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comfort food

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Phoenix - classic Chinese cuisine

Phoenix has been around since 1965. One of my recent posts (here) about Phoenix in Alhambra was opened in 1997. 

My father immigrated to the States in 1980, and like most Chinese immigrants, a lot of them resided in Chinatown. Makes sense right? My dad lived right across from Phoenix, so you can imagine how often he ate here. There's a server there, that has been working for Phoenix in Chinatown since 1981. That means my dad has been there longer than he has.  

Our whole family would come dine here pretty often for their signature Phoenix boneless chicken. Not knowing much as a child, I didn't know how precious the food actually was. When people ask me, what's a good authentic Chinese cuisine, I would have a blur. Like.. Besides white rice? Because I know we eat that. Without that we would die. But after many food adventures, I always find my most comforting Chinese food memories, besides my parents cooking, but to be kept here.  

It was a late dinner this past weekend, and my brother David and his girlfriend Angela were coming home after a vacation trip to New York. As tired as we were, we couldn't say no to a family dinner at Phoenix. I finished a Taco tasting for Tacos Tu Madre that day, had 3 drinks, then edited and blogged for 4 hours. Yeah I was pretty tired.

I didn't think I was hungry until the menu items were thrown around. Phoenix chicken... Salty Sour pickled cabbage... Fried intestines... I don't need anything to have my palate awake and read to eat.  

At the Phoenix in Chinatown, here is where you will find dishes that are not served at other locations. 

Salty sour cabbage and Beef

This is one of ours, and definitely my dads favorite dish. This may sell out sometimes depending if they have the pickled cabbage or not. The owner of Phoenix still makes the cabbage, in house, himself. The dish is also sweet which marries nicely with the sourness of the cabbage. The portions are also pretty hefty. 

Phoenix Chicken with bone

I grew up eating their boneless chicken, but have come to realization that I love this with bone in so much more. And honestly, I like to pick at the bones for the meat. So much more flavor, and besides, I am a professional at his. Ask people who know me. By the way, this was a half order.

Water Spinach with Malay sauce (excuse the blur)

One of our favorite veggies (I know everything is a "favorite"). As mentioned before, the leaves soaks up so much flavor of the Malay sauce (or any sauce you pick). The stems has a nice snap. I love chewing this with my rice. The rice soaks up the sauce, scoop one big bite, veggie, bite of chicken. Pretty damn perfect. 

Tangerine Fish Fillet  

I love this dish! Only if made correctly. I'm not sure if they make the sauce in house, but assuming they do because it turns out slightly different sometimes. It's a little tangy, and has a nice round of sweet notes from the tangerine. The pineapple and green peppers are a good palate cleanser. And, these aren't as crispy. A lot of Chinese food, is breaded so it can adhere to sauces better. Like a lot of different cultures, this technique is widely used.

Deep fried pork intestines

Squishy interior, crunchy ext. What more can I say? This is, however, an acquired flavor. I'm not expecting everyone to be popping a few of these in their mouths and enjoy the flavor and texture. But if you can get pass what you are eating, you just might, actually fall in love. Hey, eating this is like white rice to me. It's hella normal and it's not disgusting at all. A salad with no meat is disgusting. Sorry. 

Braised Oxtail with dried bean curd

Another specialty you will only find here. A big Cantonese cuisine that was also made in our household. The oxtail is braised for hours in Asian spices like 5 spice and ginger, probably 50 kinds of soy sauce, till its fork tender. Though I think this needed a good 1-2 more hours, it was still very flavorful. And look at all that tail.  

Chili oil  

Ummm yeah this was for me. Always order this with your food. I eat the Jalapeños and everything.  

Family always first (Candid)

Going back to my dad. It's amazing and scary how time flies. I know I'm young, have so much ahead of me, but being here just makes me feel some of the most important memories are passed.  

My dad and the waiter that had been working there for over 30 years, were discussing past workers at Phoenix. Some retired. Some passed away. My dad would think some workers were young, but those memories were long gone as they are 85 now.  

