Showing posts with label lettuce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lettuce. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Au Wing Kee - Burnaby

Restaurant: Au Wing Kee

Cuisine: Chinese
Last visited: March 4, 2010
Area: Burnaby, BC (Burnaby South)
5226 Kingsway
Price Range
:
$10 or less


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!

Food: 4.5
Service: 2

Ambiance: 1.5

Overall: 4

Additional comments:

  • 2 locations: Burnaby/Vancouver
  • Congee & Noodle house
  • Hole in the wall, but popular
  • A bit/quite dirty
  • Quick & cheap eats
  • The No. 9 of Burnaby, but better
  • Very familiar to Chinese locals
  • Traditional Cantonese cuisine
  • Famous for congee
  • Extensive menu
  • Lunch combos 11am-5:30pm
  • Great for snacks/late night snacks (9pm-1am)
  • Late night
  • Open Mon-Sun 11am – 1am
  • Cash only
  • Dine in/Take-out
  • Parking at rear

**Recommendation: Congee, Wonton noodles (they’re popular here although I haven’t tried it yet)

This place has been around for ages! It’s a totally hole in the wall dive that is very familiar to Chinese people. It’s pretty much the No. 9 of Burnaby, but much better. I don’t even mind No. 9 actually, you have to lower your standards for cheap late night, open 24 hour eats...you have to admit the place is packed with Chinese people all the time! It's like Hon's Won Ton Noodle House.


Au Wing Kee specializes in congee and noodles, but they offer everything from chow mien, hot pot, seafood, to late night snacks. They even have a tank filled with live seafood like crab and lobster. The food is fresh, made upon order – not gourmet, but a quick, casual bite that is very easy on the wallet.


This is more or less a tribute review to those suffering from the stomach flu, cold or virus. Too many of us have been hit. I think I was first to catch the stomach flu out of the food bloggers in Vancouver, and since then it has spread like wild fire. Everything we ordered is more or less what older generation traditional Chinese people order when they’re not feeling well. In particular the 2 types of congee we ordered are really high in nutrition and have tons of calcium, protein, and iron.


On the table:

Dried Fillet with Peanut & Spare Ribs Congee 3.5/6

  • $4.50
  • It’s not really for the Western tastes buds, but it is very traditional Chinese food. It would be probably rated higher for Chinese people.
  • The spare ribs aren’t the Western type of spare ribs that are really meaty. They’re really small and boney and the bones are what they use to flavour the congee.
  • The meat it does have is pretty chewy and the type of meat is a cheap kind. I’m not a fan, but again it is authentic and for $4.50 you’re not going to get high quality spare ribs.
  • I loved the dried fillet. Throughout the congee there are pieces of dried fish or “fillet”. It tastes like dried scallops and it’s almost jerky like. It’s salty and has a preserved fishy taste that I like.
  • The peanuts are whole peanuts and they’re really soft. It gives the congee a little nuttiness.
  • The congee itself is really delicious and creamy. They do a great job with that here. It’s really infused with all the flavours of the ingredients used.

Dace Fish Ball & Watercress Congee 2/6

  • $4.95 – rating would be much higher for Chinese people
  • This isn’t for the Western taste buds either. However for Chinese taste buds, they do a pretty good job with this congee.
  • I was not a fan of this type of congee.
  • It’s loaded with 8 dace fish balls are very fresh and made in house. It’s a mixture of fish paste, dried orange peel, scallions and white pepper. Very nutritious...but for me not delicious. What I hated was that the fish bones are pureed into the mixture and I could taste and bite into them. It was like scales. However for Chinese people that’s a good thing because it means it’s freshly ground up fish. The orange peel was very strong, but not bitter…but it’s just not for me.
  • At the bottom of the bowl is the watercress. It’s thrown in raw, but cooks with the hot congee poured on top.
  • The congee base is great. It’s lighter in taste than the spare rib congee, but still nice and creamy.

