Thứ Năm, 14 tháng 1, 2016

5 UNDERRATED DISHES IN L.A.'S CHINATOWN

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Food GPS


“There’s no good Chinese food in Chinatown.”


It’s a refrain you hear every so often from those who insist that real Chinese cooking is only found east of downtown, in the San Gabriel Valley. And sure, maybe they’re half right: The SGV is an jaw-dropping place filled with wonderful dumplings and noodles and clay pot stews from across China, often cooked by chefs who recently left their home province.

But perhaps we underestimate L.A.’s original — albeit aging — Chinatown. The chefs and restaurateurs who arrived during Chinatown’s heyday adapted their Cantonese style to a shifting American culture that was obsessed with orange chicken and egg foo young, and given the widespread popularity of those dishes, they managed to do a pretty good job of it.

Of course, you don’t need anyone to tell you about the slippery shrimp at Yang Chow or the BBQ pork buns at Ocean Seafood. Those dishes are as iconic as the dragon gate stretching over Broadway. But there are several restaurants in Chinatown that haven fallen through the cultural cracks, serving specialties that deserve a share of the spotlight. Here are a few you might have missed.



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Roast Duck & Thousand Year Egg Porridge at Phoenix Inn

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There’s no better solace on a chilling day than a hot bowl of congee, the restorative rice porridge that does double duty as breakfast or a post-bar snack. The stuff at Phoenix Inn, which has been ladled out since Lyndon Johnson was president, arrives just below boiling, seasoned with ginger, scallion and a touch of soy sauce. It’s a blank canvas for toppings, the best being crispy shreds of roast duck and a gravel-colored preserved egg. Don’t forget the savory doughnut, you tiao, for dipping. 301 Ord St., Chinatown; (213) 629-2812, phoenixfood.us.



Garrett Snyder


Home Made Bean Curd at Jade Wok

Jade Wok is basically a bare, linoleum-floored dining room with a tiny window to the kitchen; the vibe veers toward retirement-home cafeteria, and it's not uncommon for elderly diners to wait until their preferred table opens up in an otherwise empty restaurant. It wasn't until my third visit that I tried their homemade bean curd, a dish that's not only the best thing I've eaten in Chinatown but also probably one of the best tofu dishes in Los Angeles. Two large squares of soft bean curd are deep-fried until they develop a shaggy crust and their insides turn to molten pudding, then the whole thing is smothered in wonderfully thick and salty sauce made with minced pork and preserved black beans. “Best tofu in town,” the menu rightly proclaims. 625 W. College St., Chinatown; (213) 628-8288.



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House Special Shrimp at Chinese Friends Restaurant

A few years ago, while writing an article on slippery shrimp, I asked George Yu — the local business leader who’s sometimes referred to as the Godfather of Chinatown — for his recommendation. We were both deep into a few scorpion bowls at Grand Jazz Club, but I recall him speaking fondly of Chinese Friends, a small restaurant on the neighborhood's northern fringe. It wasn’t technically slippery shrimp, but their House Special Shrimp was the stuff of stoner fantasies: crispy butterflied shrimp that puts Long John Silver to shame, tossed in a sticky-sweet-spicy sauce with a tangy jolt that might suggest ketchup and a handful of crushed chili. Utter bastardization never tasted so good. 984 N. Broadway, Chinatown; (213) 626-1837, chinesefriendsrestaurant.com.



Food GPS


Wonton Noodle Soup at New Dragon Seafood


The Chinese name for New Dragon — a garishly adorned spot on a high traffic strip of Hill Street — is in fact “wonton noodle,” although I didn’t learn that right away. I had a bad cold on my first visit and saw some Yelp photos that looked enticing. The speciality here, it soon became apparent, was egg noodles swimming with bouncy little wontons, Chinese broccoli and chunks of beef brisket (they’ll add chewy bits of tendon if you ask, and you should). The broth is plain and comforting, the noodles are slightly al dente, and the wontons possess some type of slippery magic that makes you crave them by the dozen. 934 N. Hill St., Chinatown; (213) 626-6050.