If you are ever in Los Angeles, and want Chinese, Cantonese, food, come here. To this location in downtown. And take a look around. It may seem updated because it had been renovated not too long ago, but there's still a warmth here that you won't find anywhere else. The veteran that has been there for 30+ years is basically, the only history we have left of that place.  

And always, look at their menu board for their specials. It's written in Chinese, but I'm sure you may ask a server to assist you.  

Now go bond with your family and loved ones. Moments like these are not only for the holidays. 

301 Ord St, Los Angeles, CA 90012

daisy  

 

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Elote "Mexican Corn"

Elote is also known as Mexican corn. I grew eating this as a little kid. My brother and I would be playing PlayStation or Counter Strike 1.5 when we hear the bell. Sorry, it's the bell. If you grew up in this era, you would know there is that one moment of silence, to hear that bell ring again to make sure it's the corn man. Now hurry and find a dollar! One dollar can get you a corn on a stick, brushed with some mayonnaise, lime juice, cheese, cayenne and some yellow gooey cheddar cheese which we are skipping today. Though, I'm not sure how much it runs for nowadays... $1.50?! Blasphemy!

For this recipe, I got frozen corn instead, but feel free to use the cob. AND I also made this in a dish, because it's easier to eat and I don't want spicy cayenne pepper spreading around my face. You know how that is...

Elote "Mexican Corn"

Recipe:

  • 3 cups of frozen corn, microwaved till edible.
  • 1/2 lime
  • 1 teaspoon of Kosher salt
  • 1/4 cup of good mayonnaise (or 1/3), it really depends on how creamy you like it.
  • 1/4 teaspoon of cayenne to mix
    • Cotija cheese crumbled on top (I used Cacique)

The recipe is pretty straight forward. I got a plastic zip bag to microwave the corn kernels. Afterwards, by opening the zip a little bit, you are able to dumb out any excess water. I then squeezed in the lime and sprinkled with salt and cayenne. Now, you mix it all together. It might be hard with your hands because the corn is still hot, so I used a spoon.

Next is the mayonnaise. Don't get that olive oil base mayo. I get it. But you want to keep it classic. After it's done mixing, just pour it out onto a dish of your choice. It may be a little watery because of the heat melting the mayonnaise. If you want, you can always pop it in the freezer for about 15 minutes to make the mayonnaise clump up again, but I think its better hot. Crumble your cheese and top off with a dash of cayenne. If you don't use cayenne, and you know you are sensitive to spicy foods, then I would leave it out and just dash a little bit as you are eating this. Just adjust along the way. This is how it is if you get it on the streets. They ask you want on your corn so there isn't really a wrong way to do this if you stick to the right ingredients. Don't blame me for any butt fire incidents though...

I like to eat this with chicken, tortilla chips, tostadas, or just as it. By the way, cotija cheese is a little robust so if you are not a big fan of cheese, I recommend getting the Cacique queso fresco it's like my favorite for all my mexican dishes!

QUICK TIP: If you are using fresh corn on the cob, remove the silks but leave the husk. In the same bag that you loaded your corns in (clear plastic that is in the produce aisle), put your corns back in and just microwave it to cook! No need to boil water. If your husks are a little dry, just moist them a little with water. I normally microwave my corn for 3 minutes (one corn). Now thank me if I changed your life.

You can always serve it for parties like I did below:

party size

enjoy the butt fires!

daiisies

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Chinese Scallion Bun

Do you ever get bored and itch to just make something? I've been craving to steam something for the longest time and decided to make some Chinese Mantou, which is just a steamed flour bun. I hated Mantou growing up. Mainly because they don't taste like much and my parents would normally buy this to be a snack when we were hungry. Sometimes we would even eat this for breakfast... it was a nightmare...!