Sautéed Lettuce in Slice Pepper w/ Preserved Bean Curd Sauce 5/6

  • This is again for Chinese taste buds – I really like this dish. It’s acquired though. I just love it as a side dish with congee.
  • The myth or truth...is that spicy is good because it kills germs...also it makes you sweat so you sweat out the bad stuff. Chinese and I think Indian also believe that ginger kills germs...so again "sick people food". Spicy also makes you cough, so don't have it if you're coughing...and I don't think spicy is good for stomach flus either...it doesn't make sense to me...?
  • It’s loaded with long strands of ginger (in photo) and round slices of green chili peppers. It has a preserved salty taste and it’s creamy, spicy (not too spicy) and very aromatic with lots of flavours.
  • The green chili peppers aren’t really spicy though. They’re quite mild and I could eat them whole.
  • It’s a super soupy/saucy dish, but it’s not too oily and I really enjoyed it. There's no actual pieces of bean curd in it, it's just preserved/fermented bean curd sauce - so the flavour is infused in the sauce.
  • The taste is very pungent. I had the dish at No. 9 and it’s done a bit differently. I liked the one at Au Wing Kee better.

Au Wing Kee (Burnaby) on Urbanspoon

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Shanghai River - Review 3

Restaurant: Shanghai River - Review 3

Cuisine: Shanghainese/Chinese/Asian/Dim Sum

Last visited: January 24, 2010
Area: Richmond, BC

7831 Westminster Hwy
Range: $20-30


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!


Food: 5

Service: 3

Ambiance: 5

Overall: 4.5

Additional comments:

  • Known as the best/Richmond's most popular Shanghai restaurants
  • High end Shanghainese Restaurant
  • Hit or miss items - but when it's a hit it's a big hit!
  • Busy/Crowded/Line-ups all the time
  • Reservations recommended
  • Menu in Chinese and English - some pictures
  • Shanghainese staff in front and in kitchen
  • Very popular to locals/Chinese/main stream/tourists
  • Should go with at least 4-8 ppl - how the menu/portions are designed
  • Visible "Xiao Long Bao" (famous steamed pork dumplings) making station
  • Private dining room available

**Recommendation: Steamed mini pork dumplings "Xiao Long Bao", braised eggplant with chili sauce, deep fried crab with chili & garlic, hot and sour soup, fried rice cake with pork


This is my 3rd visit to Shanghai River since I started Follow Me Foodie. As mentioned in my previous posts I have been here before I started blogging as well. They been quite consistent on all my visits so therefore my ratings haven’t changed. The more I try the better recommendations I can give you and I can also track if the quality is still there.


Shanghai River is always packed and it’s one of the most popular fine dining Shanghai Restaurants in Richmond and Vancouver. Collecting a wall of awards, this is a restaurant that is familiar to locals and tourists alike.

Speaking of tourists, that is why I came here. I had a friend visiting from Austria and there everything “Asian” is all categorized under “Chinese food,” so I had to show him the difference. It was Shanghai Dining 101…for a European. He liked every single dish except for one…you’ll see which one. He liked the lettuce wraps and surprisingly the hot and sour soup the best!


The food here is Shanghainese; however it’s catered to Chinese, specifically for Cantonese taste buds. Therefore it’s not as saucy, salty or oily as authentic Shanghainese cuisine should be. The food is still good, but if you ask a Shanghainese person – then no, it is not quite authentic. There’s a reason why it’s still packed though so I wouldn’t write it off just because it’s not the real deal.


Shanghai River: Review 1

Shanghai River: Review 2


On the table:

**Xiao Long Bao – Steamed mini pork dumplings 6/6

  • A dumpling filled with juicy ground pork meat and pork broth or soup $6.80 for 8 pcs
  • This is a staple item when dining Shanghai. I will order it every time I come here and everyone else does the same. The ones here are good, but the ones at Chen’s Shanghai Kitchen have more soup that’s also hotter.
  • For more details on these Xiao Long Baos at Shanghai River please click here

**Hot and Sour Soup 5/6

  • A small size will generously fill 5 bowls $9.80
  • It’s a hot and sour soup made with pork broth, chilies, tofu, shredded pork, bamboo shoots, black wood ear mushrooms, shrimp, carrots, mushrooms, green onions and egg whites.
  • The ingredients vary from place to place and so does the level of spiciness. For me, it’s not that spicy and nobody complained about it being too spicy either.
  • This soup originates from Szechuan cuisine, but it is often served at Shanghai restaurants. The traditional Szechuan recipe will also have pork’s blood, which I’m not a fan off so I’m glad it’s not in this one. Pork’s blood is solidified and it looks like dark brown smooth slices of tofu when they use it in the soup.
  • There are tons of ingredients in this version at Shanghai River. There are more ingredients than there is soup. All the ingredients are different textures of crunchy so you’re chewing quite a bit.
  • The soup is sour from the vinegar and spicy from the use of chilies, chili oil and white pepper. It’s not that spicy though, so don’t freak out if you can’t handle too spicy. It would be much spicier at an authentic Shanghainese restaurant in Shanghai.
  • The shrimp is not bad and a decent size and we all got at least 2 of them. With the amount of ingredients they used I really think the value is here.
  • The bamboo shoots are pickled on their own so it enhances the overall “sour” flavour to this soup.
  • The broth is a pork based broth so you still get that saltiness you want in a soup. Great balance of flavours.

