple years old and is showing some wear and tear.
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Here is Derek on the left with Yarom.
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We were in the private room — which is eclectic to say the least.
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Peanuts to start.
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We started with a few classic bits of dimsum, even though it was evening.

Har Gow. Pretty solid shrimp dumplings.
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Shu Mai. Pork and shrimp. I always love these meat bombs.
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Roast Pigeon. Finger licking good.
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Garlic fried fish. Or maybe it was frog, I can’t remember. It was crunchy, garlicky, salty, and pretty good.
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Peking duck. Can never go wrong with that and this was a fairly juicy version.
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Even if they only had the buns (I prefer the pancakes).
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Roast pork. Nice crispy skin.
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Mixed seafood chow mein. Carby goodness.
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And the next noodle, because we needed a LOT of them. This was some sort of meat and black bean and black pepper wok fried noodle – it was delicious.
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String beans with eggplant.
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Pea tendrils or whichever type of colon sweeper with garlic.
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Everything fried rice.
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Lobster. A solid lobster. I’ve had better sauces but the meat was good.
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Sweet and sour squirrel fish. Very fried, which makes it extra tasty.
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More noodles, chicken noodles I think. Not quite as good as the beef pepper noodles.
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Custard buns. Tasty.

I can’t even remember if I brought gelato this night. Lol.

Food was quite good at China Red and Derek really takes care of us. We have so many Cantonese feasts that it’s hard to remember which ones are the best, but this was quite solid, although not super “unique.” China Red was oddly quiet, and the place looks a touch shabby, but it’s certainly better than most (but not all) SGV Cantonese by a good bit.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Japanese in China – Izakaya Akatora
  2. World Seafood is Elite
  3. SGV Nights – Seafood Palace
  4. Top Island Seafood
  5. Mark’s Duck House
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Cantonese, Cantonese cuisine, China Red, Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, Dim sum, hedonists, Lobster, Peking Duck, pigeon, SGV, Wine

Elite Wines at Elite Restaurant

Nov05

Restaurant: Elite Restaurant [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Location: 700 S Atlantic Blvd, Monterey Park, CA 91754. (626) 282-9998

Date: September 17, 2018

Cuisine: Cantonese Banquet

Rating: Elite!

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Elite is well known as one of great LA’s top dimsum places, but less well known is how great a Cantonese banquet place it is. On this particular night I met Paul R and a bunch of his friends out here for Burgundy night — sure it was a week night and 2 hours in traffic, but great Burgundy and Chinese is worth it!

They actually have a couple private rooms, but this time we had the small one, although it was certainly big enough for the 8 of us. The above photo is the same room, different dinner.

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1996 Deutz Champagne Cuvée William Deutz Rosé. JG 91. This is a very young bottle of Rosé that offers up excellent promise on both the nose and palate, but I would be inclined to give the wine at least a couple more years to really allow it to blossom. The bouquet is deep, young and classy, as it offers up scents of tart cherries, orange peel, sourdough, a touch of new leather and a lovely base of soil. On the palate the wine is deep, full-bodied, crisp and complex, with lovely focus and bounce, bright acids, tiny bubbles and good length and grip on the slightly muddied finish. I suspect that a bit more precision will come on the backend with further bottle age.
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2000 Deutz Champagne Cuvée William Deutz. JG 93. The 2000 Cuvée William Deutz is a deep, young and powerfully-built wine with superb depth and structure for long-term aging. The bouquet is really quite fine, offering up a deep and classy nose of apple, wheat toast, tangerine, some gentle leesy tones, a lovely base of soil, a touch of fresh nutmeg and a smoky topnote. On the palate the wine is deep, full-bodied and rock solid at the core, with excellent focus and balance, elegant mousse and excellent length and grip on the crisp and complex finish. This is a very classy bottle of bubbly that is already drinking very well and which will continue to age gracefully for a couple of decades.
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Peanuts on the table.
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From my cellar: 1983 Domaine Clair-Daü Bonnes Mares. JK 94. Insanely pretty- aromas of cherry, sweet tea, violet, rose and potpourri. On the palate this shows cherry, tea and lavender. Picks up mineral elements as it sits in the glass. Flavors of cherry liqueur, mineral, rose water and mineral. Balanced, with a long finish. Just awesome.1A0A7552
Cold BBQ Plate with Macau style BBQ pork belly, Char Sui, roast chicken, and jellyfish. Good stuff all around, particularly both porks.
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2001 Domaine Denis Mortet Chambertin. VM 92+. Full, bright red. Brooding, very ripe aromas of black fruits, licorice, graphite and gunflint, all lifted by a subtle oaky perfume. Big, broad, rich and okay, with powerful, dense black fruit flavors and excellent length and thrust. Five or six years in bottle should bring greater refinement as the wine loses some of its baby fat.
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Peking duck. Despite the fact that I’ve been to Elite 20+ times, I’ve never had their peking duck — didn’t even know they offered it. It wasn’t bad at all. Sure they offer only the buns, not the pancakes, but it was still darn good.1A0A7572
2007 Domaine Ponsot Griotte-Chambertin. BH 93. A moderately complex but quite densely fruited nose of earthy red berries, underbrush and warm earth tones leads to silky, rich and round broad-shouldered flavors that possess taut muscle but no hard edges or tannins, in fact the mouth feel here is quite sophisticated, all wrapped in an impressively intense, mouth coating and harmonious finish. The structure is dense but fine and this should benefit from at least a decade of cellar time. A Griotte of class, grace and distinction.
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Duck part deux, which is mixed with water chestnuts etc and served with…
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Lettuce cups.
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Here it is as you eat it.
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2001 Gunderloch Nackenheim Rothenberg Riesling Auslese. VM 94. Tangerine and sassafras aromas put one in mind of Erden. On the palate, honey and rich marzipan sweetness are leavened by tangerine citricity and the whole suffused with pungently smoky minerality. A hundred grams of residual sugar are brought to heel by 10.5 acidity and heaps of extract. The braid of fresh fruit, botrytized, faintly caramelized fruit and minerals here is uncanny. Juicy and refreshing in the finish even as it is profoundly botrytized and rooted in its classic red soil terroir. Smoke and almonds linger longest of all.
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Santa Barbara prawns with garlic. Very simple prep, but good. Way, way better than the steamed bugs at Newport Seafood.
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1989 Domaine Bruno Clavelier Chambolle-Musigny 1er Cru La Combe d’Orveau Vieilles Vignes. a rare wine, you don’t see Combe d’Orveau that often.
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Steamed pork with salty fish. Yeah, it looks like the cat barfed up on a plate, but it’s really delicious with a mild porky flavor.
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Sautéed scallops. Simple, to go with the wine, but nice.
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2001 Domaine Armand Rousseau Père et Fils Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Cru Clos St. Jacques. BH 93. Knockout aromas of wonderfully intense black and red cherry fruit loaded with cassis and a touch of new oak introduce medium-bodied, sweet, harmonious, very expressive and long flavors all underpinned by racy minerality and firm structure. The tannins are prominent but ripe and the density of extract is impressive and this both coats and stains the palate. As it always does, this delivers finesse with real mid-palate punch with near perfect grace. For my taste, I would hold this for another 1 to 3 years but it would be no vinous crime to be drinking this now. Note to be sure to serve this cool as the alcohol becomes noticeable if it becomes a bit too warm.
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House special lobster. Super delicious with lots of juicy lobster meat.
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2001 Louis Jadot Chapelle-Chambertin. BH 93. A still very fresh nose is just now beginning to display the initial hints of secondary development that leads to rich, intense and beautifully well-detailed medium-bodied flavors that ooze a fine minerality on the vibrant and impeccably well-balanced finish. There is a touch of austerity present on the finale that serves as a balancing element to the naturally sweet mid-palate. This has reached that point in its evolution where it’s still on the way up but still far enough along where it can be drunk with pleasure. In sum, this is really lovely juice and a classic Chapelle.
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Mushrooms and other vegetables in brown sauce.
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2001 Joh. Jos. Prüm Wehlener Sonnenuhr Riesling Auslese. 95 points. Prum calls this wine “typically somewhat reserved vis-a-vis the Graacher Auslese” but I apprehend a level of sheer flavor intensity that goes beyond the other wines here today, with apple, honey and spice supported by a volatile esterous note of botrytis and even a prickly Eiswein-like whiff of chili pepper. Impressive custardy richness in the mouth, yet ripe, refreshing citricity keeps the wine dynamic and salty minerality helps extend the finish. (In the interest of full disclosure I pass on Prum explanation that this is one of “three or four comparable lots” of Wehlener Sonnenuhr Auslese which will be bottled separately.
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Seafood chow mein. I always love this dish, particularly when the sauce soaks into them and softens them up. Oh so good.
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2006 Domaine Ponsot Clos de la Roche Vieilles Vignes. VM 93-96. Good full ruby-red. Incredible nose melds wild cherry, mocha, brown spices, iron, orange peel and underbrush. Like liquid silk on entry, then hugely concentrated in the middle, with an extraordinarily fine-grained texture and no easy sweetness. Impeccably balanced, soil-driven wine that finishes with noble tannins and great persistence. This is Clos de la Roche, not pinot. As of November, one of the most promising wines of this stealth vintage.
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I wish I knew what they called this fried rice as it’s super awesome with that chopped pork and whatnot on top!
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2008 Bouchard Père et Fils Meursault 1er Cru Les Perrières. BH 93. The intense stoniness of this wine is immediately evident as it suffuses every aspect from nose to finish. An ultra elegant aromatic profile features notes of acacia, pear and dried rose petal before sliding gracefully into detailed, driving and explosive medium-bodied flavors that display cuts-like-a-knife precision on the almost aggressively mineral-driven finish that seems to go on and on. A study in purity and a classic Perrières.
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Gotta love the Mango Pudding.

