Cathy2 wrote:Perhaps TonyC and CrazyC could take a shot at translating the Chinese portion of the menu.
TonyC was at a clothing-optional resort in Palm Springs when KS opened. CrazyC was ... somewhere in Burma.
bygones.
E9 "drunken clams":
not that drunk, hints of basil. not bad, should've just turned it into full blown basil clams. Thai-ish. way short on clams.
A6 "spicy sliced white meat" (Szechuan style, also found @ LSC), in this case, Taiwanese inflected, more vinegary than SZ peppery/spicy:
D4, boiling chitlin & blood cake (Taiwanese Benchmark I):
getting better!! whole chunks of garlic, clean intestine, stalks of green onions, great texture, what they like to call
xia fan
stir fries:
E8, minced pork and squid +spicy:
looks like something made from 2 days worth of left overs. tastes great. more
xian fan-ness.
D9, bamboo tip beef:
simple fair, home-style cooking.
F10, super garlicky (bean sprout?):
disappointments:
D19, 3 cup chicken (Taiwanese benchmark II?):
BLAH!@#$% Smelled great, looked.. well. I like to use darker aged soysauce ala:
no basil, needs soysauce w/ more punch. chicken over browned before stewing. easy to make, easy to botch up.
C*, non-fried stinky tofu hotpot style:
requested Manager Wu to fry me up some stinky tofu last week. after initially saying yes days ago he withdrew the offer. something about:
1) The processed tofu is already too dry by the time it gets here
2) Chinatown Square won't let them due to smell.
Avoid stinky tofu in the Midwest. no stink, no moisture, texture of dried human skin.
fun: 5 treasure taro cake
ehh... gooey sweet... baked with red beans, pineapple, etc. not my thing, but chics dig taro.
best: pepper & black bean stir fried anchovies
holy moly. i asked for seconds. shoulda took thirds home. better than anything from H-mart's panchan bar. if only i had some lousy Taiwanese beer that looked like pee. soju would also go well w/ this.
Of course... there were the "Taiwanese French Fries"(tm by Stagger), aka, fried baby eels. very interesting. The Taiwanese popcorn chicken (D16) smelled extremely pungent. Other interesting items: pickled bamboo shoot pork hock (D21), minced soybean over fish (pictured E14), spicy oiled kidney (D2), pickled cabbage (not napa) stir fry beef D12. Note the pickled cabbage may also be offered as
amuse bouche. BWAHAHAHAHA.
Taiwanese amuse bouche.. sorry. VI: avoid the other "Sea King" special in the "box"; main ingredient = fake crab meat.
Pardon the unorganized post, more tidbits on the restaurant: Manager Wu is, of course, Taiwanese, but perhaps
wai shen ren(?), speaks Taiwanese fluently. Chef is from Kaoshiung (Southern TW), Owner's an MD with a practice on the 2nd level of Chinatown Square. Proprietor mentioned Taiwanese street food in the works. Honestly, what good is a Taiwanese restaurant w/o oyster pancakes and pork blood rice cake? Someone else mentioned pricing.. a plate of TW style rice vermicelli was $7-ish? "Clear" clam soup (B4) for $6? "Snow Fish" E14 for $22? Twin cold plat app (A14) for $12? Go to Katy's, pickup big boxes stewed pig ear and the five spiced mix for < $10, feed a family of 4 for 2 days.
Final thought: give me
Simbala,
Class 302, or even all the various dirty
Shau May* anyday. Tho extremely glad KSS is open,
just hope it doesn't need saving like Mandarin Kitchen cuz I'm going to need a second job.
* not self aggrandizing. first googled result of ("shau may" taiwanese food) yields link. alas, the SGV Shau May(s) no longer proffer $2.99 mango shaved ice, tho New Shau May in Rowland Heights did mix up a less intricate bowl for me on Christmas Eve