Chicken with Wine Sauce 2.5/6

  • This is also commonly known as “drunken chicken”. It’s half a chicken that is marinated and steamed in Chinese wine. It’s served chilled. $6.80
  • I think they used to do a better job with this. They use to pour ½ a shot of wine/whiskey on it at the table before serving, but they don’t do that anymore.
  • This is eaten as an appetizer. This is the only dish my friend didn’t like. Maybe it was because of the way it looks and the taste was unusual.
  • The wine doesn’t really cook out in this dish and I think they add a little bit of just the wine before serving. It’s quite boozy and at first it’s sweet and then it gets a bit bitter because it’s too much wine.
  • The chicken is very well marinated, but there’s also not much meat. Consequently the meat absorbs the wine easily.
  • Since it’s served cold there is a little gelatin on the chicken which is common. It’s supposed to be flavourful, which it is, but the wine was too overpowering overall.

Pan-fried Pork Buns 4/6

  • A pan fried bun that is made with homemade bread dough and filled with juicy pork $6.80 for 5pcs
  • This is usually an item you would order for dim sum and not for dinner, but since it was Shanghainese food 101 I had to order them.
  • These buns are made pretty well and you could pop the bun whole if you wanted to. Just like the “xiao long baos” you dip them in vinegar before eating them.
  • I could taste the flavour of the meat in these ones more than the “xiao long bao” because these buns have less soup. The soup comes from the fact that the pork filling also has gelatin so as it cooks/steams/fries the gelatin melts and becomes the “soup” or gravy. There wasn’t as much soup as I would have liked though.
  • The flavour of the meat has ginger and garlic aromatics, but they’re extremely minced up so you’re not biting into pieces of anything except for pork. I feel like they could have been using ginger oil because it was so subtle. The meatball is really soft, but also not mushy like meatloaf.
  • The bottom of these buns are nicely browned and fried and most importantly not soggy from the soup.
  • As well as green onions there should be some sesame seeds served on top of these buns.

Duck Meat Lettuce Wraps 3.5/6

  • Stir-fried duck meat and vegetables. Served with lettuce leaves and Hoisin sauce $16.80
  • And I thought EVERYONE knew what a lettuce wrap was. Nope! Not the Austrian, so of course, I had to order this “typical” one as well.
  • Ok rip to the off! $16.80? The portion was so small! There were 6 lettuce leaves! They gave just enough stuffing for the 6 leaves, but the plate looked empty when they served it. Was it good? Yes. Was it great? No. Was it worth $16.80? Definitely not.
  • The best ones are still at Kirin Seafood Restaurant.
  • What I did really like was the addition of pine nuts! That was their twist which I really liked. I know they’re expensive, but the price still isn’t justified.
  • Everything was really minced up including the duck meat and I like my stuffing a bit chunkier. I felt like I was eating ground pork which is kind of a waste of duck meat.
  • It’s stir-fried with water chestnuts, green onions, onions, and carrots. It’s savoury from the marinade, nutty from the pine nuts, sweet from the caramelized veggies and the duck.

**Fried Rice Cake with Pork 5.5/6

  • Stir-fried rice cakes with shredded pork, cabbage and pea shoots.
  • I love rice cakes, so I maybe a bit biased. I really like this dish and it’s common in many Shanghai restaurants. I still think they do an excellent job here.
  • The rice cakes are thin and fresh! They’re not the packaged ones or dried ones you see at the grocery store so they're very soft here. These “noodles” or rice noodle patties are made in house. They’re cut nice and thin so they can pick up more sauce. They don’t absorb flavours though because they’re a thicker noodle. It has a creamy texture, but there’s no dairy. They’re smooth and slippery, but chewy and stick to your teeth.
  • I liked the use of pea shoots and not many places will do this. They may not use any greens or if so they will use spinach. The pea shoots made it more “gourmet”.
  • The cabbage is stir-fried and combined with the slices of Chinese mushrooms they both add a sweet and juicy flavour to the savoury dish.
  • The only thing is that it need more sauce and it wasn’t as salty as it should have been. If it were authentic there would have been more sauce because rice cakes need a lot of sauce. I know it looks oily, but that a common characteristic of Shanghainese cuisine.