A lot of these dishes were stunning, like the pig and all the crab dishes. The private room was great and we had a stunning lineup of (mostly) Burgundy. A wine or two had serious issues, but that’s par for the course. I feel that Burgundy shows off by far at dinners where it dominates (although it can mix fine with Champy). You can’t easily go back and forth between the big extracted wines and the more subtle Burgundy.

For more LA Chinese reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Elite – King Crab Custard
  2. Elite Dim Sum
  3. Elite New Years
  4. Elite Wine Night
  5. Lincoln Seafood Restaurant
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Cantonese cuisine, Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, Elite, Elite Restaurant, Paul Rosenberg, Peking Duck, SGV

Eating Guilin – Chunji

Sep28

Restaurant: Chunji Roasted Goose Restaurant

Location: No. 12, Jiangan Road, Qixing District, Guilin, China / No. 21, Qixing Road, Qixing District, Guilin, China / 1/F, Nanxi Square, Chongxin Road, Xiangshan District, Guilin, China / 2/F, Jinshuiwan International Restaurant, Jinshui Road, Lingui County, Guilin, China / No.2 Middle Zhongshan Road, Xiufeng District, Guilin, China / No.1, North Zhongshan Road, Diecai District, Guilin, China

Date: August 6 & 8, 2018

Cuisine: Guangzhou Chinese

Rating: Big menu, great service, good food

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The Guangzhou province city of Guilin is famous for its unusual and beautiful mountains.
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Like Elephant Trunk Hill (above).
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While staying here, we went twice to Chunji Roast Goose, at two different locations — like most successful Chinese restaurants there are several locations in the same city.

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This location’s spacious interior.
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The kitchen was impressive to see.
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Look at the army of wok cooks!

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This is the second location frontage.
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And here we had a private room.

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Both shared the same Guangzhou style menu.
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Chinese beer, local I think.
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Chunji brings an hour glass to the table. If it runs out (30 min) before all your food has come your meal is free! I don’t think it ever happens with that army of cooks.
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Egg pudding/custard, soy sauce, salted steamed pork. A delicious dish we ordered twice. The egg has a lovely soft texture and the pork adds savory flavor.
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BBQ pork (char siu). This is the kind of sweet “candied” pork I really love. It was soft, rich, and delectably flavored.

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Glass noodles with mushrooms and egg. Pleasant.

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Beef of some sort with chilies.
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Pork and green peppers.
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Cauliflower. This was the second “version” of this dish they made. The first had bits of pork in it and was delicious. This was properly vegetarian but flavored mostly with soy sauce and was a bit salty.
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Bamboo shoots with spring onions and pork. This wasn’t supposed to have meat either, but they included more of the “sneaky meat.” I do have to say, it improved the flavor.
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Shredded potatoes and vinegar. I love the slightly sour quality of this dish.

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Cabbage.

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Stewed tofu (with sneaky pork). The kind of pan fried tofu in a light broth.

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Bean curd. Not my favorite version of this dish as it was a bit dry, but I do like the texture of this scum from the soy bucket bean curd.

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Beer fish. This is a local specialty. Fish braised in a sauce of tomatoes, beer, and chilies.
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Steamed fish. Blander.

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Vegetable fried rice. Always a favorite. Meat version is better, but any fried rice is good.

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Toffee taro. Chunks of taro deep fried and coated in syrup. They tasted just like glazed donut balls. Delicious and rapidly stick together.

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Toffee water chestnuts. Same think, different “filling.” I liked the crunch of the water chestnuts. Tasted very slightly less desserty.
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Durian puffs. Flakey buttery dough filled with durian paste. These had a very strong durian (petrol) flavor. I find it really delicious at first but the aftertaste wears on me.
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Fruit plate.

