Eating like a local:
Regional food specialties
- Chicago's Old School American-Chinese Dining Scene
Soon it will be Christmas Day. For me that's always meant a similar schedule. Wake up, open presents, go to the Southside to hang with my moms side of the family before leaving to head back North to my aunt and uncle's place and hang with my dads side of the family. However last year we switched it up and went out for Chinese. My aunt and uncle took us all to Orange Garden where many people were eating as if just another day. Not all celebrate Christmas, people of Jewish faith for one. The countries American-Chinese restaurants are an ideal place for dinner on December 25th. This is a more recent tradition for the restaurants which started to pop up when the Chinese came to the States during the Gold Rush. They brought recipes with them and because of the fact many of the workers came from the city formerly known as Canton these recipes were made paired with readily available ingredients. With it American-Chinese food was born. These days your hard pressed to pass a town without a Chinese restaurant, they're as prevalent as Dunkin Donuts and BP.
a peak inside a few of Chicago's remaining old school American-Chinese restaurants
In the early 20th century, eating out in a Chinese restaurant in Chicago was considered an experience. Places like the Mandarin Inn, Joy Yen Lo and Hoi Sai Gai were white-tablecloth palaces that attracted some of the city's elite as well as tourists alike. Today these places are dying fast as the youth of those that owned them look to take different career paths as well as stuff like moving to the suburbs to start a family. Some of the spots have moved to the suburbs with the family but many have closed their doors for good. Today we take a look at some of the old school spots that remain.
An original participant in The Taste of Chicago
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Orange Garden
Located on Irving Park in North Center
There's a few different dates for exactly when Orange Garden opened up and one of them is 1926. The original owner needed a way to sell Chinese food to locals and designed the place to look like a diner of its time. Since then aside from a change in ownership and also the prices on the menu, not much here has changed. The outside remains one of the great architectural restaurant designs from another time and the food inside is classic American-Chinese. They have some of the best sesame chicken, make a mean egg roll and also do pork lo mein and Cantonese shrimp really well. If it's fried they tend to make it to the specifications most Americans would approve.
Sesame Chicken Lunch Plate
Orange Garden
1942 W Irving Park Rd
Chicago, IL 60613
(773) 525-7479
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Lee's Chop Suey
On Diversey in Logan Square
The inside of Lee's has the looks and feel of your grandmothers place where nothing has been updated since 1986. As far as I'm concerned this is the way it should be when eating out in an American-Chinese restaurant. According to one account I found online they've been open since 1968. Lee's is a good place to kill your sweet and sour chicken (good) craving with one of their well priced lunch specials served with an egg roll (just ok) and chicken fried rice (kind of dry).
Sweet and Sour Chicken Lunch Special
Lee's Chop Suey
2415 West Diversey Avenue
Chicago, IL 60647
(773) 342-7050
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Shanghai Inn
On Damen in Lincoln Square
Shanghai Inn was founded in 1960. It used to be at 1945 W. Lawrence Ave
before moving to the present location on Damen Ave in 1995. Which is odd
because the inside feels like it hasn't changed since the 70's.
Shanghai Inn is run by a lovely lady named Lisa who seems to know
everyone that stops thru. That's probably because they get alot of
regulars up in there.
a peak inside
I'd always wanted to see what up here but never did until past summer when I decided to put the finishing touches on this report. It's the Gum lo Beef that I always wanted to try, from the description it sounds like the popular Canadian-Chinese eat of ginger beef. Described as "Lightly breaded beef diced with cashew nuts with a touch of sweet ginger sauce." It hits the spot in a way that many Ameri-Chinese dishes do. Sometimes you just want to eat heavy plates of gloppy goodness.
Gum Lo Beef
Shanghai Inn
4723 North Damen Avenue
Chicago, IL 60625
(773) 561-3275
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Tony's Chinese & American
Grand Avenue in Belmont-Central neighborhood
While riding West on Grand one day the inclusion of American in the name of this place caught my eye. Then when I spied
they make their own egg rolls I rolled on into this old school spot
with a very modern interior. I guess they redecorated few years ago but
they've been there since the early 80's. On the wall to your right as
you enter there's a bunch of pictures of the food, which are actually
enticing well shot photographs. Along with those are some old nostalgic
pictures from one of the spots the owner Tony used to cook at in
Chinatown.