Dessert

Glutinous Rice Balls with Sesame 5/6

  • Sticky glutinous rice balls filled with hot black sesame filling. I don’t remember the price, but it wouldn’t be more than $8 for 8pc.
  • I’m not a fan of this dessert, but I did try it. For people that like it, it’s 5/6, but for me it’s 2/6.
  • It’s fresh, made upon order, and served hot.
  • The sticky rice balls are nutty and sweet because they're rolled in a coating of ground peanuts, sesame seeds, coconut and light brown sugar. The dough is made out of rice flour and it’s the same as eating a mochi. It’s very thin, chewy, delicate and sticks to your teeth, but doesn’t have much flavour without the crumbled toppings.
  • The sesame filling is made of ground black sesame seeds and sugar so it’s sweet, but not too sweet.
  • The black sesame is smooth but also gritty. It has a really deep nutty thick flavor and it’s almost creamy like a crème anglaise.
  • They’re pretty small, so you can eat them whole like a mini cupcake. I like the outside better than the inside filling.
  • Overall I’m just not a fan of most Chinese desserts though. I’m sure I’m not the only one.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Kirin Restaurant - New Westminster

Restaurant: Kirin Seafood Restaurant

Cuisine: Chinese
Last visited: December 24, 09
Area: Multiple – New Westminster, BC (Starlight Casino)
350 Gifford Street
Price Range: $30-50

1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!

Food: 5
Service: 4
Ambiance: 4
Overall: 5
Additional comments:

  • Multiple locations in Vancouver
  • Since 1987
  • Executive Chef Allen Liu
  • Considered the fine dining of Chinese cuisine in Vancouver
  • Very spacious, grand dining room
  • Extensive menu
  • Famous for fresh local seafood
  • Large selection of seafood
  • Some exotic meats
  • Big portions, dine with 4+
  • Winner of numerous Chinese dining awards
  • Set menus/Group menus available
  • Open for dim sum in the morning
  • Private rooms available
  • Brunch/Lunch/Dinner service
  • Reservations recommended
  • Closes Mon-Sun 2:30-5pm

**Recommendation: Almost any seafood will be good here: Garlic steamed Alaskan King Crab legs, Duck Lettuce Wraps, Pumpkin and fish (I don’t know what the exact name of the dish is called, but they’ll know what you’re talking about), Coconut Tapioca dessert…the menu is too big I could give lots more.


This is the fine-dining Chinese restaurant in Vancouver. It’s a common place for dim sum, dinners for large groups and special occasions. I’ve been here on several occasions, but more often than not it’s for weddings, banquets and special occasions. Like most Asian cuisine the portions are huge so going with 4+ people is ideal. They do offer menus for 2 people, but it’s more or less “White people” dishes and the typical banquet food. Chinese food isn’t catered to individual/couple dining, it’s all about sharing…that’s why we have lazy susan’s and communal chopsticks and serving spoons.


Kirin is famous for it’s fresh and local seafood all prepared in traditional Chinese/Asian methods. It doesn’t matter if you’re going for dim sum or dinner; every location is always busy so I highly recommend reservations. It’s very familiar to locals and the huge Chinese population in Vancouver and the lower mainland. With 5 locations (and growing) in Vancouver, I’d say it’s succeeded in building its reputation for elegant dining and exquisite Chinese cuisine. The seafood is excellent, but they do use too much MSG…probably why it’s so delicious though.


I came here for Christmas Eve dinner and it’s also where I had Christmas Eve dinner last year. I’m only going to review what I ordered from this year’s Christmas Eve dinner to be fair. I don’t have the names of what we ordered so don’t quote me on the names. The dishes are so familiar we never need to really see the menu to order. The menu and prices aren’t online either, the descriptions aren’t great either (typical of Asian restaurants) so I won’t be able to include them.