Chunji does a very good job. Service was solid and they have a big menu that seems well executed as most dishes were delicious. I don’t have that much experience with Guangzhou fare although certain dishes are familiar to me from Cantonese.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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Observe the city’s iconic mountains

Related posts:

  1. Eating Beijing – Xiao Long Pu
  2. Eating Beijing – 3.3 Noodles
  3. Eating Beijing – Xian Lao Man
  4. Eating Xi’an – Warrior Lunch
  5. Eating Chengdu – Alley Noodles
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: China, Chinese Food, Eating China, Eating Guilin, Guangzhou cuisine, Guilin

Eating Chengdu – Alley Noodles

Sep19

Restaurant: Somewhere near the Kuanxiangzi Alley

Location: ? Central Chengdu

Date: August 4, 2018

Cuisine: Szechuan Noodle House

Rating: OG dan dan

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Chengdu has a couple areas now of older style buildings that have been restored and turned into pedestrian streets filled with different mixes of stores, restaurants, and vendors.
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This one, apparently Kuanxiangzi Alley (someone who reads Chinese can confirm), is very popular and upscale.
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And crowded!
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Among other Szechuan delicacies they offer spicy fried rabbit heads!
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And ear cleaning!
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We asked our guide to bring us to the most authentic dan dan mein possible and he took us here. I have no idea what it’s called.
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They double as a vendor out front. Or maybe there just is a vendor out front.
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The food appears to be made right in the lobby.
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And the decor is definitely not aimed at the western crowd.
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We split into two tables and ordered everything on the menu.
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Like non-spicy pork (spam?) and mushroom and bamboo noodles (thin).
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Or the same thing with thick noodles.
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And the main event, dan dan mein, one of the world’s greatest noodle dishes — which I even make at home.
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This is Chengdu-style where it’s not very soupy, has less sesame/peanut and is spicer. You mix it up to experience the really complex savory/spicy/numbing flavor. There was a good bit of preserved mustard greens in here for that unusual umami crunch. Excellent!
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And the spicy (beef?) and bamboo noodle.
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Plus two kinds of dumplings. This numb taste dumpling which was awesome — not that you can really taste what’s inside under that chili sauce.
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And the same non-spicy pork dumpling in the non-spicy broth (same as above with the non-spicy noodles).
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Chopsticks you help yourself to.

Good place. Not a big menu, but I could certainly lunch off top notch Chengdu style dan dan mein and numb taste dumplings often enough!

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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New and old – east and west!

Related posts:

  1. Eating Chengdu – Chen Mapo Tofu
  2. Eating Beijing – 3.3 Noodles
  3. White Guys Can Cook Noodles
  4. Chengdu Taste – Power of the Peppercorn
  5. Eating Xi’an – De Fa Cheng
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: China, Chinese Food, Dan Dan Mein, Dan Dan Noodles, Eating Chengdu, Eating China, Sichuan, spicy, Szechuan cuisine

Eating Chengdu – Chen Mapo Tofu

Sep14

Restaurant: Chen Mapo Tofu

Location: 197 W Yulong St, LuoMaShi, Qingyang Qu, Chengdu Shi, Sichuan Sheng, China, 610000. +86 28 8675 4512

Date: August 3, 2018

Cuisine: Szechuan Chinese

Rating: Most balanced Szechuan I’ve had

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Being an obsessive lover of Szechuan food I’ve been wanting to go to Chengdu for years.
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It’s really quite a neat city with both modern…
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And “antique” buildings — something you don’t see as much of in many Chinese towns. It also has A LOT of crowds having grown in the last 20 years from about 3 million to over 16 million people!
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For our first night we arrived late from the train and rushed around the corner from our hotel to this recommended classic Szechuan place named Chen Mapo Tofu. The downstairs part looked hipped and was MOBBED. The guy at the front barely talked to us but basically told us that there were more people waiting than were going to eat tonight so he sent us upstairs to their less crowded area — we think.
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The upstairs was through this portal.
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And here is the menu.
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I took a picture of the first page of the huge menu. Wish I had the patience to photo 20 pages, but alas I did not.
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Signature mapo tofu. I’ve had a lot of “pocked marked old lady face tofu” and even make it myself. This might have been the best I’ve had, certain was great. Look at all that Szechuan peppercorn on top for the extra numb effect — love it!
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We had to get some rice, of course, for the quintessential combo.
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Mapo over rice.
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Had to try some Kung Pao Chicken at the source. Really nice. Not too spicy, but with a complex savory/sour kind of flavor that was really good and much more lively than the bland American versions.
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Tofu and mushrooms. Very nice mild yellow broth type of tofu. The chewier more fried kind.
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Clams and chicken with chiles. The chicken had all the bones, beak, feet etc. Very tasty sauce though with all the pepper. I really enjoyed this dish.
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Fresh whole fish boiled with chilies. Really nice version of this Szechuan classic soaked in chili oil and oozing with peppercorns and chilies. The only problem was all the bones.
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Greens.

Overall, this was a great meal, best we had in Chengdu. I’ll have to go back because I know the city has so much good stuff to offer. I really enjoyed the complex spicy, numb, tangy, sour flavors.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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The face of a (bamboo eating) angel

Related posts:

  1. Pockmarked Old Lady Tofu
  2. Chengdu Taste – Power of the Peppercorn
  3. Quick Eats: Tofu Ya
  4. Tofu with a Seoul
  5. Eating Beijing – Xiao Long Pu
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Chen Mapo Tofu, Chengdu, Chinese Food, Eating Chengdu, Eating China, mapo tofu, Sichuan, Szechuan cuisine

Eating Xi’an – De Fa Cheng

Sep10

Restaurant: De Fa Cheng

Location: 28 Pingan Market, Bell Tower Square, Xi’an, China. +86 29 8767 6615

Date: August 2, 2018

Cuisine: Chinese Dumpling House

Rating: Really interesting if a bit “big”

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When I came to China in 2008 I ate at De Fa Cheng and enjoyed it tremendously. That trip, it was one of my favorite meals and I always regretted only taking a photo or two (it wasn’t until 2010 that I started photoing every meal I ate). It claims to offer “authentic” Tang Dynasty dumpling feasts. I have my doubts as to the historicity of the food, but it’s sure good.
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The place is located right across from the central Ming Dynasty Bell Tower and is at least 3 stories!
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I remember this golden dumpling from last time and used it to locate the restaurant again this trip (by some creative googling).
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Last time we had a big group and therefore some private rooms upstairs but this time we were in the “grand hall” on the first floor.
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They have plastic models of dumplings.
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There is a sauce bar you can make up your dumpling sauces at — unfortunately I only noticed after the meal!
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We got tea, plum juice (which I love), and some weird herbal/fruit dark brown juice with a highly intriguing and not entirely pleasant flavor.
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Cold dishes to start, including the world’s largest dates.
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Wood ear mushroom with onions. Loved it.
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Spinach, egg, and garlic.
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Pickled veggies and meats.
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Shrimp and cucumbers.
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And super spicy crawfish.
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There are many levels of dumpling banquet, varying from about $10 a person to several hundred! We got level 2 or 3, it was about $15, and was a staggering amount of food. There was even a custom veggie version for my wife.

