As you may know, King Hua, one of the top tier SGV dim sum
restaurants was one of the first pandemic casualties back in 2020. It
was one of a succession of dim sum restaurants operating at that
location dating back to 1984 and Casa de Oriente, which chose a
decidedly un-Chinese name so as to not ruffle feathers in what was then
still a largely white area of Alhambra. That space is now occupied by
the first US branch of the Chengdu based Sichuan nightclub chain JiangHu
Bistro. This really puts an exclamation mark on the shift we’re seeing
in the SGV and Chinese communities all over the US away from Cantonese
cuisine and to Non-Cantonese Mainland cuisines. As such I wanted to
drop by to see how the premises changed from where I enjoyed so many
Cantonese meals to one where I discovered myself in a red fog.
My Menuism Chinese Restaurant Articles Discussing Chinese Food in the Context of Chinese-American History, Demographics and Culture are at http://chandavkl2.blogspot.com
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Stark Commentary On The Decline of Cantonese Food
Tuesday, April 12, 2022
Crowds At Bafang Dumpling Are Crazy—But Partly Self-Inflicted
Bafang Dumpling recently opened on the perimeter of the Puente Hills Mall that fronts on Azusa Ave., adjacent to stores such as Starbucks and Krispy Kreme. It's the biggest dumpling chain in Taiwan and word of its arrival created great excitement, particularly in the Taiwanese American community and leading to a mob scene on opening day.
I dropped by Bafang Dumpling, and while the excitement of the opening has dropped off, it is still quite a madhouse. However as I learned, the mayhem is at least partially self-inflicted. Actually I approached the store with trepidation on two separate counts. First of all, of course, was the fear that the crowds would be unmanageable. In addition, Bafang was profiled by EaterLA, and the article contained disturbing management comments that consistent with their location in the Puente Hills Mall street frontage, Bafang was trying to crack the general fast casual market, competing with players like Chipotle, and indeed admitting to tweaking their recipes to American tastes. Horrors!
However when I
arrived, I was relieved that to see that the line went only to the front entrance, and that the shop was besieged by Taiwanese
expats, hungry for a taste of Taiwan’s biggest dumpling chain, with nary
a potential Chipotle customer in sight.
However things changed after I arrived. It was nearly a 15 minute wait by the time I got to the front of the line to order, and when I got to my table I saw that the line had grown much longer. And then it was at least another 15
minutes before my order was ready. This preparation gap makes no sense to me because
the entire menu barely exceeds a dozen items. Famous for their
potstickers and their dumplings, they only offer two varieties of each,
“signature Bafang” and kimchee, which means everybody coming through is
going to be ordering primarily these four items. I did not
realize at the time how lucky I was because it turns out it’s not
unusual to have to wait an hour in line to order, and then another 30
minutes to get your food, which just deepens the mystery of why it takes
so long to prepare your food. So with such a drawn out wait to get your
food, it’s no surprise that the line to place your order is so long, and that the length of the wait is not solely due to the demand for the product.
The food itself is very good and the prices are extremely reasonable, which probably explains why so many people endure the wait. The signature Bafang potstickers are sold by the dozen and are excellent. No signs of the food having been adapted to non-Chinese tastes.
A dozen potstickers, a dozen dumplings and the noodles came to $25. I’d surely go back to Bafang if I didn’t have to wait in line.
Sunday, April 10, 2022
Wagyu House Is The Most Stunning and Possibly Already The Most Popular Chinese Restaurant in the San Gabriel Valley
Wagyu House by X-Pot opened late last year in the former Golden Valley location on Gale Ave. in Industry and may already be the busiest Chinese restaurant in the entire San Gabriel Valley as evidenced by the hour long waits even on weeknights. But most people have not heard of this restaurant or know of its existence, probably because it's not aimed at the masses. It's the upscale offshoot of the Chubby Cattle Hot Pot mini-chain which set up in Las Vegas a few years ago and strangely expanded to Philadelphia and Denver. This was followed by the upscale X-Pot restaurant opened in the Palazzo in Las Vegas, billed as the largest hotpot restaurant in North America. The Las Vegas branch is a real high tech experience that includes interactive lighting on your table and a menu tab that can run $500 or more. The City of Industry branch (actually referred to as the Los Angeles branch of the chain, since "Industry" just doesn't cut it with the restaurant's upscale profile) isn't as expensive--they even have a $128 lunch combo that feeds two. And the local branch doesn't have the high tech glitter of Las Vegas. But apparently, diners who have been to both locations say the food here is better.