On the table:

Crab & Fish Maw in Supreme Clear Broth 3/6

  • Crab, fish maw (gas bladder), scallops and egg white cooked in a clear thick soup base
  • $24.80 or $6.80/per person
  • It comes in a huge serving bowl and they serve it at the table. It’s basically a seafood soup and the star is the seafood. It's loaded with crab and fish maw which are both gourmet ingredients. Some places will put shrimp in it, but this actually "cheapens" this dish because the ingredients are far more gourmet than shrimp. The shrimp becomes "cheap seafood". The one at Kirin has no shrimp.
  • It’s a thick base with hearty ingredients. It’s a creamy soup base made with no cream or dairy. It’s silky from the egg whites they stir in and a bit slimy from the fish maw and the combination of egg white and thick soup broth.
  • The fish maw is chewy and a jelly like and it’s a Chinese delicacy. It’s chewy, has slightly crunchy parts and it’s also slimy. If you don’t grow up with it, it will probably freak you out a bit. I like it though.
  • The condiment to eat it with is red vinegar. I add a lot in mine because I love vinegar, but you should only use a teaspoon because you don’t want to overpower the other flavours. The flavour of the soup is really simple, it’s just a light tasting chicken broth flavoured with dried scallops and thickened with cornstarch. It’s just a simple clear salty broth. The crab and fish maw are what make the dish.
  • What I don’t like and began to realize afterward was the MSG they use in the soup. It’s too much. I couldn’t really taste it, but afterward you could definitely feel it in the dry rim in creates around your lips. That was brought to my attention from my friend.

Peking Duck Skin with Crepes 4.5/6

  • Served with Hoisin sauce and green onions.
  • Peking Duck - Two course: Skin witn Crepe and Duck Lettuce Wraps or stir fried shredded duck: $39.80 Half: $24.80
  • This is a really typical special occasion dish, that’s not made at home.
  • The fish itself is excellent, but I prefer when it’s not just duck skin, but also duck meat on the skin. Some places serve the skin with some duck meat on it as well. They don’t do it at Kirin because they intentionally save the duck meat for the duck lettuce wraps which you would usually order with duck crepes.
  • The duck skin is really crispy here. It’s one of the crispiest I’ve had and they remove as much of the fat as possible, so it's not that oily either. I hate that part anyways so I was really pleased with how much they were able to remove. A lot of Chinese people like that part because it’s flavourful, but I hate the jelly texture and flavour fat has. I actually don’t even like skin that much, I’m almost afraid to say that on here…but I’ll eat it in some cases…like this one.
  • The crepes are really fresh, soft, almost fluffy and chewy and served in a bamboo steamer to keep warm. They’re handmade in house and you can tell because they’re imperfect. I actually think they should be perfectly round, especially for a restaurant of this caliber.
  • To eat these you spread a layer of Hoisin sauce to the crepe, add a piece of duck skin, some shredded green onion and a shrimp cracker (which were really fresh too). Then roll it all up and enjoy.
  • It’s sweet from the Hoisin sauce, salty from the duck, a bit spicy from the raw green onion and just overall delicious. The texture is soft from the crepe, crispy from the skin, and crunchy from the onion and shrimp cracker. Everyone likes this dish, it’s almost impossible not too unless you’re vegetarian.

**Minced Duck Lettuce Wraps 6/6

  • Peking Duck - Two course: Skin witn Crepe and Duck Lettuce Wraps or stir fried shredded duck: $39.80 Half: $24.80
  • Marinated pan-fried duck with diced onions, carrots, celery, mushrooms and water chestnuts. Served with fresh iceberg lettuce leaves and Hoisin sauce.
  • This is pretty much the “part 2” dish of the duck. They use the duck skin for the crepes and the duck meat for the lettuce wraps. You can order them separately, but they should be ordered together. I always wonder what they do with the other part if a table only orders 1 of the 2.
  • This is one of the best lettuce wraps I’ve had. Forget about ground meats or shredded beef etc., these are gourmet lettuce wraps. I think the only way it could get better is if they included some dice pan-fried foie gras in the mix. That would be my recipe, but that’s another topic. (Not that I’m a PETA advocate, but I still feel bad for “promoting” foie gras…I try to keep my intake of it to a minimal).
  • The duck is nice and juicy and very lean. It has a lovely flavour to the dish because it’s salty and yet naturally sweet.
  • I love how they included all the aromatics like celery carrots and onions. The water chestnuts were the perfect addition and brought this refreshing and crunchy texture and flavour to the overall dish. It almost brightened things up.
  • I’m assuming everyone know how to eat these, so I’ll just skip m “how to” part.

