There is more to Chengdu than hotpot restaurants, though one can be forgiven for that impression given how many hotpot places there are in the city. It was very hot and humid when we were visiting, after 2 days of sightseeing we decided to just enjoy our fancy hotel and its nearby amenities. Fortunately we were within walking distance of an excellent local restaurant.
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Inside, it's air-conditioned and comfortable, with booth and table seatings, bright and welcoming, with an open kitchen. The menu is quite concise, showcasing about 20 dishes, I guess they have refined their offerings to just their greatest hits and have hit the sweet spot in churning them out to meet the hordes of hungry diners. A perfect model for franchising or expanding, anyone interested?
Most tables ordered pretty much the same dishes. As with many local eating places, there is a good mix of robustly flavoured dishes sprinkled with some sweet items to provide respite and constrasts. I loved the cold jelly with brown sugar syrup, it's like our cendol or ice kacang that we have with our nasi lemak whenever we eat at Madam Kwan's, so much so that I ordered it again at our next visit. Yea, there was a second visit, because husband loved the place so much.
Here we found food that is not greasy and heavy, yet very satisfying and local. Husband really liked the Saliva Chicken, it was not quite in the style we had been used to, being a bit on the dry side instead of sloshing about in an appetising special soy sauce, and very fiery. The double-cooked pork, or Hui Guo Rou, was deemed excellent too, though I have to admit that all the versions I tasted in Chengdu were great, what with their delicious bean pastes and sweet, tender leeks that complements the pork belly so well.
I loved the steamed glutinous rice with local smoky lardon, it was melting-soft and had a little filling of sweet red beans just underneath the lardon. Just poking at the top of the rice made the lardon disintegrate and melt into the sweet rice, the richness alleviated somewhat with the osmanthus syrup glaze. An unassuming but delightful dish, little wonder that it was found on every table. Another sweet wonder was a flat bao filled with brown sugar syrup, the filling half-molten yet still a bit chunky, the sugar deliciously smoky and nutty with a subtle bitter finish.
The standout dish though, had to be the braised duck-blood jelly, the menu says it's their signature. Duck-blood jelly is made by dripping duck blood into water to coagulate. It is not available in Singapore. Prior to Chengdu, I've never had it before, just that I know of fans who mention it with awe and longing. The texture is dreamy, a cross between jello and silky tofu, and the taste is surprisingly mild, and not in the least bloody or ferric. It's just like soft tofu, taking on the and complementing the flavours of what it is cooked with. In this case, we have roughly cut chunks of wobbly soft jelly in a complex spicy-tart soupy sauce. Delicious on its own, but when spooned over steamed rice and showered with crispy fried lard, it is plain amazing. If this is available in Singapore, it will be accompanied with dire health warnings. As husband is not into innards or spare parts, I had the whole portion to myself, it took every ounce of my self-control to eat no more than half. Gosh, now I wish I had been more reckless.
We were back the very next day. It was another stunning meal. Roast duck with a sweet lacquered skin, lovely. Beef with radish in a chilli-spiked broth, fantastic! It was comforting yet surprisingly incendiary, I was literally fanning my tongue. Fortunately I could cool down with that marvelous jelly on the side. (The minced meat fritter thing was quite weird though, we left them at first bite.)
What we were amazed with, was the Gong Bao style aubergines with fresh prawns. It came with a little timer, and we were told that the first 3 minutes was the optimum window of time to eat it. The greenish chunks which I had at first thought were bittergourd, turned out to be aubergines. Aubergines with a crisp coating and interiors as yielding as goreng pisang (fried bananas), coated lightly with a gong bao sauce that is familiarly sweet and spicy, but finishing with a very pleasant tingling sensation on the tongue and palate from the judicious use of Sichuan peppercorn. That fresh pepper hit made all the difference, making it the most terrific gong bao anything we have ever tried. We had to fight (nicely) for the last bite, it was that good.
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Ma Wang Zi
No.1 East Kangshi Street, Dacisi, Chengdu, China
T: 028-64231923
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