David Chan's Top Ten
1. Koi Palace
Location: Daly City, CaliforniaChan says:
“Koi Palace
is a Hong Kong style restaurant specializing in dim sum at lunch time
and Hong Kong style seafood at dinner. Koi Palace is also an anomaly in
that it is the only one of two restaurants on this list that opened
before the year 2000. This is significant because Chinese food is
continuously evolving and improving, and Chinese restaurants that might
be the best at one point in time are likely to be surpassed by new
contenders, rather than evolving to new heights themselves. Koi Palace
apparently sends their kitchen staff back to Asia periodically to pick
up on the newest trends and innovations.”
2. Sea Harbour
Location: Rosemead, CaliforniaChan says:
“The opening
of Sea Harbour about 10 years ago was a real milestone as it marked the
first venture of a Vancouver, B.C., area Chinese restaurant into the
United States. This is noteworthy as Vancouver has had the best Chinese
food in North America for over two decades, and a list of the 10 best
Chinese restaurants in North America would consist solely of restaurants
from the Vancouver and Toronto areas. Sea Harbour brought high quality
menu based dim sum (as opposed to dim sum carts) to Los Angeles and the
United States, and serves Hong Kong style seafood at dinner.”
3. Elite Restaurant
Location: Monterey Park, CaliforniaChan says:
“Elite
Restaurant, which opened five years ago, is in the mold of Sea Harbour,
serving dim sum off the menu and Hong Kong style seafood. While dim sum
carts are viewed by many as a more interesting experience, dim sum off
the menu that is cooked to order provides a fresher and higher quality
product.”
4. King Hua
Location: Alhambra, CaliforniaChan says:
“King Hua is
an offshoot of Sea Harbour, having been founded by the original dim sum
chef at Sea Harbour. Food obviously parallels that of Sea Harbour.”
5. Lunasia
Location: Alhambra, CaliforniaChan says:
“Lunasia is
another dim sum off-the-menu Hong Kong style seafood restaurant.
Innovative dim sum items include foie gras dim sum, about to become
illegal as California bans the sale of foie gras as of July 1, 2012.”
6. Din Tai Fung
Location: Arcadia, CaliforniaChan says:
“This is the
only Shanghai style restaurant on the list and is a branch of the renown
Din Tai Fung chain based in Taiwan. Specialty is Xiao Long Bao ...
[which] may best be described as a cross between a wonton and a real
dumpling, except that in addition to the meat filling there is also a
reservoir of broth accompanying the meat. Some detractors say the
California branch of Din Tai Fung pales next to the Taiwanese branch and
others say that the XLB at other Los Angeles area restaurants are
better. Yet Chinese communities in the San Francisco Bay area and New
York long for their own branch... ”
7. Yank Sing
Location: San Francisco, CaliforniaChan says:
“This dim sum
specialist has been around for decades, but has evolved from its
original Chinatown origins into a mainstay in San Francisco's financial
district. Serves the most expensive dim sum in the United States, with a
typical bill of $35 per person, compared to $10 to $20 at other dim sum
eateries.”
8. Seafood Village
Location: Monterey Park, CaliforniaChan says:
“This Chiu
Chow/Hong Kong style restaurant is highly regarded, but due to its
relatively small size doesn't get the same attention as the larger
capacity restaurants noted above. However, the large crowds that wait to
dine here are a testament to the restaurant's ability to make a large
number of outstanding dishes.”
9. 101 Noodle Express
Location: Alhambra, CaliforniaChan says:
“One dish has
propelled 101 Noodle Express into prominence, the Shandong beef roll.
Previously unseen in this country, that dish is now ubiquitous in Los
Angeles area Chinese restaurants, and turned 101 Noodle Express into a
mini-chain, with even a branch in a regional shopping mall in a part of
Los Angeles with a small Chinese population. But 101 Noodle Express is
not a one trick pony, and also serves outstanding northern Chinese meat,
dumpling and noodle dishes. ”
10. Jai Yun
Location: San Francisco, CaliforniaChan says:
“Besides
being one of the best Chinese restaurants in the U.S., it is also the
quirkiest. It's located a half-block outside of San Francisco Chinatown,
close enough to describe it as being in Chinatown. It is highly
controversial as it elicits both extremely positive and extremely
negative comments. There is no menu at Jai Yun. Rather you tell the chef
how much you want to spend (e.g., $35 per person, $50, $100, etc.) and
he'll provide you a selection of small plates of his choice, based on
the ingredients he has purchased for the day. The chef is from Nanjing,
and his cooking reflects a variety of eastern and northern Chinese
locales...”
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