Oh. And the restaurant has its own wagyu farm in Texas.
Friday, April 1, 2022
What We Ate In Honolulu (2022), Part 3
First of all, for those of you who don't remember seeing parts 1 and 2 of this series, this is not the case like the record album "The Smothers Brothers Golden Hits, Volume 2," for which there had been no corresponding Volume 1. Rather, parts 1 and 2 of What We Ate in Honolulu were titled with specific reference to restaurants we ate at, Senia and Yung Yee Kee, both restaurants where we had an extraordinary number of notable dishes. So this part 3 will cover all of the other restaurants we ate at during our stay.
Arriving in Honolulu on an early Tuesday afternoon, we headed straight for the food court upstairs from the H Mart in the center of Honolulu. The primary attraction there was the brick and mortar branch of the ridiculously busy North Shore food truck, Giovanni's Shrimp Truck. Waiting maybe a minute in a short line here sure beats waiting an hour or more at the North Shore truck. The garlic shrimp was great, but I do question the sanity of anyone who would drive out to North Shore and then wait in a long line, when you can get the same product in town with no muss or fuss.
Also in the same H Mart food court was a tea and snack shop with the strange name Teasket Toasket, apparently referencing their selling both tea drinks and toast items. Still, the name was odd on two accounts. First it was visually strange, but in addition I have to believe that it was a wordplay on the old rhyme which became an Ella Fitzgerald hit over 80 years ago, A Tisket, A Tasket, which I didn't think anybody younger than myself would even be familiar with.
I had the Hawaiian egg bread which was quite good, and also very visual from multiple angles.
The first night's dinner was hastily arranged as the first choice, X O Restaurant had to close down unexpectedly for that evening. Consequently we ended up at DoraKu at Kaka’akao. Dinner started with hamachi carpaccio.
Agedashi tofu.
Hamachi sushi.
The always delicious miso butterfish.
Grilled oyster mushrooms.
Hamachi collar.
Mixed nigiri.
And lastly, an awful cream corn on the cob which I had to finish off because nobody else would touch it.
It's a good thing that this was our first dinner of the trip because at the time it seemed decent enough, but in hindsight it clearly was a cut below most everything else on the trip. Yet, both this branch of DoraKu Sushi, and the branch in the Royal Hawaiian Center that we passed a few days later had crowds waiting to get in.
Next breakfast was a reprise visit to Marugame Udon, a block away from our hotel. This time I had the kitsune udon. Still so much better than the Los Angeles branch.
After lunch on the way back to the hotel we stopped at Ice Monster for a strawberry shaved ice. But barely more than six months after our last visit, where we enjoyed the same fantastic ice that we had eaten at the Taipei branch back in 2019, something had changed. The ice somehow had become sort of dry and not as delicious. Don't know what happened.
We finally made it to our original dinner target for the first night, X O Restaurant on Waialae Ave., founded by former employees of Senia Restaurant which I chronicled in a separate article. No surprise based off its blood lines that X O Restaurant served interesting combinations of flavors and ingredients. This is their beet-lotus-quinoa salad.
Here's the oxtail truffle xiao long bao. Surprisingly not as flavorful as one would have expected.
No complaints about the crispy rice topped with foie gras, though.
Seared scallops with crispy kale and brussel sprouts was another great combination.
Adobo fried chicken turned out to be a clunker, though.
Another interesting dish was Kalua chow farci with sweet potato haupia,
And finally for dessert, brown bunny mochi.
Continuing with the Senia connection, the next day's brunch was at Senia's newly opened affiliate Podmore, in the government district just south of Chinatown. We first started with the tri-color quinoa salad.
Here's the wonderful Christmas breakfast of salmon, egg, spinach and potatoes.
How about beer battered crispy egg?
And for dessert, the chocolate cheesecake waffle (which wasn't actually listed in the dessert section, but in the entrees).
