leek wrote:We had another lovely dinner here a week ago. I felt bad, though, because as Laura (I think it was Laura) was carving up the duck, my mom is saying how she thinks the buns are bland and doesn't want hers. Then she goes on about how the soup is bland and she doesn't like it. Right in front of Laura, like she's not even there!
MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:In previous trips to Sun Wah when I've been in charge of ordering it's been easy. My upcoming visit is a little different. I'm expected to order for 7 but 5 of them are vegetarians. I have no idea what to get.
Thoughts?
petite_gourmande wrote:MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:In previous trips to Sun Wah when I've been in charge of ordering it's been easy. My upcoming visit is a little different. I'm expected to order for 7 but 5 of them are vegetarians. I have no idea what to get.
Thoughts?
Are they strict vegetarians or is seafood acceptable (pescatarian)?
There are lots of options, if you call in advance and ask, here are some obvious and not so obvious ideas:
- chinese broccoli with oyster sauce (there isn't any oyster in the sauce, mostly MSG), or sauteed with garlic is good, too.
- tong or ong choy (water spinach) sauteed with fu yu (fermented bean curd)
- any of the noodles, fried rice, or chow fun dishes can be made without meat, such as Singapore mai fun, beef chow fun without the beef (ask if you can substitute with tofu instead)
Some of the not so obvious, variations of menu items:
- Bittermelon in black bean garlic sauce
- eggplant dish - either yu shiang or black been sauce, or they might have a better idea
- Fried tofu Salt & Pepper style, like the shrimp, but with tofu
- Sweet and Sour tofu (off-menu, but can usually be done) The tofu will either be fried crispy without batter, or battered
- Seafood tofu casserole, but with tofu and vegetables -only
- Ma Po Tofu, without meat - this is the cantonese version, nothing like Lao Szchuan.
- Black Mushrooms with Fried Tofu
- any of the vegetarian tofu dishes on the menu
Do call in advance so they are prepared.
BR wrote:There were a number of complaints about service and waiting times for food when Sun Wah opened in its new location. For those who haven't been to the new location (or those who have not returned after a sub-par service experience), you should know that Sun Wah is adapting very well to the new, larger location and to the increased number of customers. A number of new service staff has been added and I've now been there twice when the dining room was quite crowded (filled with far more people than the old location could ever hold) and on both occasions the service was prompt and food delivered fresh, hot and tasty. In short, Sun Wah in its new location is the same Sun Wah you grew to love.
Mikey wrote:Like many other Chinese restaurants, they will not allow you to order appetizers and maybe a soup while you relax and consider the menu. Everything has to be written at the same time on the same ticket. When I send the waiter to the kitchen with my starters, it is obvious that it has not been turned in, and he is merely waiting for me to decide on the remainder. Then, of course, you have to wait for them to bring out the appetizers, closely followed by everything else, and all the dishes start stacking up.
I realize that is Chinese family style eating, but a party of two is not a Chinese family.
riddlemay wrote:I was floored by the amount of the bill. Three people, soup for all with seconds for all, a large shared appetizer, three very generous entrees that yielded leftovers, a large Matilda--$50. What is this, 1974?
groovedirk wrote:
And is Thursday a common day for restaurants to be closed. I had my in-laws visiting a month or so ago and wanted to take them to Sun Wah and made the mistake of trying to take them on Thursday--and not checking to see if they were open, because what restaurant is closed on a Thurs??? right??. OOPS. Had a very nice meal at Silver Seafood but it didn't strike me as odd being closed on Thursday. Monday? sure. Tuesday? I have seen it happen. Thurs?? Never before.
--Dirk--
Octarine wrote:Mikey wrote:Like many other Chinese restaurants, they will not allow you to order appetizers and maybe a soup while you relax and consider the menu. Everything has to be written at the same time on the same ticket. When I send the waiter to the kitchen with my starters, it is obvious that it has not been turned in, and he is merely waiting for me to decide on the remainder. Then, of course, you have to wait for them to bring out the appetizers, closely followed by everything else, and all the dishes start stacking up.
I realize that is Chinese family style eating, but a party of two is not a Chinese family.
Guess I must be special then. I've done exactly this many, many, times. Hot sour soup, chinese broccolli, and a side of roast pork is my go to first order.
riddlemay wrote:Bumping up this question, because I'd really like to know, and I know some of you have good input to give:
How do you eat the duck at Sun Wah? Specifically, how do you handle the "many small bones" issue? Pick up each piece with chopsticks and nibble on it? (Beyond my skill level.) Cut very small pieces of the meat away from the bones with a knife and fork? Pick up each piece with your hands and gnaw, using your teeth to pull away tiny bits of meat away from the bones? Put the whole slice in your mouth and extract the bones from your mouth as you come across them?
I'm sure one answer is "Hey, whatever works for you," but I'd really like to know the more "approved" methods for doing this.
riddlemay wrote:How do you eat the duck at Sun Wah? Specifically, how do you handle the "many small bones" issue? Pick up each piece with chopsticks and nibble on it? (Beyond my skill level.) Cut very small pieces of the meat away from the bones with a knife and fork? Pick up each piece with your hands and gnaw, using your teeth to pull away tiny bits of meat away from the bones? Put the whole slice in your mouth and extract the bones from your mouth as you come across them?
FoodSnob77 wrote:I'd also like to know people's duck eating methods. Also, are the garlic fried ribs advance notice special order items or is it on the menu?
BR wrote:Done correctly, I agree w/ Mike G. that the boniest, most difficult duck pieces are not plated.
You're right - they're different. The issue is that you don't always want a whole duck. When I lived right near by, I used to get the bbq combination over rice (char siu, roast pork, and roast duck over rice, with some greens and half an egg - $5) regularly as a carryout dinner.riddlemay wrote:I'm inferring that Peking Duck and the item on Sun Wah's menu called BBQ Duck (which is what I ordered) are very different in the amount of bones they contain. Sun Wah also has Peking Duck, of course. So the conclusion is that the more expensive Peking Duck is the way to go, unless you want a more economical alternative that will come at the price of having many bones to pick, in which case the BBQ Duck is your option. Is that about right?
dansch wrote:You're right - they're different. The issue is that you don't always want a whole duck...I have no problem gnawing around the bones and such, but can definitely where some people wouldn't care for it. I brought coworkers to Lao Sze Chaun and almost no one was interested in the twice-cooked frog once they encountered all the bone shards...