I can think of a few such dishes that I have had over the years. All interestingly enough, are from Chinese or Cuban Chinese places. Maybe it's my youth I long for more than these particular dishes.
The first is (was) a Szechuan Chili Chicken dish served at the Greenwich Village outpost of "Mama Buddah", a Chinese American joint on Hudson Street in the West Village of NYC which sadly closed in late 2007. It was essentially a really crispy hot version of Tony's Three Chili Chicken without the somewhat sweet glaze that the dish gets at Lao Sze Schuan. It was definitely a more savory dish than the one served here n Chicago. The place was an unpretentious, dumbed down Ameri-Chinese place that served more Americans than Asians on a given night. If I was ever in New York for more than a couple of days , I made a point to stop by for lunch or dinner. I ate that dish for almost twenty years in that location before the restaurant closed this year.
The second was a different but enjoyable version of Ropa Viejo served at La Chinita Linda on Eight Avenue inn Chelsea. The soft simmered beef was served with a somewhat thick tomato based sauce and a huge pile of fluffy yellow rice and beans. It was one of my great dining our treats in my poorer and hungrier days of my 20s. It is a dish that I would gladly eat today if |I could only find a place that served it. La Chinita Linda was pushed out of business by rising Eighth Avenue Rents in 2007.
Growing up as a kid in a rather unsophisticated southern town, eating out usually meant Chinese after church on Sunday. For me that meant a big dish of Wor Su Gai, deep fried, battered chicken over a bed of iceberg, covered with a brown sauce and sliced toasted almonds. When i returned for my grandmother's funeral ten years ago, and was asked to choose where to have a family meal after, I chose the place where we had shared so may Sunday lunches many years ago and chose the dish that was representative iof what we often ate at those meals.
I'd love to find Wor Su Gai today. But, it, like pressed almond duck, seems to be from a past era on Chinese American menus.