MARY FURR -- Dining Out
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The red and gold facade of Li’s Chinese Restaurant in Huntington Beach
is as much a distinctive part of Huntington Beach as Mann’s Chinese
Theatre is to Hollywood.
Stepping inside is like entering a miniature Chinese palace with
intricate gold-embossed walls and ceiling, colorful pictures of peacocks
done on silk -- a room that holds a promise of such tempting dishes as
mushu pork and orange peel chicken that owner and chef Kai Chen has
offered for the past 27 years to his faithful diners.
Monday through Saturday has 15 quick lunch specials ($3.85 to $4.75),
but if you’re there for dinner, you might as well go all the way and
select one of the family dinners ($8.95 to $13.95 per person) to really
taste what chef Chen can do.
Our choice -- Chef’s Special Deluxe dinner for two ($12.95 each),
began with fried shrimp, butterflied and covered with a crispy batter and
foil-wrapped tender chicken pieces in a tangy garlic-flavored sauce that
were very good. Rumaki is my favorite -- a toothpick tidbit of chicken
liver and water chestnut wrapped in bacon and quickly fried.
And there’s more -- crispy fried won ton skin with a tiny dab of meat
in the middle, tightly stuffed egg rolls and two cuts of medium-sized
beef ribs. These were not as good as expected-- dry meat was disguised
with a mildly sweet barbecue sauce. There are the traditional dipping
mustard and cocktail sauces and a warm sweet and sour one that is
excellent with the egg rolls.
All of that was on the appetizer plate and was only the beginning.
Next was a Chinese specialty, sizzling rice soup. Our server brought a
large bowl of hot chicken broth filled with snow peas, bamboo shoots,
carrots, shrimp and chicken into which he dropped deep-fried rice squares
that sizzled and popped -- satisfying all the senses.
Sauteed sliced chicken ($7.25 a la carte) and pink, plump shrimp
($9.95 a la carte) was my choice from seven entrees -- a colorful platter
filled with mushroom slices, water chestnuts, snow peas, broccoli flowers
and carrots. The fun of Chinese dinners is sharing the dishes, and there
was plenty here.
Another choice is mushu pork ($7.25 a la carte), preparedtable side. A
pancake-sized won ton skin is spread with pungent dark plum sauce on
which is piled a vegetable and pork mix. It’s then neatly wrapped like a
burrito, ready for you to pick up (the only way) for a great mouthful of
flavor.
A well-flavored rice with bits of chicken, peas and carrots is served
with the chef’s dinner, but with the exception of the sizzling rice soup,
the appetizers, rice and entrees could have been served hotter.
Li’s, owned by Grace and Kai Chen, is a beautiful quiet place, a
respite from a busy noisy world. Chef Chen, who grew up in Japan and
cooked at Shanghai Palace on Balboa Island before buying Li’s, serves
Southern Cantonese cuisine, which he says uses less oil and more steam,
less frying and the freshest ingredients to promote natural, pure flavor.
Li’s is a tradition that families in Huntington Beach have grown up
with, a place for a restful light lunch or extensive family dinner.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments
or suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
FYI
Li’s Chinese Restaurant
WHERE: 8961 Adams Ave., Huntington Beach
PHONE: (714) 968-5050
HOURS: 11:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 11:30 a.m. to
10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 3 to 9:30 p.m. Sunday
MISC.: Full bar, take out. Credit cards.
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