Hours: Daily 11am-9pm
Last Visited: May 24, 2025
Food: 2 to 3 stars
Atmosphere: 3 stars
Service: 2 stars
Price: $$ to $$$
I really wanted to like this place. In fact, I thought it could be my new go to place for beef chow fun. The Jingege side of the house has a San Leandro branch and when I ordered beef chow fun for takeout there, it was easily one of the most wok-hay filled chow fun (that steaming heat that you only get from stir frying in a wok), but I was so incredibly thirsty after, that I have yet to go back there. Sometimes it's a tradeoff - incredible taste, but maybe enough MSG that you get a headache or drink gallons of fluids to quench the MSG thirst, which I know may not be a tradeoff that anyone is willing to take, but at least it's a choice.
I was excited to try this new location which is also coupled with sour pickled vegetable fish dishes (that's the suan cai (sour pickled vegetable) yu (fish) part of the name). To me, it's usually a good sign when the name of a place does not care about the English name, but in this case, it didn't meet my expectations. One side of the menu is for barbecue items, and the other side is for the Szechuan dishes. Unlike typical Chinese barbecue places, you can't order by the pound. All barbecue is ordered as a single dish with a set serving size.
The restaurant has a lot of bright pastels and one wall has life-sized people pictures taking a selfie with their food. It can feel crowded when full and the kitchen noise can be loud.
- Beef Chow Fun - I ordered this dish for takeout and it had decent flavor and was cooked well (nothing burnt which is often the challenge with beef chow fun). Typical ingredients include onions, green onions, and bean sprouts to add some crunch to the chow fun and beef. While the taste was standard, the amount of oil left on the takeout container and my individual serving plate was quite alarming - it was as though I had poured oil on my plate and gently coated it like you would a frying pan. And that I had also coated all of the individual serving plates. While the price is reasonable for the portion, there is no way I can continue to eat something with this much oil. $15.95
So I was thinking that maybe this was a fluke. Maybe the chef used too much oil during my takeout visit. Maybe, just maybe, other dishes would be lighter in the oil content.
- Crispy Tofu - From this photo, you can see that there is again a pool of oil underneath that tofu. The way that tofu is typically fried, the crispiness is from the texture of the firm tofu itself. However, this has been coated with some light batter and while it's seasoned, it's not seasoned all that much. Salt and pepper fried tofu at other restaurants is better with a better taste and texture. And that oil, well, too much oil is never appetizing. This one was below standard for me and I couldn't finish. $9.95
- Yaoyao Suan Cai Yu - Considering this is a signature dish for the other side of the menu, and I've had some wonderful soups of this style at other restaurants, I ordered the sour pickled vegetable fish soup. Unlike other places, there aren't choices of what to include in the soup - everything is already there - fish, sour pickled vegetables, glass noodles/bean thread, lotus root slices, and black fungus. Sesame, fried shallots, green onions, and red peppers top the soup. And the reason the photo is glistening so much - it's the oil. Too much oil once again. While other soups have a little oil drizzled on the top at other restaurants, this has a whole lot of oil that you can even taste the heaviness of it with each spoonful. On top of that, there is a really sour, not so tasty, pepper that is similar in color to a banana pepper. I think this spoiled the soup for me. It's rare that I don't finish a dish or take the dish home with me as leftovers. Between this and the tofu, I abandoned my usual rituals and left significant amounts in the bowl/plate. $38 (large), $21.95 (small)
Barbecue Combination Platter - I had ordered soy sauce chicken (since it's another signature dish) and roast pork. Despite it being just past 5pm on a weekend, they had already run out of roast pork, so I went with barbecue pork. While not traditional in style, if you like your barbecue pork dark, this had a molasses-like quality to the sticky sauce and there was enough fat in the pork that it was quite tender. The soy sauce chicken was flavorful and not dry. Sweet soy beans accompany the meat. Of all the dishes we had this visit, this was by far the best, and I would actually get this one again. There weren't any oil problems. $21
With this visit, I decided that no matter how good a deal it may be to go on your birthday and get a free soup, it's not worth it for me to go back. The barbecue items were easily the best thing, but the oiliness of all of the other dishes deter me from going back.
As for service, you're ordering off an iPad and have to flag people down to get a bowl, water, receipt, etc. When I ordered takeout, the woman at the register took the credit card out of my hand rather than wait for me to hand it to her. This leaves a lot to be desired. I left the food rating between 2 and 3 stars because the beef chow fun, though oily, tastes fine. The barbecue items rescued the rating. If you're going to go, order the barbecue items and it might be worth trying the desserts that they offer, but this is more because of the novelty of these items rather than because I've tried them.
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