Finding Hidden Chinese Food Around USC - L.A. Weekly -- March 30, 2017
Finding Hidden Chinese Food Around USC
I turned to the good people at the Food Talk Central message board to ask where USC's mainland Chinese students went to satisfy their Chinese food needs. The answer has two parts. Initially most of the responses indicated that a lot of the Chinese students at USC live away from campus, in luxury downtown apartments, or perhaps in San Gabriel Valley mansions. That would explain the lack of authentic Chinese restaurant options that are otherwise common in campus communities from Champaign, IL (which has at least 10 authentic Chinese restaurants for the large contingent of overseas Chinese students); Manhattan, KS; Athens (Winterville), GA; Fayetteville, AR and probably hundreds of other university towns across America.
But even if a lot of the Mainland Chinese students left campus at night, they had to eat somewhere during the day. And certainly not all of them lived away from campus. Since today's Mainland Chinese students are much less inclined to widen their culinary horizons than prior generations of foreign students from Hong Kong and Taiwan, where did they get their Mainland food fix? The real answer to the question of where USC's Mainland Chinese students go to get their Chinese food was eventually provided on the Food Talk Central message board by the indubitable food writer Dommy Gonzalez (also known as Dommy!) who lives in the USC area and who explained that what looked like taco trucks parked around Jefferson and McClintock were actually Chinese food trucks that didn't bother to change their names.
Going back on foot to Jefferson and McClintock confirmed that it's all true. All four trucks served Chinese food. The truck that said Tacos Guadelajara when I drove by on the street, said J. C. Foods on the street side and was festooned with Chinese lettering, as were all the trucks. Fluffy Tacos didn't bother giving itself another name and I don't know if G & G Express Foods renamed itself from something else or not.
Each truck had a "menu" in the form of probably 40 to 50 pictures of their dishes that they served, almost exclusively Mainland-style dishes, plastered on the side of the truck. Prices were reasonable, with most dishes under $10, some including combos with rice and soup. I was surprised to see an apparent nod to healthier ingredients here in California, as I ordered ground chicken wonton soup from one truck (can't recall seeing that anywhere) and a popcorn chicken roll (similar to the ubiquitous Shandong beef roll) at another. But most of all, it was great to learn that even at USC there are authentic Chinese food options for the mainland Chinese students at these and other Chinese food trucks in the area.
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