Thanks to everyone who attended. I expect the photos will be available soon.
I was very glad to have had the opportunity to dine at Hon Kee. It was the kind of dinner that LTH does so well: allow us to try about a dozen things on the menu in close succession, and with an embarrassing reasonable price ($12, including tax and a large tip). First, the consensus was that Hon Kee, while a worthy dining experience, did not outshine Sun Wah. The difference was particularly noticeable in the barbeque duck. I particularly missed the crispiness of the skin that Sun Wah does so well. And of course Hon Kee lacks Kelly who serves as a cultural translator.
Still, there were several things that made Hon Kee impressive. I particularly enjoyed the three soups. The pork pickled cabbage soup was a particularly pleasant surprise (they do pickling well), as were two noodle soups - won ton and dumpling. The soups were the high point of the meal.
Also on the positive side, the roast pork with crispy skin was tender and crunchy both. And the barbeque pork with scrambled egg was quite good as well. The cuttle fish with salted pickle was an unusual and evocative dish and was worth ordering. Some of the other dishes were more pedestrian, such as granulated beef, green peas with rice, which was reminiscent of a solid Midwest ground beef casserole, and not a molecular cuisine experiment. The curried chicken was rather bland, whereas the prawns and bitter melon were overwhelmed by the very bitter melon.
Hon Kee, being less popular than Sun Wah, is quieter and certainly provides a pleasant, inexpensive meal. I was glad that we didn't stick to traditional favorites, but tried dishes "off the beaten path."
Toast, as every breakfaster knows, isn't really about the quality of the bread or how it's sliced or even the toaster. For man cannot live by toast alone. It's all about the butter. -- Adam Gopnik