Having just returned from a 10 day tour of Brazil and
Argentina this is my obligatory summary of the Chinese food portion of my
trip. And let me say at the beginning that this is
going to be a very short write-up, because I only saw three sit down Chinese
restaurants during the entirety of the tour of Brazil and Argentina, and I ate
at all three of them. And the only other
Chinese food I saw were the two branches of Magic Dragon, a Chifa (Peruvian
Chinese) chain located in the food court of two large shopping malls in Buenos
Aires.
Such a paucity of Chinese restaurants was a real surprise,
as on past trips all over world, just looking outside the tour bus window or
walking around our hotel would lead to numerous Chinese restaurant
sightings. But not on this trip. When we arrived in Rio de Janeiro at our
hotel on Copacabana Beach, I asked the tour guide whether there were any
Chinese restaurants in the vicinity. She
said there weren’t. However during a
stroll across from Copacabana Beach, I did spot Restaurant Chinese Palace about
four blocks from our hotel, and I returned one night for a late snack of
dumplings which were better than I would have expected, though certainly
nothing exceptional on an absolute basis.
I subsequently spoke to other tour group members who ate at Chinese
Palace who indicated the food was passable for someone longing for Chinese
food, but there was a clear problem with the availability of ingredients. For example, the chow mein dish was made with
dry ramen noodles. And that was it for
Brazil.
Similarly, no Chinese restaurants were seen during our
bus tour of Buenos Aires or walking the area near the Panamericano Hotel on the incredibly wide 9th of July Ave. However,
returning to the hotel one afternoon, I grabbed a street map which included an advertisement
for Bao Kitchen Taiwanese Bistro.
Taiwanese food in Buenos Aires?
Who would have thought that?
And it was less than a mile away from the hotel, so I walked on over
there. Sure enough, Bao Kitchen served Taiwanese
items including pork gua bao, chicken gua bao, curry bao, beef noodle soup,
three cups chicken along with other items.
The curry bao, with a panko crust was different and extremely good., while the gua bao were OK The lady running the place proclaimed that
Bao Kitchen was the best Chinese restaurant in South America. She also indicated that Buenos Aires had a
small Chinatown that was about 3 blocks long, around 20 minutes north of town, but that all
the Chinese restaurants there were terrible.
I later read that the small Chinese community in Buenos Aires was dominated
by Taiwanese, which would explain the existence of a Taiwanese restaurant
downtown. However, all of the other
customers while I was at Bao Kitchen were non-Chinese, presumably ordering off of the Argentinianized part of the menu.