Dinner at the Koa Luau at Wailea Falls wasn't as good as last year's luau food, though the entertainment here was much more professional.
Last year we visited Piggie Smalls, so this time we visited the Chinatown mothership, The Pig & The Lady. Since we had already tried the specials last year, it was just simply pho this time.
Actually, more intriguing than the menu was the restroom!
With all our lunches and dinners planned in advance by the kids, the only room for improvisation was for breakfast (the hotel had a microwave in the lobby, so food purchased the day before provided broader options) and snacks. With the scarcity and cost of fresh produce, finding this dish of oyster sauce lettuce at Lam's Kitchen in Honolulu Chinatown was a real treat.
Once again I was thwarted in my attempt to buy manapua, the Hawaiian version of the baked bbq pork bun, as the bakeries sell out early. Had to settle again for a coconut bun, this time from Lee's Bakery & Kitchen on King St., which is another island specialty.
And another vegetable dish from Chinatown was the Chinese broccoli with fresh (as opposed to dried) pieces of salty fish, kind of a Chinese equivalent of bacon bits, from Yong's Kitchen.
Paia Fish Marketplace was one restaurant that was chosen due to its proximity to our hotel. The Sauteed mahi mahi was quite good.
But little Jemma was slow to eat her noodles with cheese and butter.
The other repeat from last year was the ramen from Wagaya. This time it was the garlic ramen that was fabulous.
And the daikon salad was interesting and good.
The last scheduled dinner that we actually got to eat was at Tommy Bahama. Yes, that Tommy Bahama, entered through the Tommy Bahama store in Waikiki, on the second floor. The opening dish, the ahi tuna poke, showed that this restaurant was legit.
As was the miso salmon.
As well as the macadamia crusted mahi mahi.
A real surprise was the chicken salad.
And a pretty decent New York steak.
The last choreographed meal we had was at Ramen Ono-Ya on Kapahulu Ave. Shoyu ramen was good.
As was the tonkatsu black.
With a side order of chicken karaage and gyoza.
Top meals were also planned for 53 By The Sea and a sushi izakaya restaurant, but Little Jemma wasn't feeling well and those meals had to be cancelled. The penultimate dinner was cancelled rather late, so our choices near the hotel were limited. We ended up at the Royal Hawaiian Center food court, which was in the process of closing up. But I can't complain about the Shanghai angus beef dish from Panda Express, since it gave me a chance to try one of their new items.
The following day's brunch was also right by the hotel at Basalt. The egg white frittata was so so.
But the chicken salad was excellent.
We caught a break when there was hardly a line outside of the Island Village Shave Ice Cart outside of the Royal Hawaiian Center, so we grabbed a Heavenly Lillikoi shave ice. Better than Matsumoto's on North Shore.
The last dinner was rescheduled for Basalt, but we couldn't even make that. Since I wasn't keen on eating twice at the same restaurant on the same day, that was fine with me, as that gave me a chance to head on over to Tim Ho Wan in the Royal Hawaiian Center. Mind you, I'm no fan of the US branches of Tim Ho Wan, except for the crispy bbq pork buns, and whose menu is overpriced to boot. However, compared to many of the meals on our trip, Tim Ho Wan was relatively inexpensive, and it did give me a chance at their pork buns.
I did see one intriguing new item on their menu, the black bean lobster cheung fun. Expensive at $12.50 and unfortunately it was awful.
On the other hand, the egg white shrimp egg roll was actually pretty good.
The har gow was equally good, but the chow mein was terrible, indeed several steps below the chow mein we got out of the steam tray the night before at Panda Express.
As it turned out, our flight back home was delayed by over an hour, so that gave us one last meal at the airport, fish tacos from Local HNL. Fairly decent though expensive at $16 for a pair.
Plus a chance for takeout for the flight home from Chowmein Express. This chow fun was actually a find as it was the old Hawaiian style dry wheat chow fun noodle, as opposed to the fresh rice noodles typically used this days. This dish is seldom seen on the mainland.
All in all, despite missing out on a couple notable planned meals, I had no complaints about our second eating expedition to Hawaii in a little over six months.