With L.A. Weekly apparently having cleared out their online archives, here's a repost from an article I wrote for them in 2017.
Westfield Santa Anita's Restaurants Are Getting Even More Impressive — Here's the Latest Addition
For
those who remember pre–civil rights–era Los Angeles, it's ironic that
communities that once did not allow Chinese people to reside within
their borders now sport a significant Chinese-American population: San
Marino, South Pasadena and Rancho Palos Verdes, for example. But the
greatest irony is that of Arcadia, which once vehemently excluded
Chinese-American residents but now has become the face of the globally
known San Gabriel Valley Chinese-American community. A city whose entire
character has changed as its single-story homes have been replaced by
mega-mansions built to the lot lines, thanks almost exclusively to the
influx of Chinese homebuyers. A city whose famed Santa Anita racetrack
is probably now better known these days for hosting the summertime 626
Night Market and its panoply of Asian food offerings than for
horseracing. And a city whose signature shopping mall, Westfield Santa
Anita, is beginning to resemble an Asian community center.
While
the Santa Anita mall has a long history of Chinese food options (albeit
originally just your typical food-court Chinese), it is now becoming a conspicuous powerhouse for Asian food in general,
and Chinese food in particular. The seeds of this food transformation
began in 2013, when the famed mainland Chinese Sichuan hot pot
specialist, Hai Di Lao, opened its first U.S. branch here. Even with a
$50 or more per-person tab at lunch or dinner, Hai Di Lao was booked for
months, and the precedent was set. While more authentic Chinese
eateries opened up in the interim, 2016 was the year when the mall’s
Chinese food scene exploded. In the spring, Beijing-based Sichuan-style
restaurant Meizhou Dongpo opened up Dongpo Restaurant, its second
American branch following up its surprisingly successful initial opening
in the Century City mall, supposedly bringing much of its kitchen staff
from Century City to Arcadia. A few weeks later, the big dog, the
legendary Taiwan-based Din Tai Fung, opened up its massive 300-plus-seat
flagship restaurant to replace its two modestly sized locations a
half-mile away — but there are long waits here, too. And at the end of
2016, Johnny Lee opened his acclaimed Hainan chicken specialty eatery,
Side Chick, as part of Westfield Santa Anita’s Asian food court alley
around the corner from Din Tai Fung.
Now in 2017, the beat goes on. Once
again it’s a famous Chinese mainland-based chain, Sichuan Kungfu
Fish, opening its first U.S. location (and its second North
American location — there's one in suburban Toronto) in Westfield Santa
Anita. The opening of Sichuan Kungfu Fish in mid-August shows just how
far Sichuan-style food (as well as other regional Chinese cuisines) has
evolved in the United States in the 21st century.
When
"authentic" Sichuan food first came to the United States in the late
20th century, it was all about the chilies and fiery spiciness, as
typified by the water-boiled fish at Chungking Restaurant in Monterey
Park. At the time, the ma la numbness of Sichuan peppercorns was
virtually unheard of in local restaurants, since those peppercorns were
banned from the United States as a carrier of citrus disease. It wasn’t
until a dozen years ago, when properly treated Sichuan peppercorns were
allowed into the country, that ma la came to our local Sichuan restaurants (though bootleg peppercorns did previously manage to slip through for personal use).
While
San Gabriel Valley Sichuan cuisine is now synonymous with those numbing
Sichuan peppercorns, and the establishment of destination purveyors of ma la such as Chengdu Taste and Szechuan Impression is making the biggest splash, Sichuan cuisine continues to evolve in the San Gabriel Valley.
Chengdu Taste has opened Mian, its noodle spinoff, Chengdu Impression
has a broad Sichuan menu that goes beyond numbing and spicy, and a
number of small restaurants have opened up featuring Sichuan grilled
whole fish and fillets — most impressively, Sichuan Kungfu Fish, just a
few doors down from Dongpo and Hai De Lao.
It’s not clear what the relationship is
between kung fu and either Sichuan or fish, but the restaurant plays it
up to the hilt. As you open your relatively slim menu, you are urged to
“choose your opponent” from Top Secret Sea Cod, Professor Swai, Killer
Catfish and Commander Tilapia. You are given your choice of several
spicy and nonspicy base sauces, along with a number of sides and
appetizers. There are also set dinners for two based on the same
opponents. Those still in a fighting mood can select from a listing of
“Fighting Skewers.” Fish dishes are served hot pot–style in fish-shaped
vessels.
All in all, the presentation and the ambiance at Sichuan Kungfu Fish are in line with the new wave of more upscale Chinese restaurants
opening up in the San Gabriel Valley in the past two years. The entrees
at Sichuan Kungfu Fish run generally in the $20 to $35 range. One
interesting section of the menu is marked “Reservations Required,” which
is apparently Chinese for “order in advance.” Included in this section
is the "Ultimate Seafood Boss," containing lobster, crab, shrimp,
scallops, clams, sea cucumbers and mussels for $199. (It does serve five
to six people, so pricing is comparable to the individual and set
dinner items.)
A lot has happened in Arcadia in the past
few decades. And in traversing Westfield Santa Anita these days,
perhaps the ultimate irony is catching yourself wondering “What are
those non-Asians doing here?”
400 S. Baldwin Ave., #2360, Arcadia; (626) 898-5733, kungfu-fish.com.