The normal course we ordered came with what seemed to be “all you can eat” boiled pork dumplings, a comfort food I always enjoy. Each time our plate got low they just brought another.
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The veggie course likewise had a plate of boiled veggie dumplings. She level got it low but I’m sure they would have replaced it too.
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Each person then got one of each type of specialty dumpling. I’m going to have to guess for most what was in them because I couldn’t read Chinese. The brown ones were walnut dumplings. I dunno about the other.
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There were duck dumplings and something else here.
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A whole selection of veggie dumplings here.
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And a second round of different veggie dumplings here.
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Then some veggie and some other type here for us.
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The orange ones were a touch sweet and really good. Maybe pumpkin.
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These dumplings were in a soup with Szechuan peppercorns and hence had a nice numbing bite.
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Fried pork dumplings.
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Baked dumplings.
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More rounds. I can’t remember what they were but the ones with the green edge were really good. Like meatball dumplings.
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The middle ones were a strong tomato dumpling and I can’t remember about the outside.
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Finally there was a wonton soup.
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We got this whole story about the Empress Cixi and how this was made for her. It contained little wontons and the random number in your bowl denotes your fortune somehow.
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Watermelon.

This was a fun meal and a great deal at $15 a head for an epic gut bursting feast. Light eaters could split a course. In fact we ordered 4 for 3 adults and the kids. The dumplings were interesting and flavorful. My only complaint was that sometimes the skins were a bit chewy/thick. I wonder what the hell is in the expensive banquets? I think they go up to 100 dumpling types!

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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De Fa Cheng is right across the street from the iconic Bell Tower

Related posts:

  1. Eating Beijing – Xian Lao Man
  2. Eating Xi’an – Jia San Soup Pau
  3. Eating Xi’an – Warrior Lunch
  4. Eating Beijing – Country Kitchen
  5. Eating Beijing – Dadong
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: China, Chinese Food, De Fa Cheng, dumplings, Eating China, Eating Xi'an, plum juice, soup, Xi'an

Eating Xi’an – Warrior Lunch

Sep07

Restaurant: ? near Terracotta Warriors

Location: ? near Terracotta Warriors

Date: August 2, 2018

Cuisine: Shaanxi Chinese

Rating: hearty and tasty

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After a nice hot (100 deg) morning visiting the vast terracotta army of Qin Shi Huang it was time for lunch.
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The human version of this army most have eaten a lot of noodles!
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We stopped at a local place just outside the grounds. The name wasn’t in English but anyone who reads Chinese can feel free to zoom in and translate for me. Please message me and I’ll update the post.
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The inside is simple.
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They had pomegranate juice which is a speciality of the region. It’s pretty sweet.
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Scallion pancake.
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These are some plain knife cut, hand pulled, noodles. Thick and almost like lasagna sheets they are a staple of Shaanxi cooking.
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Preserved beef noodles. This classic local dish is hearty peasant fare and delicious. Thick noodles are covered in sauce, potatoes, celery, etc and then topped with “preserved beef” which turns out to basically be pastrami. Quite lovely.

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Noodle pull!
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Sprinkle chicken. I don’t know what to call this interesting and presumably non traditional dish. It was deep fried boneless chicken strips in a sweet and sour sauce and covered in rice sprinkles! While the taste was a bit like a more homestyle Panda Express dish it was actually quite addictive. The soft/sweet chicken was nicely offset in a textural since by the mild crunch of the sprinkles.
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Chicken noodle plate. We finished the noodles and pastrami in our first big plate and so ordered another, this time with chicken. We didn’t realize it would be fried (just like the sprinkle chicken). It was still tasty though.

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Greens. So all those noodles don’t cause a blockage.

This place was simple and hearty but a solid example of homestyle Shaanxi cooking. Actually something I wanted because on this trip I’ve been trying to eat regionally and experience the character of each area.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Eating Beijing – Xian Lao Man
  2. Eating Beijing – 3.3 Noodles
  3. Eating Xi’an – Jia San Soup Pau
  4. Eating Beijing – Country Kitchen
  5. Crafty Little Lunch
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Chinese Food, Eating China, Eating Xi'an, noodles, pasta, pomegrante juice, Shaanxi, Terracotta Warriors

Eating Beijing – Country Kitchen

Aug31

Restaurant: Country Kitchen (at the Rosewood Beijing)

Location: China, Beijing, Fengtai, Chaoyangmen Outer St, 1号京广中心 邮政编码: 100020. +86 10 6597 8888

Date: July 31, 2018

Cuisine: Chinese

Rating: Kitschy kitchen but really good

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My research into best restaurants in general (in Beijing) and best Peking Duck in particular brought me (via the web) to Country Kitchen.
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Located inside the Rosewood hotel (which looked very nice).
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It’s sort of a modern fashionable Chinese take on their own “rustic” kitchen. Sort of like a large “rustic” Italian place here. It’s not really a country kitchen in any way, just the Kitsch of it. As they say on their webpage:

For an exquisite taste of Beijing, Country Kitchen presents an array of Northern Chinese specialties. With an open show kitchen and a wood-roasting oven, chefs demonstrate their culinary art with dishes such as hand-pulled Chinese noodles, Beijing duck and a variety of dumplings. A fine selection of local Beijing and Chinese drinks are also available to perfect the dining experience.

Country Kitchen is a modern tribute to traditional Chinese dining in a sophisticated, yet casual environment that includes an outdoor terrace. The integrated décor features granite, wood, soft red tones, terracotta and oil paintings to embody the charm and simplicity of a village restaurant.

lol. But the food is great. At the helm is Chef Leo Chai.

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They have the wood fire oven (BBQ) for duck.
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A noodle making station.

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And a lovely dining room.

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This is actually a “small” menu by Chinese standards so I photographed it. Many are so big that I can’t handle the task.
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Attractive sauces on the table.

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We preordered our Peking Duck, and so they brought it first. You can see the “raw” ducks aging in the larder.

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Then the duck chef moves it to the hook and dresses it.
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Notice the drippings bowl. After that they go in the oven where he moves them around perfectly to achieve that golden brown doneness.
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At the table our chef gets to work with the carving.
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See the crispy skin. Drool.
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A bit of skin comes out first for dipping in sugar and eating straight.
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Then plates of the meat and skin, sliced in an interesting scallop pattern here.
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Some with heads or legs.
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The condiment tray is more classic and a bit simpler than at Dadong.
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They have just pancakes.
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My duck pancake, before rolling. This was seriously good. Maybe the best I’ve had? Hard to say, but really really good.
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Young Dylan manned up and sucked the brain from the duck!
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Clay Pot Roasted Pork Belly, Sour Cabbage, Glass Noodle. From the “lost recipes” section of the menu. This was like Chinese/German pork and cabbage soup! It was a touch sour and very rich. Quite delicious actually, but did keep reminding me of a German dish.
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Because lunch didn’t have enough dumplings. Some pork dumplings.
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And a few more veggie dumplings. Not as popular, of course. They had cabbage, glass noodle, fungus, and mushroom.

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Zha Jiang Mian. Hand cut noodle, pork belly, fried soy bean paste.
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Here is the soy bean pate.
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Then you mix it all up. These look better than they taste. The bean tends to be flat in taste and yet dominate. I’m thinking after many tries at many places that Zha Jiang Mian is just not my favorite Chinese noodle (and I love a LOT of them).
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Wok fried market vegetables. Pretty good actually — for vegetables.
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Clay pot with braised tofu and crab roe. Ordered this dish. Loved it! Really nice savory umami crab roe broth with silken tofu.
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Cabbage with pork.
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They have a bunch of skewers on the menu, robotoyaki style. In this case mushroom and eggplant.