The old Chi'Am Restaurant
I'm glad I found this place because they make some solid stuff, I've
been back a couple times since first trying them, but I haven't tried
the egg roll since the first time in. It was awful, the interior layer
was rubbery. Had I not tried their Tiki chicken plate which got me
nostalgic for this place from college I wouldn't of ever gone back. But
I'm glad I did, their fried rice rocks and everything else I've tried
like the mayala chow fun has been better than average. It's a well run machine.
Chicken Tiki over Fried Rice (Available all day off the lunch section)
Tony's Chinese & American Restaurant
6347 W Grand Ave
Chicago, IL 60639
(773) 637-2221
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Young's Chinese Restaurant
Glenview, IL
a peak inside
Classic old school stop in the middle of an area with many options for
this style. Young's has been serving the Northshore for over a half
decade. I decided I had to stop in and try something based on the sign
outside, it's definitely a classic. Inside is a time warp as well and
the Young's Lunch plate Special will get you a soup, egg roll, spare
rib, Cantonese shrimp, crispy wonton and a scoop of pork fried rice for
$6. Nothing special, egg roll included. While it was well sized and
extra crispy with hints of peanut butter the rest of the filling was
average at best, though the house hot mustard was fire and I'll always enjoy a Cantonese fried shrimp in that guilty pleasure sort of way.
Young's Lunch Plate Special
Young's Chinese Restaurant
1744 Waukegan Rd
Glenview, IL 60025
(847) 724-7611
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Green Jade Chinese Restaurant
Elgin, IL
I've only tried
War Sue Gai at a couple spots
in Detroit. It's available all over that region and is also commonly
found around Columbus, Ohio. I've had a couple itches for it over the
last year but only found two places with it listed on the menu. Weird
since we're close enough to both city's and I'm sure there's folks in
the restaurant business who have a connection to either or of the towns.
I was in and out of Elgin a while back so I finally had the chance to
give the Almond Boneless Chicken at Green Jade a try. This place screams
American-Chinese from the dimly lit dining room to the 1970's booths to
the customers and buffet table many of them were eating from. The dish
was damn good if you like to indulge in the guilty pleasure that is
regionalized Americanized Chinese food. Nicely fried breast with the
stir fried veggies and gravy underneath to help keep the crispiness
intact. I'll be back.
Almond Boneless Chicken
Green Jade Restaurant
10 Tyler Creek Plaza
Elgin, IL 60123
(847) 888-8010
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Hong Kong Chop Suey
Mundulein, IL
I was tipped off to this place by a buddy of mine over at
LTHforum. He was throwing praise upon it after a trip he took up there on a tip from his brother. My chance to try them came a couple weeks later when I was headed out that way. As he rec'd the egg rolls were phenomenal. They would of ranked high on the upcoming list had I not chose to feature this locals favorite on its own. Equally as good was their wonton soup which for $2.75 is a steal. Loaded with strips of white meat chicken, bbq pork, mushrooms, water chestnuts, green onion slices and delicate wontons this was a stellar bowl.
Top Notch Egg Rolls and Very Good Wonton Soup
Equally as valuable as far as bang for your buck meals are the lunch specials. I decided to go with a namesake plate of chop suey and opted for the pork. Maybe the most iconic American-Chinese dish this was a common meal for the railroad workers who went to California from China. Take whatever is left, chop it down, season and sautee with some brown gravy on top. This is how they ate.
Pork Chop Suey Lunch Special with fried rice
Hong Kong Chop Suey
316 N Lake St
Mundelein, IL 60060
(847) 949-9019
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Plum Garden
Main Street in McHenry, IL
Plum
Garden is the oldest restaurant in McHenry dating back to 1965. I could
go into detail about the history of this near perfect example of an old
school American-Chinese restaurant or I could link to a video on it
from YouTube.
I'll choose the latter. Considering it's still going
strong in 2014 I'd say it's safe to assume the dream has been achieved. I popped in on a crisp cool Fall day and was greeted by
Perry who was playing the gaming machines off to the side. They do the
heavy loaded luau style cocktails and some local craft beers at the bar
which has a slick old Vegas type of vibe.
The Bar
Chef/Owner
Perry has developed a few of the recipes you'll see on the menu though
most of them are the same ones you'll find at every other small town
Chinese restaurant. I'd heard the fried rice was good and can always
appreciate a well made order of that so I tried their fiesta version
with all the meats and some vegetables included in it.