There are a lot of Chinese Soap Operas that were recreated to be in the Hans Dynasty. Mantou was known to be the foods the dirt poor would eat. Like literally. There would be very depressing scenes where a prince, would turn into a bum, and then look like he's been out in the dessert with dry ass chapped lips, ridiculous crazy hair with ripped up shoes (Chinese film makers over exaggerated, but we all loved it). And for some awkward reason it's POURING rain, and a Mantou, out of the freaking blue falls on the ground and rolls up to his feet. It's all dirty and stuff, but he picks it up, looks at it passionately, starts eating it and crying at the same time. Or there are other series with the same scenario, but a dog eats it before he gets to it, and someone that feels sorry (normally a really pretty princess) would come by and buy a whole basket for him. OR (last one I PROMISE), the bum/prince guy, would see a family with children starving and gives them the bun instead.

You see how complicated it gets?

But honestly, Mantou is one of those food items that you hated, and never appreciated until you are a lot older, and start reflecting on your childhood. Now, I really enjoy it. It's the base of a lot of things and you can eat it in many different ways. The way that you are going to see below is whatever scraps at home you can find. Recipes for this, and for all bread normally, is required to have yeast. Well I don't have any so I skipped it. The results are a denser, heavier dough since it doesn't have the chemistry inside to make it rise. I did the best I can and added a lot of baking powder not really knowing what it does. I-am-NOT-a-BAKER. I had tons of green onions left from the week that I decided to just mix in the dough for flavor.

Mini Mantou

 

Recipe

  • 3 Cups of flour (I did not pack, don't ask me why because I don't know)
  • Maybe 2-3 tablespoons of sugar
  • Big pinch of salt
  • Big dash of baking soda
  • If you have yeast, use it. 1-2 tablespoons (yeast highly recommended if you have it)
  • Mince 3 whole green onions
  • 1.2 Cups of warm water

I sifted the dry ingredients together and then poured in the water. Once it starts binding together, I would add the onions. I drizzled a little canola oil to form clumpy balls. I thin put my buns in the steaming basket with a parchment liner, and let it go for about 25 minutes, but it really depends on the size. If you have yeast, you would need to let it rest an hour or so to let it rise. By all means, this was made for cravings. There will be a honest recipe in the near future.

How am I going to eat this:

One of the reasons why I decided to make this was because I had left over Chinese BBQ from last night (see Chinese BBQ post here) and I was running low on rice. So I'm going to cut these buns open and stuff it with my BBQ. Served with some Chinese Jasmine Green Tea in my Gaiwan and I will be ONE HAPPY CHINESE CAMPER.

Remember, don't be intimidated to cook with what you have. I don't know how many people turned over in their graves... but it still worked out at the end (Not the best replication of this, but you can catch the drift). And who cares about the recipes. Don't let that stop you from making something, because now you know why certain things are to be asked in the ingredients, and why there are certain steps to follow. Going away from the recipe(s) make me understand food a lot better, and it makes me more adventurous to try and create other things.

It's all about Food Within Reach!

Gom Bui!

Daiisies

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Chinese BBQ

Chinese BBQ

I remember in our household, we would have the items above weekly. Everything of course tasted better with an egg. What I loved most about this, and you may not believe it, but it's a penny savor. What makes this meal cost efficient is the rice, a hunka hunk of it! My favorite parts are the duck leg, the fatty sections in the char siu, and the charred parts from the BBQ Sausage. I remember eating a ton of this when I was younger, but not as much when I was on my own. It is something that I've forgotten, but I've found my way back to remembering the best foods from my childhood.

This screams comfort food to a lot of Chinese People! In LA, you can find BBQ chinese meats in San Gabriel Valley and a few in Chinatown. Remember, most places are cash only... or so they say.

If you have left overs, I recommend making fried rice with the char siu and BBQ sausage (or scrambled eggs, MMMMMmmMMMmm!) . I like using the roast duck in noodles.

I can't wait to devour this for dinner. What are you having tonight?

Cheers!

Daiisies

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