Is Los Angeles Regaining Its Dim Sum Mojo?
Is Los Angeles Regaining Its Dim Sum Mojo? - Menuism Dining Blog, December 4, 2017
A brief history of L.A.'s food scene
Los Angeles came to the Chinese food forefront in the 1990s, surpassing San
Francisco and New York. As the 21st century progressed, Los Angeles
continued to pull further ahead of the competition. Most recently,
L.A.'s advantage has been reinforced by numerous Mainland China-based
restaurant chains choosing to locate their first US branches in Los
Angeles, rather than San Francisco or New York.
In
the 1990s, Cantonese was L.A.'s dominant subcategory of Chinese food,
an the best dim sum was purveyed at area restaurants such as Ocean
Seafood, ABC Seafood, and Ocean Star. The best was yet to come when
Vancouver based Sea Harbour Seafood opened in the San Gabriel Valley
community of Rosemead 15 years ago.
Sea Harbour
was a game changer as the first menu- and check sheet-driven dim sum
palace in the United States. A second Sea Harbour opened in Rowland
Heights, which eventually morphed into today's Happy Harbor. Then
Mission 261 opened (and has since closed), followed by New Concept (now
Elite), Triumphal Palace (now Lunasia) and King Hua. Though San
Francisco's cart-driven Koi Palace continued its reign as the nation's
top dim sum dog, the opening of these-style dim sum restaurants
collectively propelled Los Angeles dim sum far ahead of he rest of the
country, where dim sum continued to be offered only on carts.
Dim sum differences
Los
Angeles continued to dominate most categories of Chinese food in the
United States, but when it came to dim sum, San Francisco snuck back
into the picture to retake the lead. How did this happen even as Los
Angeles was extending its overall Chinese food dominance?
Well,
as I previously wrote, Chinese food continues to evolve and get
better. But innovation and improvement come from new players, as
opposed to existing restaurants which may be lulled into complacency by
their success. The dim sum scene is a perfect example of this principle
in action: Los Angeles dim sum effectively stopped evolving almost ten
years ago. After King Hua's 2008 opening, no new dim sum restaurants
upped the ante. True, there have been new contenders since then,
particularly Shi Hai which opened in Alhambra is 2014 with the expressed
goal of becoming Los Angeles' new #1 in dim sum. But only two years
later, the restaurant rebranded as World Seafood, settle for a lower
quality and price point. Other dim sum menu-driven restaurants have
also opened, including Shanghai #1 Seafood Village, Grand Harbor,
Pleasure Ocean and Capital Seafood, but of the newer arrivals only
Arcadia's China Red has managed to barely break into the top tier of the
local dim sum.
L.A. vs. the Bay
Meanwhile,
restaurant openings in the San Francisco Bay area such as Hong Kong
Lounge, the now unrelated Hong Kong Lounge II, Lai Hong Lounge and most
recently Dragon Beaux, brought menu/check sheet dim sum to Northern
California. More recently with the adoption of cooked-to-order dim sum
by the big dog Koi Palace, these Bay Area dim sum purveyors have added
new and innovative dim sum varieties and propelled the Bay area's best
dim sum past that of Los Angeles and the San Gabriel Valley.
For
example, in the past three years, all of these Bay Area restaurants
have added excellent versions of cirspy baked barbecue pork buns to
their menus. This dish was invented and popularized by Hong Kong
restaurant chain Tim Ho Wan, helping it to earn a coveted Michelin star,
the first ever given to a restaurant in Tim Ho Wan's price range. At
the time, Tim Ho Wan was the cheapest Michelin star restaurant in the
world. In Los Angeles the crispy baked barbeque pork bun has only been
sporadically available in the area's leading dim sum parlors. In fact,
Sea Harbour took it off the menu for a while before recently
reintroducing it.
The Bay Are dim sum
restaurants have also introduced a wide array of outstanding new dim sum
items, such as coffee ribs, red rice noodle crepes, squid ink
dumplings, rainbow xiaolongbao, molten lava cheese tarts, and glutinous
durian rolls, among many others that have not been seen in Los Angeles.
Just five years ago, a listing of the U.S.'s elite dim sum restaurants
would have been made up mostly of Los Angeles area restaurants, but with
these innovations, that list today would be dominated by restaurants
in the San Francisco area.
Still,
in just the last few months, Los Angeles has shown signs of awakening
from its dim sum slumber. In late summer, Xiang Yuan Gourmet opened in
Temple City. With items such as crispy bamboo shoot paste balls,
mushroom filled buns, pork blood jelly with chives and green tea baked
barbeque pork buns, not to mention these whimsically decorated taro buns,
we get to enjoy the type of dim sum innovation missing in Los Angeles
for nearly a decade.
This fall, Longo Seafood opened in Rosemead,
bringing with it more dim sum varieties closer to the new San Francisco
standard. Its selection includes lobster dumplings at $20 an order,
black truffle shumai, shrimp dumplings with foie gras, birds nest tarts
and wagyu beef rice noodle rolls. Of course, Xiang Yuan Gourmet and
Longo Seafood are too new to be crowned as game changers. Who knows if
they can consistently produce high-quality items and whether they will
survive the competitive San Gabriel Valley Chinese restaurant market?
However, it appears that the dim sum wars are starting to heat up again
in Los Angeles, and we diners will hopefully be the real winners.
Comments
Post a Comment