Fiesta Fried Rice (chicken, steak, shrimp, bbq pork)
Most
of this plate was ate the next day and while it was pretty good I don't
like when the meats are large chunks, preferring it to be diced which
is what the bbq pork was. Should there be a next time I'd just get some
pork fried rice. Reason for the visit was to try their famous "Hong Kong
Chicken" which the menu boasts has been served over a million times.
Chef Perry came up with the recipe in 1972 and today it's one of the
most popular plates of food in McHenry.
Hong Kong Chicken Lunch Plate
Large
breasts of white meat chicken are hand-dipped resulting in a crispy
house batter. The breasts are then sliced and topped with Hong Kong
sauce and served over a crispy bed of bok choy, peapods, and water
chestnuts. It's the epitome of American-Chinese food and to me this
isn't a bad thing. Not all that different than
War Sue Gai aka Almond Boneless Chicken.
It's basically that minus the almonds and when the taste for some
comfort food comes kicking I could understand why someone from around
this way would head over to Plum Garden. They were also voted the best
egg rolls in McHenry County and one comes with each lunch plate but they
must fry them beforehand because the rolls I got were limp and room
temp. I don't think it would of made much of a difference had they been
fresh, while they are handmade the ground meat and vegetable mixture
inside is lacking any peanut butter flavor and the house hot mustard was
1920's orphanage tame. All in all, a cool spot if you're in the area
and from time to time like to indulge in the joys of Gold Rush Chinese
Cuisine.
Inside of the Egg Roll
Plum Garden
3917 Main St
McHenry, IL 60050
(815) 385-1530
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Grand Cafe
Bloomington, IL
While passing thru Central Illinois recently I finally got to try the
oldest restaurant in town. The Grand Cafe has been around since 1921 when
its founding father moved from Chicago's Chinatown down to Bloomington. Today the place is operated by a fourth generation family
member.
a peak inside
I've always wanted to stop in if for anything to get a peak inside and it's what you'd expect from the oldest restaurant in the area. Cool place, the
locals were pouring in as they were just opening for dinner. I was
originally just going to try some egg rolls but the Grand tray caught my
eye and I was with my friend who presented eating power so I dropped the
$10 on it. The egg rolls were the best thing off of it, though
nothing special on this day. Either way, cool place for the nostalgia.
Grand Tray
The Grand Cafe
615 North Main Street
Bloomington, IL 61701
(309) 828-0324
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Tang's China House
Sarnia, Ontario (Since 1969)
Bonus Stop! Oh, Canada. I guess now is as good a time as ever to talk some
Canadian-Chinese without derailing the original topic too much. I love
seeking out the regional American-Chinese treats like a St. Paul
sandwich (STL), War Sue Gai (Detroit + Columbus), and Springfield (MO)
style cashew chicken and of course a peanut butter laced egg roll
amongst others. Anyway in Canada they have many of the same stuff made
in the States plus their own signature dishes found regionally. It's
said that even the most desolate towns that have no McDonalds, Pizza
Pizza's etc have at least one Chinese restaurant. One day I'll try
Calgary style ginger beef but a couple summers back I made it into a famous longtime spot in Canada on my way back into the states.
As we enter
Over the Years
Dining Room
Anyway
I was there for sweet & sour chicken balls, yes I still laugh when I
say that. Aside from the Calgary style fried ginger beef and a few
other regional dishes the main points of Canadian-Chinese are very
similar to American-Chinese, they just do things a little bit
differently as far as presentation. The S&S Chicken balls here were
no different than most American recipes though they were properly fried
thus better than many renditions I've tried. Egg roll was loaded with
peanut butter but I noticed that it was wrapped differently just like it
was at another Canadian-Chinese takeout spot that
I tried near Niagara Falls. A little
google search reveals that most spots in Canada make them as seen below, that's about the only difference in egg rolls north of the border.
Sweet and Sour Chicken Balls Lunch Special with a Canadian Egg Roll
Tang's China House
165 Cromwell St
Sarnia, ON N7T 3X4, Canada
+1 519-336-2200
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Chicago (land) Egg Roll Tour
Back in this blogs beginning days I went on a search for the best egg roll in the Chicagoland area. I found some good ones but never kept up, often forgetting about egg rolls anytime the thought of a quick snack came to mind. It wasn't until recently when a thread on LTHforum titled 'American-Cantonese Egg Rolls' popped up that the urge to find the best one suddenly came back.
