Like Don K, perhaps the recent Christmas Eve dinner did not quite get the Chinese food holiday obligation satisfied. My wife, especially, needed another bout of Chinatown. With Justjoan chauffeuring us, we hit the mall last night. We thought of KS, sounding good and interesting, but we also wanted another crack at good ol' traditional Cantonese, what got so screwed up the other day.
A restaurant has been in the spot in the Chinatown Mall called Mountain View for many years. It has retained the same, basic, seen in Chinatowns around the world decor, but has gone through different incarnations and focuses, and also, I believe, different owners. The new place distinguishes itself by calling itself Mountain View
Chef. The menu claims:
Authentic Chinese Cuisine Cook by Authentic Hong Kong Chef & The Best and Most Original Chinese Food of Chicago Chinatown
More important, that menu distinguishes itself with decent color pictures of over 50 of the menu items. That menu is filled with dishes that called out for ordering. Duck in House Sauce, Black Bean Ox Tail Casserole, Fillet of Pike in X.O. Sauce, Boiled Whelk were all amongst the dishes that could have easily fit in our order. Alas, we were only 3 adults and two pre-teens.
We ended up with Hong Kong Style Salt and Pepper Shrimp, Fried Japanese Tofu, Beef Chow Fun (Hong Kong Style [sic]), Farm Raised Chicken [sic], and Sizzling Black-Pepper Eggplants. The menu came to just under $40. It was certainly one of those meals where all the dishes complimented and balanced each other. After dinner, in the swoon of a great meal, I said to my wife, "you cannot go wrong with traditional Cantonese." She wisely noted, "oh yes you can", explaining how this kinda food is so dependent on good ingredients and very exact cooking techniques. There's not much in the way of heavy, spicy sauces to cover any deficiencies in the kitchen. I recanted and said, "you cannot go wrong with good Cantonese."
It was hard to single out a best; I really like the chicken, a cold poached chicken, perhaps organic, with an incredibly tasty pureed ginger dip. Hong Kong style places have been using the moniker "Japanese" to signify soft or silky tofu, compared against the more typical tofu found in say, Ma Po To Fu. It borders on the avante garde, the frying of this near liquid tofu. They coated the gel intensely with salt and spices, a dish pretty far out there on the palate, but one that did not go over the edge to inedible, a dish I will surely order again. The eggplants went over so well because they managed to cook them with nary a wisp of extra oil (oh in contrast to what we had the other night!). Oh, and I liked the noodles too, chewy rice noodles, not a hint of crispness, with classic soft Chinese texture beef.
The only dish that troubled me, the shrimps. They use a slightly different treatment than other salt n' pepper dishes in Chinatown, with lots of garlic chips and a red chili jam (an almost Thai profile), but the shrimps were on the small side and some of middling quality. I'm hoping this was an abberation of the night.
We entered an empty restaurant at about 5:30. We left it mostly filled. The casseroles seemed popular on a lot of tables as did dishes in bubbling mini-woks. As I indicated, I feel I've barely touched the menu. I know one bad meal at Lee Wing Wah should not cause me to
that quickly switch my loyalities. I'd still like to get friendlier with Mountain View Chef.
Mountain View Chef
2168 S. Archer Ave
Chicago, IL
312.842.2168
(a door or so down from Lao Sze Chuan)
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.