No surprises, just good Chinese food
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DINING OUT
China Moon, a warm and cozy store front restaurant and buffet on
Goldenwest Street and Warner Avenue, offers freshness and
friendliness. The attraction here is simplicity. The buffet has no
menu -- just labels (thank goodness) above each selection of the
double-sided steam buffet.
To one side are two big kettles of soup -- egg flower and sweet
and sour. Try the mild egg flower with a ladle of spicy sweet and
sour to begin with. It’s thick enough to stand a spoon in and warm
enough to untangle your cares.
What you get at the lunch buffet ($5.50, dinner $6.95) is what you
see. Is it good? You bet it is -- a buffet you won’t tire of, fresh
and deeply aromatic.
Crisp lettuce is offered at the beginning of the buffet and you
can also add honey dew melon, orange sections and pineapple cubes.
Strawberries, which are now in season, would be a good addition here,
though.
Then it’s on to the hot buffet. The pinch-topped wontons are crisp
and filled with creamy cheese. The egg rolls are excellent with the
paper-thin pastry wrappers folded around fresh strips of cabbage and
then deep fried until crisp. With the buffet close to the kitchen,
helpers replenish the trays continuously.
Stars of the buffet for me are the orange and lemon battered
chicken dishes, which seduce you with their citrus aroma. Be sure to
try the tasty strips of battered lemon chicken with pieces of lemon
in the sauce to create the lively flavor. There is also an excellent
chicken dish loaded with mushrooms in a dark soy sauce.
Vegetable chow mein is a squiggly mound of bean sprouts, celery
and noodles. There’s also hot kung pao chicken, sweet and sour pork.
In fact, the small buffet offers the usual popular Chinese dishes
spread before you like a palette to combine as you wish -- no trying
to decide what’s best, just sample it all.
China Moon was opened nearly 10 years ago by chef and owner Pak
Chan and manager Ming Ng, who were previously at May Yu Restaurant in
Fountain Valley. This is the kind of neighborhood restaurant that
attracts families, as there are several big round family tables and
booths, while still being the place you’d meet a friend or plot a
business venture.
There are no surprises here, just good Chinese food.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail
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