kuhdo wrote:I really like SS, and for the last several years I have felt it offers the best and most consistient Cantonese food in the city. This is a regular stop for me and I'm usually there once every 4-6 weeks. Regular dishes for us include the seafood soup with dried scallops, salt and pepper squid and cuttlefish, Hong Sue fish fillet with pork, chow fun noodles dry style (with duck substituted for beef), crispy skin chicken or steamed chicken with ginger and onion, and whatever seafood is fresh and interesting. If avaiulable the whole flounder either steamed or braised can be excellent. Another dish they do really well, and not often found at other spots is Dover sole "two ways" (meat stir fried with snap peas, and bones deep fried and crunchy). Duck with taro is also very good. My kids love the long life noodles or the bbq pork cantonese chow mein (actually, I do too).
They also have nice seafood potstickers , great soft (Japanese) tofu with mushrooms and good clams in black bean sauce (can be had over crispy rice noodles on request)...I could go on. one of my favorites on the north side. Americanized Chinese dishes are best avoided (with the exception of Mongolian beef which they really do well),. Pseudo sechuan here can be even worse. This is a cantonese restaurant, and a very good one at that.
Jay K wrote:kuhdo wrote:I really like SS, and for the last several years I have felt it offers the best and most consistient Cantonese food in the city. This is a regular stop for me and I'm usually there once every 4-6 weeks. Regular dishes for us include the seafood soup with dried scallops, salt and pepper squid and cuttlefish, Hong Sue fish fillet with pork, chow fun noodles dry style (with duck substituted for beef), crispy skin chicken or steamed chicken with ginger and onion, and whatever seafood is fresh and interesting. If avaiulable the whole flounder either steamed or braised can be excellent. Another dish they do really well, and not often found at other spots is Dover sole "two ways" (meat stir fried with snap peas, and bones deep fried and crunchy). Duck with taro is also very good. My kids love the long life noodles or the bbq pork cantonese chow mein (actually, I do too).
They also have nice seafood potstickers , great soft (Japanese) tofu with mushrooms and good clams in black bean sauce (can be had over crispy rice noodles on request)...I could go on. one of my favorites on the north side. Americanized Chinese dishes are best avoided (with the exception of Mongolian beef which they really do well),. Pseudo sechuan here can be even worse. This is a cantonese restaurant, and a very good one at that.
I'm always impressed by your knowledge of authentic Cantonese dishes - in particular, this evening, your knowledge of "Gwut Heung Leung Lei" was astonishing.
kuhdo wrote:Jay K wrote:kuhdo wrote:Another dish they do really well, and not often found at other spots is Dover sole "two ways" (meat stir fried with snap peas, and bones deep fried and crunchy).
I'm always impressed by your knowledge of authentic Cantonese dishes - in particular, this evening, your knowledge of "Gwut Heung Leung Lei" was astonishing.
Jay, I'd like to say thanks, but fear I may have stepped off into a sarchasm.
Jay K wrote:
kuhdo wrote:Texas!Also, snow peas or sugar snaps are usually part of the package.