China has a vast amount of regions and styles of cooking, and a good number of them can be sampled in L.A.'s San Gabriel Valley. A year or so ago, I realized that my knowledge of Chinese food mainly consisted of "Szechwan, spicy, good!" and "dim sun, fun, like har gow the best." And in fact, if you never ventured east of Chinatown, you could go your whole life not knowing much more than that. So I decided to right this shameful wrong, felicitously aided by the appearance of the extremely helpful
Finding Chinese Food in Los Angeles by Carl Chu. Now out of print, it's been replaced with the updated
Chinese Food Finder: Los Angeles and the San Gabriel Valley.
With the help of the book, a group of us has ventured out to the San Gabriel Valley on a semi-regular basis, trying real Szechwan at
Chung King (really spicy, really good), Islamic at
China Islamic (very filling), designer dim sum at
Sea Harbour (delicately lovely), Shanghai at
Green Village and Hunan at
Shiang Garden. Some folks on Chowhound suggested dumplings or hand-cut noodles for our next experience, but that seemed too informal for a group dinner, so I decided to go with
Newport Seafood, a Chinese/Vietnamese restaurant featuring Chaozhou food.
It was packed on Sunday evening, but after about a half hour of gawking at platters piled high with crabs and lobsters being delivered to every table, we were finally seated. I tried to order the specialties of the region, but instead of Vietnamese style seafood soup, we ended up with a very typical Chinese hot and sour soup, with shrimp and scallops. Although it was a standard dish, I certainly wouldn't complain if it was available somewhere near Silverlake. We also had beef loc lac, the savory "shaking beef" dish available at every Vietnamese restaurant; sauteed bright green pea sprouts; Newport special crab; a whole steamed seabass; and wide rice noodles with chicken. The crab had an excellent spicy garlicky sauce, and was certainly the messiest thing we've eaten in a long time.
The verdict: Everything was good, although other than the crab and the beef, nothing was really that distinctive. But the seafood was good quality, and the lobster looked amazing, so it would be worth another trip to try it. The bill came out to $20 each for the five of us, including tip, with just tea to drink -- not bad for very satisfying six course dinner.
Newport Seafood835 W. Las Tunas Dr.
San Gabriel
(626) 289-5998
Archived comments:chickenbuttz said...
The garlic sauce, more like fried garlic bits to my recollection, is also very good with the asparagus.
typefiend said...
I beg you to try the lobster next time you return. If you're lucky, it will have the extra decadent bonus of lobster eggs inside. A group of 12 of us once ordered an $85 lobster, and it was the first time ever in which there was more lobster than people could handle (most of my friends were too squeamish to try the eggs, but they missed out on a delicacy). Oh the garlic...the garlic!
You totally ROCK!!! I found your blog by searching for a review about Alcove Cafe, and now i think i've been on ur site for about 2 hours.
When I lived a couple of blocks from Magnolia in the Village, I was puzzled by the existence of huge lines while other, much better local bakeries wanted for business. (The fact that Magnolia was actively nasty to neighborhood children didn't help - the local third-graders all called the place Mongoloid Bakery.)
I finally figured out that what the regulars were hungry for were not the best cupcakes in the neighborhood, but the cupcakes most like the ones that their mothers used to make from a boxed mix. Add plastic-like buttercream frosting vividly tinted with food coloring and flavored with an artifical vanilla reek you could sniff from a block away, and you have the stuff of every six-year-old's red-state birthday party, festivity in the style of Duncan Hines.
The cupcakes at Auntie Em's have, indeed, gone a bit downhill in recent weeks. I didn't get it at first, but read on chowhound board that the one owner that used to do all the baking has officially left the building. Auntie Em's still has some respectable qualities, but sweets ain't one of 'em...
As for Magnolia's cupcakes---I've never understood the long lines. The cupcakes are dry as dirt and (as j gold says) the fake vanilla is a stench to be reckoned with. I'm all for the tapping into the cupcake memories from my youth---problem is, i had a mom who could actually bake!
i beg to disagree. the desserts at auntie em's are great. the cupcakes, cobblers, cookies, brownies, and the food. they have always had a baking team at night, and the woman who left was a half partner. i think with a place that does seasonal and different things all of the time there will be things people like and don't like. it is the nature of that type of place.
i was at auntie em's for lunch today. we stopped by because of the kcrw interveiw. (thanks) we had a cobb salad and a roasted vegetable torte with goat cheese, a piece of black berry pie and a red velvet cupcake. wow! great food, great desserts. what a find.
.. the regulars were hungry for the cupcakes most like the ones that their mothers used to make from a boxed mix. Add plastic-like buttercream frosting vividly tinted with food coloring and flavored with an artifical vanilla reek you could sniff from a block away
ABSOLUTELY! They bear the same relationship to gourmet baking as McDonalds does to gourmet beef