JoelF wrote:Add another vote to the "awesome experience" column.
One more vote! Thanks again to EC and pp for the idea and the organization.
As I was relishing the memories of the dinner, I had two thoughts (one naughty, one nice). Nice, it struck me how limited LSC is in its cuisine. I mean about 3/5 of our dishes looked about the same. Yet, within this tight framework, the dishes all tasted so different (and great). Yes, there were some legitimate, minor quibbles. Like the tea-smoked duck being a bit dry, but I walked away without a single dish I did not like. Now, naughtly, LSC makes want to shove down (and perhaps this is a strawman at this point, given all the people who showed up the other night), but shove down at those who claim there is no good Chinese food in Chicago.
Specific dishes--well, like I say, there was nothing below average. Still, a few things stood out. I just loved the pork elbow. It had the same gross red sauce as so many other dishes, but this one had a brightness to it, I just could not place. EatChicago thought it vinegar, but it really did not taste like that to me. I also liked the house special potherb, something green and contrasting, that stayed mostly in front of me all night. Finally, we ordered a couple of tofu dishes, one from the appetizer section and one from the snacks section mainly to see what they were, and that proved a great strategy. Both came in the heavy, spicy house oil. One was firm almost like cheese, the other so loose it could not be eaten with chopsticks.
I had not been to Lao Sze Chuan in a while. Honestly, it was hard to remmember it was this good. Maybe it was the How Do You Spell Hannukah spirirt. It was that good.
Rob
PS
Yea to everything EC sez about Huck Finn. Someone opens a nice cafe near Chinatown and they can make a fortune offfa us chowhounds.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.