It's funny sometimes the places that we cluster around-- and the other places, often better situated and more obvious, that get overlooked. Vital Info selects a far west side Polish restaurant or a Puerto Rican chicken place more or less randomly, likes what he finds, and suddenly Pico Rico and Zascianek are known locations on the great Foodmap in our collective heads.
When MikeG
wrote those words, I was gonna retort. It's not so much that I (or any poster) goes out trying to make a place famous. More like the famous find us. But really, the gist of Mike's point was spot-on. You never know what good food lurks around the corner, even if no one's discussed it. So, I steal freely his moniker of Annals of the Overlooked. I do, however, think it makes less sense to cram all the overlooks into one thread. Hence, Lee Wing Wah deserves it's own space.
Let me say at the start, that Lee Wing Wah is hardly overlooked. For one thing, on a day in day out basis, it is quite crowded (and I'll get back to this in a sec.) For another thing, when Chicago Magazine did a bit on Chinatown last year, they singled out Lee Wing Wah for yummy food. Yet, I only found
two small mentions of the place on LTHForum. And it it aint on LTHForum, it's overlooked. Hopefully, no more.
I am mostly a creature of habit, and while I go to a lot of places in Chinatown, I tend to have set places for things: Mandarin Kitchen for Shanghainese (which sounds wierd but makes sense if you know the back story); The Sevens, Treasure for soup noodles, Wives for breakfast; Spring World for spicy/oily stuff; Happy Chef for Cantonese; Triple Crown for late night; Ken Kee if I wanted to be wierd. I know there are places I need to try like Sky, and I know that others off the short list, like Lao Sze Chuan or Moon Palace can be pretty special, but like I say, I am a creature of habit. Now, a few weeks ago we finally tried the pho place in the Chinatown mall, so I guess I was inspired to seek out new things. I gazed long into the Lee Wing Wah space because it was so packed on this weeknight. And it all looked good, especially the salt 'n pepper shrimps on a lot of tables.
I could tell from the outside, just from the outside, that these shrimps were a bit different. Happy Chef makes great salt n' pepper shrimps, but it is a dusting, a veneer, a condiment on the shrimps. At LWW, the salt-pepper amalgamated into a batter. I love fried shrimp, like say, Goose Island, and I wanted to try these.
I did. Also, stir fried tong choi with spicy bean sauce (not really spicy at all); crispy skin chicken, steamed oysters with black bean and "egg style" tofu (or something like that). Let me get to that dish first. It was called egg style because the tofu was cut to look like hard cooked eggs. It looked solid but it was just barely, and it contrasted well with typical brown sauce. Let me also get out of the way, that we picked the dish (one of my daughters picked it) from a menu with color pictures, making the place easy to navigate. The other thing about that menu is that they gave away the game on "crispy skin" chicken. That is, the picture menu translated it as fried chicken. Fried chicken, it definately tasted more fried, more greasy than others around Chinatown, but not in a bad way at all. In fact it was all very, very good. I am anxious to return.
I do have one bone to pick though. As I noted, there are several color pictures to help form a menu. But, but, there is also a page of lunch specials, much cheaper, written soley in Chinese characters. I loved the food, and there was a good amount of leftovers, but I think I could have spent less if I read Chinese.
Lee Wing Wah
In the Chinatown Mall
312-808-1628[/quote]
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.