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Pulled thin noodles with egg and tomato. Very Beijing comfort food. We had a lot of kids with us, which is why we end up with so many noodle dishes.
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Pulled thin noodles with eggplant and string-beans.
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Plain “cat ear shape” noodles.

Country Kitchen was good. Very good in fact. We didn’t have the most balanced order due to our group composition (vegetarian, a bunch of kids, etc), but everything we had was quite good for what it was — and the duck was amazing. We also liked the high production quality kitsch and the service was top notch. Sure it was more than most Chinese restaurants, but it still wasn’t bad (maybe $35 a head).

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Eating Beijing – Dadong
  2. Eating Beijing – Xian Lao Man
  3. Eating Beijing – 3.3 Noodles
  4. Eating Beijing – Xiao Long Pu
  5. Beijing Pie House
By: agavin
Comments (4)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Chinese Food, Country Kitchen, Eating Beijing, Eating China, Rosewood Hotels

Eating Beijing – Xian Lao Man

Aug27

Restaurant: Xianlaoman

Location: 252 Andingmen Inner St, Dongcheng Qu, Beijing Shi, China, 100007

Date: July 31, 2018

Cuisine: Chinese

Rating: You can never go wrong with dumplings!

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Xianlaoman apparently translates as “our fillings are big” or something like that, referring to the apple stuffing of their dumplings.
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Located not far from the Forbidden City, it’s a small chain of very Beijing style food.
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The frontage is just across the street from an old Hutong area.
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They pickle garlic!
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The interior is typical of contemporary mid-level Chinese places, with a bit of actual decor, but not over the top.
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Nice wood chairs.
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Our guide in Beijing, Dana, was vegetarian (unusual for a Chinese) and kept — to my annoyance — taking over the orders and trying to make them all vegetarian. Boring! Although we did have 1-2 in our party who needed it, but the rest of us wanted the meat.

In any case, this spicy cauliflower was actually very good. Nice crispy texture to the plant and a salty heat.
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Vegetarian egg noodles with celery. The noodles didn’t have egg, but instead there is egg in the dish.
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Fish flavored pork. I managed to get this one in, although she tried to cross it out. It isn’t actually “flavored with fish” but instead “fish flavored” means something (like pork or eggplant) cooked in a prep traditionally used for fish. In this case a sort of tangy/spicy/oily sauce I love. This was a great fish flavored pork with good textures and lots of subtlety.
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Steamed broccoli. Why, Dana, why?
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Boiled Fish dumplings, I think. These were okay.
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Pork and shrimp dumplings. Excellent, and the only one I was “allowed.” It was finished in 2 seconds and half the table was complaining that there were no other meat dumplings.
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Vegetable dumplings. 2 X double order. Notice there are twice as many — and she ordered 2 plates. Stuffed with spinach and garlic. They were ok for vegetable dumplings but they are still kind of like spinach balls and we had lots uneaten at the end.
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Vegetable pies. I ordered the classic Beijing pork pie but Dana switched it to vegetarian in Mandarin. More spinach. Just not as good as a nice steamed pork ball!

Xianlaoman was good, particularly the meat dishes (wish we had more). This is well done Beijing comfort food and pretty similar (but better executed) to the fare in Northern Cafe here in west LA.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Eating Beijing – Xiao Long Pu
  2. Eating Beijing – Dadong
  3. Eating Beijing – 3.3 Noodles
  4. Beijing Pie House
  5. Hedonists go to Beijing
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Beijing, Chinese Food, dumplings, Eating Beijing, Eating China, Xianlaoman

Eating Beijing – 3.3 Noodles

Aug24

Restaurant: Noodles at 3.3

Location: No.33 Sanlitun Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing, China +86 10 6417 3333

Date: July 30, 2018

Cuisine: Chinese

Rating: Noodle fast casual

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I’m not sure what this place is actually called, but it’s the noodle joint at the top of this building (nearly 90% sure).
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If any of you read Chinese you can tell me the actual name. We stopped in here for a quick late night bite.
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It’s popular. A little like a fast casual noodle bar that might be found on Sawtelle or something, just more Chinese. And actually the waiters take your orders — China has no labor problem — but it’s still sort of fast casual.
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The menu is simple. Basically stuff on the same noodles.
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Plum juice. I love these Chinese plum juices, but this one wasn’t very good. Not very sweet.
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Spicy pork and egg noodles. Red and green chilies, shredded pork, omelet, and a bunch of thick noodles underneath. Not bad. Not complex or anything, but greasy and excellent post drinking food.
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Pork and mushroom noodles. Same, but less spice, more shroom.
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Spicy chicken noodles. Cleaver-ed chicken (with bones, and feet, and beak) with the peppers and the noodles. I’m sure you are sensing a theme.
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Shrimp noodles. Shrimp and well… noodles. There seamed to only be one type.
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Pea tendrils. In case noodles don’t leave you regular.

This place was quick and had a sort of greasy yummy factor. Not bad for a quick stop but fairly one note — definitely for the youngish crowd.

For my catalog of Chinese restaurant reviews in China, click here.

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Doing it Gavin Style!

Related posts:

  1. Eating Beijing – Xiao Long Pu
  2. Eating Beijing – Dadong
  3. White Guys Can Cook Noodles
  4. K-Town Report – Lee’s Noodles
  5. Night of the Whirling Noodles
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Chinese Food, Eating Beijing, Eating China, noodles

Eating Beijing – Xiao Long Pu

Aug20

Restaurant: 晓龙瀑

Location: Near the Mutianyu Great Wall, Huairou District (近郊怀柔区慕田峪长城环岛南). Tel: 010-61621322, 61621922

Date: July 30, 2018

Cuisine: Chinese

Rating: Just ok — near the Great Wall

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Our guide, Dana, took us here on the way to the Mutianyu Great Wall.
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She described it as “fancy.”
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Not the words I would use, particularly with regard to the 2 star bathroom and the in-corner AC.
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Dana, unusually, is actually a vegetarian Chinese. Now this was convenient because my wife, who is also a vegetarian and determined to avoid the “sneaky meat” (which you will hear about many times in these reports) but for me, Dana’s passive aggressive tendency to order up too many vegetables and ignore the meats was a mild bummer. As a Mandarin speaker, she had the upper hand too (in ordering).

Anyway, string beans. Better with pork, but we had to live with the essentially soy prep. Not too bad actually.
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Mixed peppers. I’m not used to seeing these type of peppers in China.
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Eggplant. A bit mushy, but nice sauce.
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Kung Pao Chicken. A bit of a white boy Beijing version. No bones, minor heat, and only a touch of the sour quality it should have.  Not bad though.
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Grilled trout with sweet and sour sauce.Nicely cooked and pretty tasty.
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Sadly, my son is very picky. He went for mein. Yeah, plane noodles. These are actually kinda hard to order. The Chinese don’t want to bring something so plane.
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They had to include some tomato and egg sauce (on the side).
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Scallion pancake. Heavy, but fine.
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Mean pie. Very salty and (temperature hot). Could have used more savory pork flavor.