Garrett Snyder


Cold Special Chicken at Fortune Gourmet Kitchen

Far East Plaza, the weathered Chinatown shopping mall that’s been ground zero for the neighborhood's new arrivals — Chego, Pok Pok, Ramen Champ and Scoops are all located there — has a handful of old-school Chinese restaurants left, including Fortune Gourmet Kitchen, a Cantonese dining hall hidden on the upper level. Their bargain lunch specials are the main draw, and the highlight is probably the

FORMER ANIMAL CHEF TO OPEN JAPANESE-MEXICAN RESTAURANT IN KOREATOWN

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Chef Jonathan Whitener/smoked beef belly/Here's Looking at You logo
Garrett Snyder/Lien Ta

When chef Jonathan Whitener departed his post as chef de cuisine at Jon Shook and Vinny Dotolo's acclaimed Fairfax restaurant back in December, there was a sense of mourning amongst a certain circle of diners. This was the guy, after all, who came up with killer Animal dishes like "honey walnut" fried crab with black Sriracha, crispy rabbit larb, and tonkotsu ramen topped with ham hocks and swiss chard.

Luckily for us, he won't be out of commission for long: Whitener will be teaming up with Lien Ta, a former manager at Animal and culinary liaison for Jon and Vinny's restaurant group, to open a new 50-seat restaurant in Koreatown called Here's Looking at You this spring.


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The food will tap into L.A.’s wide range of immigrant cuisines for inspiration. Whitener notes that as a surfer kid who grew up in Huntington Beach eating burritos and musubi, his cooking often exhibits a heavy Japanese-Mexican influence.

Whitener has been experimenting with dishes at private catering dinners in the interim, and he shared with us some creations that have made the cut thus far: fried chicken with ume (sour plum) ranch, hamachi crudo with tamarind-hibiscus onions and beer ponzu, beef tartare with togarashi spice, fried head-on shrimp a la diabla, smoked beef belly with radish, broiled unagi with mole negro and polenta, burrata with rau ram pesto, beet-persimmon poké, bone-in ribeye with pickled ramps and sesame gomashio, and an endive salad with Chinese sausage and five-spice blue cheese dressing (“I’m a pretty good condiment maker,” he says).

Whitener has been working in restaurants since he was 13, when he borrowed an older friend’s social security number to land a dishwashing gig. He later attended culinary school in New York before moving back to Los Angeles, where he worked at Craft and Mezze. After three years cooking at Animal, Whitener — winner of the 2014 Los Angeles Rising Star Chef award — left on amicable terms to eventually pursue a project of his own. “I loved cooking at Animal, but sometimes I would come up with dishes that were a little too refined for the menu and I’d write them down for later. The food we did [at Animal] was supposed to be kind of ‘dirty,’ amped up with lots of fat, salt and acid.”

Whitener and Ta, who become friends while working at Animal, didn’t anticipate opening a restaurant so soon, but after learning that Beer Belly owner Jimmy Han was looking for a new tenant for his former Whiz location (as well as two adjacent parcels) the wheels were set in motion. The duo is currently designing the restaurant themselves, with the nearest description being a sort of mid-century-modern, Eames vibe, utilizing warm and clean colors. Interestingly, Whitener previously restored and re-sold vintage furniture, which probably gives him an advantage to most chefs when picking out bathroom tile.

The restaurant’s unique name comes not from the film Casablanca but from a vintage tiki postcard that Ta stumbled upon. Expect a list of wines from sommelier Danielle Fournier of DFF Wine consulting, as well as craft beers and a few cocktails once the liquor license arrives (apparently Whitener makes a top-notch Mai Tai).
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“We couldn’t be more excited to open in Koreatown,” says Ta, “it’s a neighborhood we’ve loved and admired for a long time and now get to be a part of.”