eatchicago wrote:Marinated Chicken (small) We originally wanted the house special salt-baked chicken, but they were out. The marinated chicken was mostly white meat, tender, and very juicy. It had a very fresh, mild flavor and was served with a really refreshing ginger oil. This would be a great summer-time dish. The chicken appeared to be steamed, which gave the skin a limp-rubbery texture, but easily removed.
Erik M. wrote:When done properly, the process involved in making "marinated chicken" is likely more complicated than you imagine. Proper technique yields meat which is soft and resilient--just as you describe--with some remaining pinkness at the bone. This recipe should give you some idea.
trixie-pea wrote:Even though we specified that we wanted extra, extra crispy noodles--our noodles still arrived limp. A few of them looked like someone had made a feeble attempt at frying them, but they were even more pathetic looking then the rest. Like a peach fuzz mustache on an 12-year old man-child. The good news was that they tasted great. They slightly over seasoned the sauce so that when they added a healthy dose of noodles, the whole dish was perfectly seasoned. We ordered ours with strips of roasted duck and crisp-tender vegetables on top.
trixie-pea wrote:And we couldn't leave without ordering a couple rounds of roasted pork. Eatchicago's physical description of the Hong Kong style roast pig was dead on. But while he thought the skin tasted like pork rinds in heaven, I thought they tasted more like pork rinds in purgatory.
trixie-pea wrote:And finally a small order of BBQ'd Pork - which when we ordered it, the waitress looked at our plate of uneaten Hong Kong pork and said, "Yea, I like the BBQ'd style better too."
eatchicago wrote:My waitress at Sun Wah (I always seem to have the same woman) is very forthright about what's good and what's not. I've had her give me a look that says "think again" when I've ordered something. Upon changing it, she'll say, "Much better". Sometimes, if I just want some pork and a veggie dish, I'm happy to let her do the ordering based on freshness or what's good that day.
G Wiv wrote:Sun Wah is closed on Thursdays.
Does one eat use the chile flavored soy or the soy flavored chiles?
G Wiv wrote:Had a spot-on lunch yesterday at Sun Wah, the star being shrimp wonton soup w/roast duck and egg noodle. With the addition of a healthy shot of table chili oil and peppers a near perfect, if not remedy, temporary relief from my late summer cold.
titus wong wrote:As for their other BBQ items, I have to admit that I'm fonder of the roast pork from Hon Kee down the street. It tends to be leaner (though I always order it that way) and less salty than Sun Wah's version. Peter from La Patisserie/Sweet Passsion agrees with me. Everything is a bit saltier at Sun Wah.
ChrisH wrote:G Wiv wrote:Had a spot-on lunch yesterday at Sun Wah, the star being shrimp wonton soup w/roast duck and egg noodle. With the addition of a healthy shot of table chili oil and peppers a near perfect, if not remedy, temporary relief from my late summer cold.
Are the shrimp wontons there essentially all shrimp or is there some filler? Thanks!
Pucca wrote:I would have to say that Seven Treasures/Wonton Gourmet has more shrimp and uses a thinner wonton skin, both of which I prefer.
David Hammond wrote:It was very fine, which leads me to believe my visual assessment of Sun Wah’s food must be wrong…but boy, those pix don’t do it for me (just goes to show how sometimes a picture can tell a 1,000 words, many of which may be an inaccurate reflection of reality).
David Hammond wrote:so much so that last night I ordered the grilled mackerel at Matsuya,
G Wiv wrote:Though no guarantee you will like it, especially if you have healthy eating on the mind lately.
kuhdo wrote:Kam Fong in Chinatown, done with bitter melon and black bean sauce, which I understand is the most traditional preparation.
kuhdo wrote: rely on the tried and true "point at interesting things at other tables, which look good and simply ask for the same" technique.