RIP
What makes a great egg roll? That's often up for debate as the treat can vary by country, but when it comes to the patriotic American-Chinese egg rolls, there's a few things we know make for a good one. While we all have preferences I think most readers will agree with how I went about scoring each place. The wrapper needs to be near greaseless and crispy. The insides should ideally have crunchy cabbage, pork, shrimp and the secret ingredient of peanut butter giving it a smooth finish. I went ahead and scored them based on this criteria. With the filling being most important it scored on a scale of 1-10 while the exterior and condiments were each scored 1-5. If you offered the standard packet mustard, you scored 3, if you offered housemade you got a 4 or 5. Lets roll.
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Ing's Palace (Bridgeview)
I think I got an off batch from here, while there was a slight detection
of peanut butter the egg rolls were over-fried while still managing to
be limp. On top of that they gave me this generic packet of hot mustard
that I've never seen (every other place uses the same brand) and it was
hideous. All that said this is a really cool old school spot, the type
that's fading fast.
Score:
Wrapper: 2/5
Filling: 6/10
Condiments: 1/5
Total: 9/20
Ing's Palace
8900 Harlem Avenue
Bridgeview, IL 60455
(708) 598-9555
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Golden Chef (Wheeling)
Another classic old school spot. The couple here used to own another
popular Chinatown spot until moving out to da burbs. I guess consistency
can play a key in the scoring of egg rolls because what I got were not
what online reviews had described. While there was a nice amount of
shrimp and some pork too with hints of peanut butter throughout, the
filling was dry and the first and last bites were doughy. Packet mustard
wasn't helping.
Score:
Wrapper: 2/5
Filling: 5/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 10/20
Golden Chef Restaurant
600 S Milwaukee Ave
Wheeling, IL 60090
(847) 537-7100
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Hong Min (Palos Hills)
The cabbage in these had crunch and there was plenty of bbq pork but
something was lacking, at this point I'm used to most places serving
packet mustard so I doubt it was that. Their Chow Fun is pretty damn good
though I prefer it served dry (no gravy) so I'd advise to ask for that with the gravy on the side. If you you really want egg rolls these will do the trick though I wouldn't call them great.
Score:
Wrapper: 3/5
Filling: 6/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 12/20
Hong Min Restaurant
8048 West 111th Street
Palos Hills, IL 60465
(708) 599-8488
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Luo's Peking House (Oak Park)
This was the first place I tried since the OP was made. I was just in
the mood for two and happened to be driving by so I stopped in to see
what was up. Classic old school spot with the fish tank and furniture
from the 70's. The menu states that these are made with peanut butter
but unfortunately they're also made with bird instead of pig. I liked
them but I really had a taste for them so as it turned out better rolls
lay ahead.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 6/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 13/20
Luo's Peking House
113 N Marion St
Oak Park, IL 60301
(708) 386-3055
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Heng Wing (Palatine)
Had to stop when I saw the sign riding by. After pulling into the lot I
checked what people were saying about it online. Lots of mentions for
their egg rolls which was all I needed to read. These guys were medium
sized with shrimp, pork and peanut butter. The cabbage and green onion
mixture was finely chopped and the house hot mustard was thicker than
the norm with extra kick to it.
Score:
Wrapper: 3/5
Filling: 7/10
Condiments: 5/5
Total: 15/20
Heng Wing Restaurant
121 Palatine Rd
Palatine, IL 60067
(847) 358-3061
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Wing Hoe (Chicago)
Never been here until they came up in a search though I've passed it
countless times. I always wanted to do the old school Chinese restaurant
1-2 punch of Wing Hoe in Edgewater followed by taking Lakeshore drive
to House of Bing in the South Shore neighborhood. Both have been there
for a while. Wing Hoe has been tucked away amongst the towers for over
30 years and as you may of seen coming the specialty of the house is the
egg roll. "Our house special! The crispy crust is made with peanut
butter for a delicate nutty flavor. Egg rolls are then filled with
shrimp and cabbage." Not bad but there's better.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 6/10
Condiments: 5/5
Total: 15/20
Wing Hoe
5356 N Sheridan Rd
Chicago, IL 60640
(773) 275-4550
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Gen Hoe (Geneva)
If not feeling like modern Mexican then this old school stop is your
spot for a roll in the pretty little town down on the river. I guess
they have a few locations and as was evidence on the weekend I rolled in
they can get packed, however unlike Bien Trucha they seem to have
unlimited amounts of space. This one had both a crunchy interior and
also exterior with lots of BBQ pork and a couple tiny shrimps inside.