Xiao Long Pu was fine for lunch but it’s nothing special. I’ve had much better Chinese food in the SGV. Flavors were a bit monotone.

For my catalog of more Chinese food in China, click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Eating Beijing – Dadong
  2. Hedonists go to Beijing
  3. Shin Beijing Again
  4. Shin Beijing Cubed
  5. Beijing Pie House
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Beijing, Chinese Food, Eating Beijing, Eating China, Xiao Long Pu

Eating Beijing – Dadong

Aug17

Restaurant: Dadong Roast Duck (Nanxincang)

Location: 1-2 Nanxincang Guoji Dasha, 22A Dongsishitiao, Dongcheng district, Beijing 100007, China. +86 10 5169 0329

Date: July 29, 2018

Cuisine: Beijing Chinese, specializing in roast duck

Rating: Superior (and lean) duck

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Our 15 day trip to China begins auspiciously (in Beijing) with a trip to a branch of the granddaddy of serious Beijing Roast Duck places, Dadong.
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This is the Nanxicang branch. I was at Dadong in 2008, but it was definitely a different (less modern) branch. Or they redid considerably.
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The decor is very contemporary and everything is “fancy.”
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Down to the duck chopstick holders!
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Salad. Not sure I’ve ever had a salad in China before, and this one was some kind of dandelion leaf and radishes. No dressing really too. Sort of bracing.
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Asparagus. Pretty much what it looks like.
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Then comes the duck, along with the professional duck carver. He even had an assistant in tow.
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Close up on the lovely bird which was puffed with air, lovingly basted, and fire roasted.
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The guy knows how to carve.
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Beijing duck. We got 2 platter of meat and skin.
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And heads and legs (not pictured).
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At Dadong, everyone gets their own condiment tray.
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Plus there are pancakes.
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And sesame buns. They showed us how to dip the skin in sugar and which condiments to put in which carbohydrate. Although the bun is good, I prefer the pancake, as it distracts less from the duck/hoison awesomeness. Dadong’s duck is crispy and ultra lean. Really perfectly cooked and delicious, but not fatty.
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Duck soup. Not the biggest thrill. It never is. Just a bone broth.
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Bean sprouts. Looks boring, but these were actually excellent. Must have been the perfect amount of oil.
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This trip included A LOT of dumplings, so we had to get started right away with some steamed vegetable dumplings.
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And cabbage and egg fried rice.
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Plus a fresh whole fish in brown sauce with garlic and mushrooms. I’ve never had this exact sauce before and it was a little like a tangy gravy. Quite good actually but unexpected.

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Mysterious bland sweet Chinese dessert soup. No thanks.

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Dry ice fruit plate looked cool.

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Beijing embraces the 21st century

Now-a-days in Beijing and Shanghai there are a lot of restaurants that have modernized their look and feel while staying fundamentally Chinese. This is certainly the case with Dadong and its lavish plating and epic sized picture menu. But the execution was also very good — particularly on the standout item, the Beijing Duck. This and Country Kitchen set my new standard for Peking/Beijing duck. If these are now a 10, the best places in the SGV are mere 7s. I wish I’d had a few more days in Beijing just so I could try 1949, Duck de Chine and a few other top duck places. We managed 2 in 3 days.

For my catalog of more Chinese in China, click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Beijing Pie House
  2. Hedonists go to Beijing
  3. Back to Beijing
  4. Shin Beijing Again
  5. Shin Beijing Cubed
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Beiing, Beiing Duck, Chinese Food, Eating Beijing, Eating China, Peking Duck

Hop Woo is Hop New

Jul11

Restaurant: Hop Woo

Location: 11110 W Olympic Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90064. (310) 575-3668

Date: May 30, June 3 & July 25, 2018 and January 6, 2022

Cuisine: American and Szechuan Chinese

Rating: Surprisingly excellent Szechuan!

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Incredible as it sounds, just a few days after hitting up new Brentwood Szechuan GuYi Erick and I explore another new westside Szechuan. Plus, this is a composite posts with returns on my own and a Hedonist visit.
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This time disguised as venerable American Chinese Hop Woo, which has been serving a big menu of Cantonese inspired classics for years — but it turns out they have a new Szechuan chef and a secret Szechuan menu!

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The space is vintage LA Chinese.


At night, it’s packed with us Hedonists taking up 3 tables!
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Here is the special Szechuan menu. You have to ask for it. Some of the more challenging items they didn’t even bother to translate!
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The big regular menu has a few gems too, but everything here from my first two visits is from the Szechuan menu.
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Cold Szechuan Noodles (June 2018). Not even on the Szechuan menu, but they can make them. Basically nice wheat noodles with a tangy/spicy Szechuan chili oil sauce.
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You mix them up and they are quite addictive. But the third time I had them (7/25/18) they were different, heavier, not as much chili, and not nearly as good.
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Toothpick lamb (June & July 2018). The classic cumin rubbed lamb nibblettes. Quite nice.
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Griddle cooked Bullfrog (June 2018). Very nice sauce and flavor. Mind the little kermit bones.
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Griddle cooked lamb (June 2018). Somewhere between a griddle and a cumin lamb.
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Garlic Shredded Pork (June 2018). Big dish, full of flavor, and nice texture.
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MaPo Tofu (June & July 2018). Really a 9 or 10 out of 10 version of this favorite of mine. Tons of mala (numbing Szechuan peppercorn), you can see it dusted on top. Eaten over rice this is just so good. I have had this every-time I have been.
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Hop Woo Signature Fresh Rock Fish with Hot and Spicy Flavor (June & July 2018). A very nice white fish smothered in delicious chilies (and chili oil). Some good vegetables like lotus leaf are hiding in there too. Could use more veggies though.

Slightly spicy fried calamari (7/25/18). Not bad. Very fried.

Cold chicken in chili oil (7/25/18). Delicious dish of boneless white meat (and skin) with a tangy spicy Szechuan chili oil.

We liked the sauce so much we ordered some Hainan chicken (boiled chicken, ordered 7/25/18) to dump into the extra sauce. Tasted the same but had bones.

It came with this bagna caulda (aka garlic oil).

Spicy lobster (7/25/18). Salty and full of flavor. Excellent lobster actually, if perhaps very slightly over done.

Garlic greens (7/25/18). Typical greens and garlic.

Shrimp with chilies (7/25/18). This is normally chicken with chilies, but we got it with shrimp. Basically salt and pepper shrimp (you eat them whole) with dry aromatic chiles. Pretty good.

Cauliflower with bacon (7/25/18). Awesome dish. Nice crunch to the vegetables and made 10x better with the soft pancetta like ham/bacon.

Panda Express Fried Sesame Pork Balls (7/25/18). Someone wanted a “white guy dish” and this fit the bill perfectly. Tasty enough, but REALLY fried.

Fish filets with green peppers (7/25/18). A savory mix of regular green chilies (Jalepenos or Serranos) and Szechuan peppercorns. Nice flavor and burn and numb.

Braised eggplant (7/25/18). This might be their take on “fish flavor eggplant.” Hard to tell, but it was tender and had lots of garlic. Not that spicy.

