earthlydesire wrote:I had lunch here about a two weeks ago and it was pretty tasty. We ate early so it was completely empty when I checked in but by the time I left two hours later, it was pretty full up. The food was very good -- pretty much what i expect from Tony Hu, and I had good renditions of the Crispy Shrimp and Mayo, the Mongolian Beef and a pretty spicy Kung Pao chicken. Shui Mai were okay -- not bad, but I've tasted much more flavorful versions of shrimp dumplings, and the potstickers were okay as well.
I like the restaurant design, and frankly, any Chinese option in the loop or river north is welcome. Short of Panda (blech) or PJ Chang's (expensive blech) there's not much around.
I did think that the lunch portions were a bit small for sharing. But we ended up ordering a third entree because of that, and with Chinese food -- I think that's a bonus. Variety!
There's also Shanghai Pavilion, but while it's well executed and IMO well-prepared food, the price point makes it a special occasion, and it's more "gourmet food in a Chinese vein" than Chinese cuisine.
We haven't been to Lao 18 yet, but after reading the menu, I can't say I find the entree offerings compelling compared to Lao Hunan or Lao Yunnan (a few of the appetizers are edgier). And why anyone would eat at a Lao restaurant and order Mongolian Beef , Governor's Chicken, let alone Kung Pao, is beyond me.
At least they have Three Cups Chicken...but unless it's a business lunch I'd rather go to Chinatown and eat the real thing than settle for something aiming higher than PF Chang, but not as high as, say, Roka Akor does with Japanese.