**Lobster Cream & Butter Sauce 5/6

  • A whole steamed lobster cooked in cream and butter sauce. Market price. (From their in house seafood tanks)
  • When you order a whole crab or lobster at Kirin they’ll bring it out to show you in a plastic container before they cook it…that’s weird…that just mad me really sad to write that out…anyways the point is so the customer gets to “approve” it before it hits the steamer. Therefore for you know exactly what you’re getting – the size of it and the weight of it. They charge by pound or kg and they keep all live seafood in tanks in the restaurant so when I say fresh…it’s really fresh!
  • Lobster and any sauce will be good here. It just depends on what you like. They have I think 8+ sauce options and they’re all great.
  • Cream and butter is a very popular option. The cream sauce is an Asian style cream sauce, not like a Western cream sauce where there’s usually cheese in it too. I find the Asian cream sauce is a lot lighter and perhaps “healthier” because it’s not as rich. It’s more like the texture of a cream soup. It’s still really creamy, but it’s light tasting – lighter than a béchamel or Alfredo for sure. It’s not too salty, a tad sweet and buttery, but not to the point of really greasy. The sauce is heavy, but not as flavourful, which is fine because you want the lobster to be the star of the show.
  • I was not a fan of the noodles. You need to pay extra to have it served on a bed of noodles. They use the flat thin rice flour noodles but I thought they were too soft. They were fresh but because they also cook under the heat of the steamed lobster I found they got overcooked and became mushy.
  • Added note: For King crab legs: steamed garlic sauce is the way to go.

We accidentally started eating it before I got the photo, so it was nicer than this and bit more of it too.


Steamed Pea Shoots 4/6

  • You can order this in a couple variations. We ordered it “sheung tong” which is basically “supreme chicken broth” a special broth they stew in house. You can’t really ruin this dish, unless you overcooked the vegetable or it’s really oily. The one here is very good, but again watch the MSG.
  • I liked the one at Shanghai River better for some reason. The visits to each are quite far apart, but I just remember being more crazy about it at Shanghai River. I need to do a direct comparison between the two. I’ll get them to go next time.

Sautéed Beef Tenderloin & Scallops 5.5/6

  • This was sautéed beef tenderloin with black pepper and basil and your choice of prawns, scallops or squid. It’s served on a bed of freshly chopped lettuce and very lightly sautéed onions.
  • I think they also have a fish option, but our server didn’t advertise it. He actually recommended this dish to us and I’m glad he did because we wouldn’t have ordered it. It reminded me of the pan-fried prawns with basil I rated 6/6 on from Rainflower Restaurant. I think those are better though.
  • Everything was perfect and really good except for the beef which is really disappointing. The beef tenderloin was really tough and not tender at all. The flavour it was marinated in was excellent though.
  • They actually deep fry the beef before sautéing it in the sauce so it has this crispy coating. It tastes just like honey garlic spare ribs. Ideally, I would order this dish with scallops and prawns, but too bad that’s not an option. They would probably still let you do it, but charge extra of course.
  • The scallops were fantastic! They were tender and had a crispy exterior from being quickly deep-fried and then pan-fried to finish cooking. They were honey glazed, slightly tangy, and a bit spicy from the freshly cracked pepper it was lightly coated in. They were so flavourful and aromatic and absorbed the basil and garlic used in the sauce. I ate at least 3 of them and that was at the end of the meal...it was painful, but so worth it.
  • I found it more of an appetizer or hot salad because there wasn’t much sauce and the portion wasn’t that big. The marinade could have been more reduced because it was more of a sauce than a glaze, even though there wasn’t much of it. It could have also used more fresh basil, although it was still flavourful as is. It just could have been slightly better.

Dessert

Chilled Tapioca and Coconut Cream Sweetened Soup 6/6

  • Tapioca pearls served in coconut milk with coconut flakes. Served cold. $3.95/per person. Usually served complimentary if you order one of their set menus.
  • They make the best coconut tapioca 'pudding'. It's not a pudding, but that's a popular name for it. This is one of the few Chinese desserts I actually like.
  • They use real coconut in it along with coconut milk. It’s watered down and sweetened so it’s not thick or really creamy at all. They bring it up a notch by using finely ground dried coconut too. It’s not too sweet, very light with a strong coconut flavour.
  • It’s not a pudding at all; it’s more of a chilled soup, almost like a drink. It’s really refreshing and a perfect way to end a Chinese meal.

Kirin (New West - Starlight Casino) on Urbanspoon