Just packet mustard so I cant call it great but it was pretty good.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 8/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 15/20
Gen Hoe Restaurant
537 East State Street
Geneva, IL 60134
(630) 232-8350
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Palace Cantonese (Morton Grove)
I;d wanted to further the explore the menu at this classic looking spot but never got around to it before this report was due to go up. Next year, in the meantime they make a formidable egg roll. Not quite great these still hot the spot with a crunchy exterior though there were little shrimp, mostly pork. Tastes of peanut butter were traced inside.
Score:
Wrapper: 5/5
Filling: 7/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 15/20
Palace Cantonese Restaurant
9236 Waukegan Road
Morton Grove, IL 60053
(847) 966-2231
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House of Wah Sun (Chicago)
I've passed this place countless times and my time to try it came with this round-up. The friendly lady working takeout asked how I knew they used peanut butter when I asked if it was inside. With it were well ground pork, shrimp and cabbage and while the rolls were smaller in size than most they still hot the spot, extra props for house hot mustard.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 7/10
Condiments: 4/5
Total: 15/20
House of Wah Sun
4319 North Lincoln Avenue
Chicago, IL 60618
(773) 477-0800
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Golden Sea Chop Suey (Aurora)
I decided to try this place tucked in on Ogden. From the feel of the
inside they've been there for a while and their egg roll is probably
part of the reason why. This was described as having pork, shrimp and
peanut butter and each of them were present. Even with a high cabbage to
meat ratio and hot mustard packets this was one of the better ones I've
had to date. Must be the peanut butter.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 8/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 15/20
Golden Sea Chop Suey
2908 Ogden Avenue
Aurora, IL 60504
(630) 851-7997
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Ma's Chinese (Elk Grove)
Another stripmall stop. Lots of mentions for their egg rolls over on
Yelp which doesn't mean they're good but could at least be a clue. These
were as big as they're cracked up to be. One of these was like two from
the above spot. While I didn't taste nor find much peanut butter
inside, the filling was loaded with shrimp and pork and managed to stay
extra crunchy as opposed to mushy which can sometimes can be the case.
These were pretty damn good, only thing missing was house hot mustard.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 8/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 15/20
Ma's Oriental Express
1141 E Nerge Rd
Elk Grove Village, IL 60007
(847) 301-1988
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Moy Lee (Chicago)
Randomly drove by here and decided to try it before remembering that
they were part of the original round-up. I pretty much agree with
everything said as far as it having the most meat in an egg roll I've
ever come across, BBQ pork too I believe as mine had the red colored
meat with lots of chopped scallions inside. One was perfectly fried
while the other was a tad soft and I didn't detect much peanut butter
either yet thoroughly enjoyed them.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 9/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 16/20
Moy Lee Chinese
5346 N Milwaukee Ave
Chicago, IL 60630
(773) 631-1290
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Mee Mah (Chicago)
Another rec off LTH. I always suspected this place of having something good due to their old school looks. Turns out that item to order is the egg roll. Like in so many other old school spots they have a long picture of all the generations of family members associated with the place. The egg roll was near flawless aside from the fact they gave packet hot mustard with to-go orders. So close.
Score:
Wrapper: 5/5
Filling: 8/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 16/20
Mee Mah
4032 West Peterson Avenue
Chicago, IL 60646
(773) 539-2277
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Kow Kow (Lincolnwood)
This place has been a mainstay for people out this way for a few generations now. Originally this was the place that made me want to go on an egg roll crawl again. It happened when my buddie Rob posted his little round-up on LTH. These scored the highest on his card and the batter dipped shell is a big part of the reason why, inside is chopped cabbage paired with pork, shrimp and peanut butter.
Score:
Wrapper: 5/5
Filling: 9/10
Condiments: 3/5
Total: 17/20
Kow Kow Restaurant
6755 North Cicero Avenue
Lincolnwood, IL 60712
(847) 677-7717
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New Star (Elmwood Park)
If not for this story I would never know where to find this one
because never would I have stopped hear with Johnnie's so near. In fact
as soon as I got out the car to go in I got a whiff of the char grilled
sausage in the air and almost walked towards there before fighting off
the urge and continuing on with the quest. Turns out I might have a new
1-2 punch in my rotation. These were fantastic, creamy and perfectly
balanced with house mustard that delivered sinus clearing heat. I'll be
back.
Score:
Wrapper: 4/5
Filling: 9/10
Condiments: 5/5
Total: 18/20
New Star Restaurant
7444 W North Ave
Elmwood Park, IL 60707
(708) 453-8242
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