Below is a return post pandemic 1/6/22 meal:

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Cold chicken with chili sauce (1/6/22). Great sauce. Chciken itself was a little big on the tendon factor.
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Garlic cucumbers (1/6/22). Pretty good.
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Jellyfish (1/6/22). A bit chewy.
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Honey Walnut Shrimp (1/6/22). Very tasty. Not the best ever version of this dish, but quite good.
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Sichuan Garlic Scallops (1/6/22). A bit sweet and cloying.
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Clams with garlic and scallions (1/6/22). Not bad, but not amazing either. Not so much clam meat.
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Whole fish with Rattan Pepper (1/6/22). Awesome broth. Fish was very tender. Lots of numbing. Bones, yes, but delicious. DOTN.
1A4A1050
“Peking Duck” (1/6/22). Not bad, but huge chunks of Southern Chinese style roast duck.
1A4A1055
Thin sweet hoisin.
1A4A1059
Buns.1A4A1061
Salt and Pepper Pork Chops (1/6/22). Very salty, but quite tasty.
1A4A1064
Mooshu Pork (1/6/22). Extremely mushy and not very good.

1A4A1068
Mexican Tortillas instead of real spring pancakes. Not kidding, just el patio.

1A4A1075
Orange Beef (1/6/22). Super sweet and fried. Kinda delicious in a dessert sort of wait.
1A4A1078
Cumin lamb (1/6/22). Pretty decent.

1A0A9498
Fried Rice Cake with Brown Sugar (June 2018). The owner gave these to us on the house. Very interesting Chinese dessert, all about the texture as usual. Chewy inside and dusty sweet on the outside.

Mandorla Tostata Stroopwafel Gelato (Toasted Almond) made by me for Sweet Milk Gelato (7/25/18) — toasted Sicilian almonds and Dutch Stroopwafel, because, why not?
1A0A9536
Classic oranges and Fortune Cookies.

Overall, I was very impressed with the Szechuan items. It’s not a huge menu of them, and they aren’t quite Szechuan Impression or anything, but a few of these dishes, like the MaPo Tofu and the fish were absolutely first rate. Nice balance of tangy, hot, and numbing. It’s great to have a few real Szechuan choices on the westside!

Given my repeat and must larger visit with a lot of dishes I actually think the Szechuan here is on par with a second tier SGV Szechuan like Lucky Noodle King or maybe Spicy City. Some dishes better, some worse. It’s not the BEST Szechuan in the city by any means, but it’s the real deal and surprisingly very good for Westside. The even have really legit dishes like MaPo tofu with pig brains!

On our 1/6/22 visit a certain spice hater forced us to order about 3/4 from the regular menu. It was pretty consistent that almost everything from the regular (Chinese American) menu was very mediocre while stuff from the Szechuan menu was pretty good.

For more LA Chinese dining reviews click here.

Random wines, only a few of the ones we brought:









Related posts:

  1. GuYi — Szechuan in Brentwood?
  2. Cui Hua Lou – Szechuan Shed
  3. Hunan Mao
  4. Huolala Hot
  5. Hip Hot
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, Gelato, Hop Woo, mapo tofu, Sichuan, spicy, Szechuan, Szechuan Chinese

Had to Write it Up – Mr Chow

Jun22

Restaurant: Mr Chow

Location: 344 N Camden Dr, Beverly Hills, CA 90210.  (310) 278-9911

Date: May 19, 2018

Cuisine: American High End Chinese

Rating: Tasty, but bland and pricey

_

Mr Chow is an interesting place — and particularly for me, given my proclivities. It’s been open here in Beverly since 1978 (London in 1968!) and represents a mid-late 20th century attempt to bring international Chinese food to rich Westerners in an upscale format. I haven’t been in years, maybe 10+ years, and it will be interesting to see how it is after becoming much more knowledgeable about more authentic Chinese food.

Located on Camden in the heart of Beverly Hills, it’s still pretty darn crowded on a Saturday night.

The decor is dated but in perfect preservation.

Fairly elegant, if a little 70s-80s.

The menu.

Hot sauce.

Some noodles for my son. He didn’t really like them, just boiled noodles.

Gambei with goodies. Candied walnuts, crispy spinach?, fried lotus root. All carby, sweet, and tasty.

Vegetable lettuce cups. Basically chopped up vegetables with a light sauce.

The lettuce. These are all about the hoisin. Not sure they are particularly Chinese in any way (they seem far more Vietnamese), but they are associated with Asian restaurants. They may represent a staple of Mandarin places in Vietnam (with it’s heavy Southern Chinese influences).

Squid Ink Rice Noodles. Never seen these at a real Chinese place either, and the portion is small, and they weren’t the hottest, but they did taste pretty good in a lip staining kinda way.

Chicken Satay (Original Recipe). Definitely is. Not much like a Thai satay. Very sweet with this weird sweet mayo sauce. Not a huge fan myself.

Water dumplings. Basically very small standard “boiled” pork dumplings. Other than the price per gram, tasty enough.

Chicken Curry Puff. I like these flakey pastry puffs. The curry didn’t hurt either.

Drunken Fish. Filet poached in wine with mushrooms. Very nice Chinese white wine sauce. Incredibly soft and mild dish but very enjoyable as well.

Green Prawns. I think these are a slight Mr Chow variant on the Hángzhōu style prawns with green tea. These were sweeter, with less overt tea flavor, but tasty enough.

Ma Mignon. Tender and delicious (says the menu), since 1975. Also not very Chinese. Ok, but a little over cooked.

Mixed vegetables. Looks about like what it is.

Peking Duck. They carve it tableside.

The duck on the plate.

With the traditional scallions and cucumber.

And pancakes. I ate about 10 of these. Nothing at all wrong with them. Excellent duck.

They have a dessert cart with more or less Italian or French style tarts.
 Mixed berry tarte. It was fine, a little dry.

The place was fairly packed, with the private room swinging with a very pretty, very blond Beverly Hills 16 year old celebrating her sweet 16. I don’t really get it, as it’s well over $100 a person and where “pretty good” about at the level of a very good Chinese American joint. The atmosphere is old school and interesting. Food doesn’t have the balance or zing of good real Chinese food. It’s extremely mild across the board. I don’t just mean in terms of spiciness, but flavors are soft and veering toward sweet. Some dishes are excellent in terms of taste, like the drunken fish, green shrimp, and duck — but all in the same soft modality.

Service was pretty good. It was LOUD though, like a more modern restaurant. Not really for me.

For more LA Chinese dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. George R. R. Martin, Write Like the Wind
  2. SGV Nights – Seafood Palace
  3. K-Town Report – Lee’s Noodles
  4. Chicken Crawl – Red Chicken
  5. Hunan Mao
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Champagne, Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, Mr Chows

Cui Hua Lou – Szechuan Shed

Jun16

Restaurant: Cui Hua Lou [1, 2, 3, 4]

Location: 920 E Garvey Ave. Monterey Park, CA 91755. 626-288-2218

Date: May 13, 2018

Cuisine: Szechuan Chinese

Rating: Awesome!

