Though
it was just a three day trip, we managed to cover a lot of ground in
last month's visit to San Francisco. Due to traffic conditions, we
didn't get to the Royal Pacific Motor Inn until 8:30pm, at which point I
was only looking for a light snack, and not knowing what restaurants
were still open. I had been keeping track of Chinese restaurant
openings in Chinatown since last year, and there were two on Jackson
St., Fusion Dumplings and Taishan Restaurant, both of which were still
open, so I chose Fusion Dumplings which was the first. This was their
sidewalk spotlight.
The Peking duck dumplings were quite good.
The intriguing sounding Shanghai bean curd leaf rolls was just a fancy name for vegetarian chicken.
With
an early Tuesday lunch scheduled, Tuesday morning was limited to a
visit to the newly opened Stockton Bakery for an excellent BBQ pork bun
and this unusual and delicious durian bun.
For
lunch it was on to the newish Grand Dynasty in San Jose. Interestingly
I recently received an inquiry to be an expert witness in defending an unnamed
Chinese restaurant in this area from claims of appropriation of trade
secrets leveled by the owner of another restaurant against his former
associates who opened a similar restaurant. The premise was that the
design and menus of the two restaurants were similar. I declined the
offer, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was Grand Dynasty being sued by
the owner of the shuttered Dynasty, a mile away in Cupertino. If the
plaintiff were arguing there was something proprietary about the look
and feel of Grand Dynasty, I would say sorry, Charlie, this is what all
the new large Cantonese restaurants in the Bay Area look like.
I'm a sucker for piggy buns, so here are the Grand Dynasty lava buns.
These green fried mochi dumplings were great.
Fish dumplings with roe was another interesting and different dish.
At
sit down dim sum restaurants, the cheung fun always have filling. This
is the first time I've seen plain cheung fun with dipping sauce at a
large restaurant like Grand Dynasty.
Apparent,
a combination of crunchy tofu, eggplant and shrimp paste is a common
dish in Hong Kong, but I only ate it for the first time as an entree,
six months ago in Monterey Park. So it was interesting to see this dish
again, as a dim sum item.
The crispy skin pork belly was top notch.
We
almost never order BBQ pork pastries, because we normally order baked
or steamed BBQ pork buns, and these would be duplicative. This version
was quite good too.
There
was one other Chinese restaurant in the same shopping center on
Bollinger Road, Shang Cafe. This is their mung bean noodle salad.
Afterwards
we checked out a couple of shopping centers in nearby Cupertino. We
immediately saw evidence that all the big new Cantonese restaurants look
alike, such as these views inside Koi Palace Contempo in the Cupertino
Main Street shopping center.
The
cheapest thing on the menu at Koi Palace Contempo was this $7 steamed
bbq pork bun. I don't think I've ever paid that much for an order of these.
The guava cheese pastry at the nearby 85° Bakery and Cafe was better and
much cheaper.
It
was back to Chinatown for dinner, at the newly opened Taishan
Restaurant on Jackson St. We had eaten at their first location on
Broadway two years ago, Taishan Cuisine. Anyway, as we walk into the
restaurant and look at the menu, we see a combination of familiar dishes
and dishes we never heard of, which presumably represent modern day
dishes of Taishan. The real puzzle to me was the fact that the prices
of just about everything was quite high, something not to be expected
given the peasant background of people from Taishan. We ordered the
beef chow fun and the grass carp jook, each apparently pricey at $18
each.
To
our surprise, both dishes were unlike any version of these we ever had
before. The chow fun noodles were not the flat noodles we’re familiar
with, but rather sort of crinkly, reminiscent of the new style crinkly
cheung fun some of the restaurants serve these days. When I asked the
waitress whether the noodles were made in house, she said they were.
Since the crinkly cheung fun is the new style that has become popular in
Guangzhou and Hong Kong in the last few years, I presume the same trend
has affected Taishan. And then there was the fish jook. When I bit
into the fish, I thought it was squid–hard and crunchy, but it looked
like fish. So we asked the waitress, and she said it was a special kind
of imported fish, grass carp, which is used traditionally to create a
crunchy fish jook in southern China. I must say that the portions were
also quite large, so the prices which seemed unreasonable actually
reflected the portion size, the utilization of rare ingredients, and
based on other Yelp reviews from people in-the-know, high quality
authentic Taishan cuisine.
Wednesday
was spent entirely in the City. Crispy baked BBQ pork buns from AA
Bakery on Stockton St. provided a nice start to the day.
At
lunchtime we headed over to the newly opened second branch of Hon’s Wun
Tun House, a branch of the Vancouver restaurant of the same name but
nowhere as good. The San Francisco branch opened up maybe 30 years ago
and I’ve only eaten there once as it was unremarkable. However they
just set up this new location on Washington St., taking the space of the
iconic Washington Bakery and Café. This new branch is much larger,
with a much bigger menu. The fish ball soup with dumplings was pretty
good. The pickled green bean soup was surprising as we were expecting
regular Cantonese egg noodles, but instead getting lai fun rice noodles.
We headed downtown to say goodbye to three of our favorite stores that were closing. Everything they say about downtown San Francisco is true. When I walked into Off Saks 5th Avenue on Market Street, the security guard was wrestling a shoplifter to the ground, so I quickly fled downstairs into the basement. Dinner
was in Chinatown was at G & Y Bakery and Café, where we ate last
year, and which doesn’t have any bakery goods for sale. I
guess that’s why this year they added a secondary sign which said G
& Y Hong Kong style café. We had the fish with corn sauce, which
was actually more of a corn soup, and bitter melon with beef.
Getaway
day before lunch on the way home via Milpitas was this tuna bread from
Little Swan on Stockton St. in Chinatown, one of a small number of
non-chain enterprises ever to have locations in both San Francisco and
Los Angeles.
At HL Peninsula in Milpitas we have further proof that all new Hong Kong style seafood and dim sum palaces look alike.
What
an exciting array of new and attractive dim sum items. My favorite was
the purple wild rice shrimp paste cruller cheung fun--quite a mouthful
in two ways.
Something I've never seen is the ginger sweet rice cakes, which apparently is typically a seasonal new year's dish.
Continuing purple treats, the unique baked taro bun.
The
lava bun, however, was a disappointment, since it was pictured and
described on the menu as a tangerine bun, not a squid ink bun. Taste
was fine, though.
Bean curd skin dumpling is broth was fine.
The crispy baked bbq pork bun wasn't very crispy.
Last stop was OK Noodle in Milpitas for tomato/egg/beef stew hand pulled noodles.
All in all, not too bad for a little over 60 hours on the ground in the Bay Area.