ANY CHARACTER HERE

Chinese food is incredible regional, and we are blessed in SoCal with a lot of very specific restaurants (mostly in the San Gabriel Valley). My Hedonist group has returned to this little known spicy Szechuan in the corner of an undiscovered Monterey Park strip mall. We love Szechuan for its spicy/smoky flavors. This is a cuisine that packs a real punch and is one of my favorites in China and CHL is seriously “local.”


The storefront, as usual, isn’t much to look at.


A menu with fairly literal translations.


And the usual minimalist decor.

But we weren’t even in the restaurant proper, but across the parking lot in “the shed.”

Inside they’ve actually cleaned it up (significantly) since last time we were here (2 years ago) — back then there was a bunch of junk in the room including a band saw!

Szechuan pickles. Lots of garlic and some chili oil. Great stuff.

Cold beef tendon with chili. Nice and chewy with that hot chili oil flavor.

Vegetables. For plain steamed veggies these were actually excellent. Mildly pickled.

Cumin mushroom and snausage skewers. The mushrooms are pleasantly chewy and the little dogs delicious and a touch sweet.

Spicy Turtle Hot Pot. This Szechuan stew of turtle, chicken, tofu, and veggies was quite good. Though I’ve had better broth here (with the lame stew) and the turtle meat itself wasn’t doing it for me. I mostly ate tofu, veggies, and the sauce.

 Turtle foot!

Lamb and gizzard skewers. Both good.

Szechuan chicken wings!

Sweet and sour pork ribs. Super yummy intense sauced pork niblets (with the bones).

Another view of the lovely room. Again, it’s much nicer now!

MaPo Tofu. A very good rendition of this classic dish.

Shredded potatoes.

Lobster. Not usual at Szechuan places.

Beef with green onions. Very tasty.

Fish filet boiled in chili sauce. The sauce for this dish was much hotter, more numbing, and better than the turtle broth.

Kung pao chicken.

Mixed noodles. We sorta wanted dan dan mein and they brought these, saying they were better. I’m not saying they were better but they were actually really good for this sort of simple fried noodle dish. Really good.

But we got the dan dan mein anyway. Very vinegary version, different, not so nutty, but delicious.

Noodle pull!

Three flavors of gelato by Sweet Milk Gelato (me):

White Chocolate Lime-Berry – lime infused milk blended with Valrhona Ivoire white chocolate and laced with frutto di bosco coulis.

Gianduja – Valrhona chocolate with Hazelnut Regina (the queen) from Turin

Black Madeira – Blackberry Madeira sorbetto

I have to regale you with the lovely bathroom!
 Check out the mirror!

In conclusion, Cui Hua Lou, while apparently totally undiscovered, offers up some fabulous traditional Szechuan fare. Yarom thinks this is the best Szechuan in the SGV. I’m not sure I’d go that far, as it’s a little too home-style, but it’s certainly one of my favorites. They don’t use MSG. The flavors are great. It has a slightly different mix of dishes than some. But I like a lot of the top Szechuan places, and they are each a bit different.

The service is really friendly, particularly as Chinese restaurants go. Our hostess really took care of us, spacing out the dishes, bringing us whatever we needed.

We went crazy overboard and ordered up about 50% more food than we needed, still this feast, including tax and tip, only set us back $25 a person! If you like spicy, you should try this place. It’s not big, but it was still busy at 10pm!

For more LA Chinese reviews click here.

or more crazy Hedonist dinners here!

Wines pictured below:





Related posts:

  1. Serious Szechuan
  2. Spice Up Your Life Szechuan Style
  3. Szechuan Everywhere
  4. Hunan Mao
  5. SGV Nights – Seafood Palace
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, Cui Hua Lou, Gelato, hedonists, SGV, Sichuan, Szechuan cuisine, turtle, Wine

Hunan Mao

Jun04

Restaurant: Hunan Mao

Location: 8728 Valley Blvd, Rosemead, CA 91770. (626) 280-0588

Date: April 29, 2018

Cuisine: Hunan Chinese

Rating: Good, but not super super spicy

_

My wife and son were out of town this Sunday in a school trip so of course I had to organize a bunch of dads (and others) to head out to the SGV for some “real Chinese (food).”

Hunan Mao is probably the second best known SGV Hunan restaurant and somehow I’d never been, so we decided to rectify that.

Crunchy pickled radish with chili on the table.

The giant Menu

I needed a crib sheet to organize the ordering!

Giant Steamed Fish Head Casserole w/ Special Hot Pepper and Tofu.This is a Hunan classic, with the pickled chili peppers, and the tofu takes it to the next level (I like this kind of soft tofu).

Beef served cold with special spicy sauce. Everything seems to be “special” but this is the relatively usual beef/beef tendon with chili oil. Like spicy corned beef!

Cold noodles. With special chili sauce, of course. Very nice tangy/spicy noodles.

XLB. These aren’t Hunan, but I had to order them anyway. They were pretty decent XLB too.

Smoked Hunan ham with bamboo and hot pepper. Really good, really aromatic dish. The bacon-like ham, the crunchy bamboo, the pickled chilies. Yum! All bound together by a deep heat.

House Special Chicken with hot sauce. This is the Hunan Mao version of the “most typical” Hunan Chili dish. Not as crazy red/green chili as at Hunan Chili King.

Eggplant with preserved egg. This unusual dish (which I’ve had once before at China Tasty) has spectacular umami. Everyone loved it.

Mao’s Special Braised Pork Belly. So good we ordered another round of it!

Cumin Lamb. More peppers — plus cumin and lamb.

 

These black plates make for nice photography.

Hunan style bullfrog with chilies. Same chilies as the chicken — different “white meat.” The frog actually had a better flavor. More little bones.

MaPo Tofu (pocked marked old lady face tofu). One of my favorites, and technically Szechuan, but this was a very good version with lots of salty/numbing/spicy goodness. And a MaPo zoom.

A trio of gelato flavors made by me (in my alto ego as the Sweet Milk Gelato chef). Lavender Blueberry Gelato, Pineapple Rosemary Sorbetto, and Brillat-Savarin Gelato with Sicilian Candied Orange.

Overall, Hunan Mao is very good and they really treated us well. We had a nice big table, great service, and no corkage. The price was ludicrously low considering how much food we had. Food is very good. Certainly quite Hunan, and medium spicy (very spicy for the neophyte). They aren’t as “serious” about their chilies as Hunan Chili King, which is still the SGV Hunan gold standard. HCK is hotter, and the chilies have both brighter red/green/orange color and a more serious pickled quality. But Hunan Mao (the former chairman came from Hunan province) has a lot of good variety and some really tasty dishes.

It wasn’t a serious wine night, but I photoed most of them the same:







For more LA Chinese dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Hunan Chili Madness
  2. Hedonists Hunan Style
  3. SGV Nights – Seafood Palace
  4. Shaanxi Garden
  5. Fancy Feast – Bistro Na
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Chinese cuisine, Chinese Food, Gelato, Hunan Cuisine, Hunan Mao, SGV, spicy, Wine
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