ReportWire

Tag: chinese food

  • Kings Co Imperial serves Chinese cuisine with Brooklyn twist

    WILLIAMSBURG, Brooklyn — Good vibes meet Chinese cuisine at Kings Co Imperial, a restaurant and bar serving Chinese dishes in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. They also have a location on the Lower East Side of Manhattan.

    Josh Grinker is the chef and co-owner of Kings Co Imperial. Grinker says he and his business partner, Tracy Jane Young, wanted to utilize their culinary experiences and training in a new business venture.

    “At a certain point we just decided, you know what, we want to take the training we have in Asian cooking, and wok cooking specifically, and put it to use,” Grinker said.

    Young described the moment Grinker gave her a call about going into business together.

    “Josh worked in New York, and he called me and he said, ‘I’d like to open a restaurant. Do you want to come open a restaurant with me?’ I said no, I definitely don’t want to open a restaurant. And by the way, what kind of food? He’s like, Chinese. I’m like, you’re crazy. You’re going to go open a Chinese restaurant in New York City? I was like, good luck,” Young said.

    “So here I am, 15 years later, and really proud and very happy with what we’ve done.”

    While Grinker admits he is not a classically trained Chinese chef, he says he has a lot of enthusiasm about the food cuisine and is excited by the learning process. Young says they try to offer as authentic of an experience as possible at Kings Co Imperial.

    “I think what we really tried to do in the beginning was offer authentic or, as authentic as we could cook it, Chinese cuisine. We wanted good music and good service and good cocktails, but we wanted to marry that,” Young said.

    The co-owners say they started in a relatively small space before expanding. Now Kings Co Imperial includes a backyard with outdoor dining, a small private dining room in the center of the restaurant, and a bigger room they called the “Imperial Room.”

    Some of the signature dishes you can find at Kings Co Imperial include kung pao chicken, a stir-fried dish with chicken, vegetables and peanuts.

    One thing that makes Kings Co Imperial unique is that they don’t use any canned vegetables. In fact, they have a garden in the back where they grow a lot of produce they use in their dishes.

    Another dish customers can order is the dry-fried long beans.

    “So, dry frying is a technique where there’s no sauce,” Grinker said. “We use preserved kohlrabi root, fermented black soybeans, a little bit of ground pork for flavoring, for seasoning.”

    Customers can also enjoy eating xiao long bao, or pork soup dumplings.

    In the end, the co-owners say they hope to continue serving customers with amazing vibes and hospitality.

    “I think, you know, showing up and being consistent and creating an environment where people can come and be happy and experience and hopefully, you know, feel good when they leave, maybe even better than when they came. I think that really keeps us going,” Young said.

    Grinker agreed.

    “You know, we’re a mom-and-pop operation, so we’re not a big conglomerate or something. So, it’s really boots on the ground to make sure that the quality is there every day,” Grinker said.

    CCG

    Source link

  • Genghis Cohen Relaunches Dine-In at New Fairfax Location

    The NYC-style Chinese restaurant takes over the former Sweet Chick space 

    Credit: Lucky Tennyson

    After 42 years of service at 740 N Fairfax Ave., Genghis Cohen held its final service on May 31.  

    “After doing our best to secure a long-term lease at a reasonable rate, the property is being redeveloped,” owners Marc Rose and Med Abrous explained in an April Instagram post upon initial announcement of the move. “Even with all of these challenges, we are prepared to surmount them with your support and are more energized than ever on keeping the Genghis Cohen legacy alive for generations to come.”  

    Genghis Cohen new Fairfax location September 2025Credit: Lucky Tennyson

    Since then, the New York City-style Chinese restaurant has supplied eaters with takeout and delivery. All that will change on Sept. 25 when it reopens in a new, temporary space on Sept 25.  

    A half mile from the original location, Genghis Cohen 2.0 brings with it its core components — cozy red booths, silk dragon lanterns and favorite menu items like New York Egg Rolls, Crackerjack Shrimp and Foo Foo drinks — with an added dash of refined flair. Owners Rose and Abrous (Dolce Vita, The Spare Room) tapped friends in the design community for a refresh, adding red carpet, teal accents and plenty of neon to the restaurant. 

    Genghis Cohen new Fairfax location September 2025Credit: Lucky Tennyson

    A fish tank looks over the larger 12-seat bar, complemented by new cocktails: a frozen Dole Whip-inspired concoction and the Oolong Island Iced Tea. For new eats, try the Shrimp & Chive Dumplings, spicy glazed chicken (Volcano Chicken) served tableside and the bar-only Szechuan chicken sliders. 

    Genghis Cohen new Fairfax location September 2025
    Volcano Chicken
    Credit: Lucky Tennyson

    The new space does not have a music venue like the original spot, but there will still be a live music component. Partnering with neighbor Canter’s Deli, Genghis Cohen will host “Genghis Cohen” live at the Kibitz Room on Wednesdays and Thursdays, presenting acts that span from shoegaze and punk bands to comedy acts.  

    Genghis Cohen new Fairfax location September 2025Credit: Lucky Tennyson

    Reservations are now open. 

    Haley Bosselman

    Source link

  • The 10 best Chinese restaurants in metro Phoenix

    The 10 best Chinese restaurants in metro Phoenix

    While we do have Mesa’s dedicated Asian District, sadly we don’t have a designated Chinatown in this city. However, that doesn’t mean you can’t find delicious Chinese food in Phoenix…

    New Times Staff

    Source link

  • Chef Brandon Jew Is Redefining Asian Tradition In The Most Delicious Way

    Chef Brandon Jew Is Redefining Asian Tradition In The Most Delicious Way

    On a surface level, Mister Jiu’s in San Francisco has everything you’d expect of a Michelin-starred restaurant: elaborate plating, an immaculately curated Instagram presence and a revolving tasting menu. At the helm of the kitchen and its vibes is executive chef Brandon Jew, who, like many of his peers, is navigating culinary expression through his blended, Asian American identity. Specifically, he wants to rejigger the space that contemporary Chinese cuisine occupies in the American food zeitgeist.

    The menu at Mr. Jiu’s (a reflection of Jew’s overall cooking ethos, it seems) is both innovative and reverent of San Francisco’s old Chinatown, bejeweled with slightly remixed Cantonese-style dishes meant for sharing, as well as a tasting section that leans a bit more adventurous. He never strays too far from home, though — his choices feel cohesive and cozy.

    For those in the East Asian diaspora, sharing a meal is quintessential to forming and nurturing bonds. Food is sometimes a unique type of love language that rescues us from having to be unnecessarily sentimental, even borderline uncomfortable. The word “love” in Mandarin, for example, carries a lot of weight — and for many of us, asking someone if they’ve eaten yet is an easier way to express it.

    Jew is at the helm of Mister Jiu’s kitchen and its vibes.

    There’s love in community, too, which has become crucial during the uptick in anti-Asian rhetoric and racist crime. This need to band together and seek comfort in the familiar was the impetus for Jew’s most recent event, a Chinese banquet-style dinner for artists and other prominent community members in the Bay Area. It’s his hope that through the gathering, which he called the Golden Generation dinner, the larger AAPI community and its allies can foster support and strategy to combat anti-Asian violence.

    A little context for why simply coming together in this way can be a radical act of resistance: Too often and for a number of reasons, many Asian Americans have avoided getting deeply involved in U.S. sociopolitics. It’s a broad assessment, but it’s linked to the fact that many immigrant families have been too focused on adapting and assimilating into American life to worry about high-level politics. Many Asian immigrant elders believe that keeping a low profile and taking up less space will ensure easier survival. Another harsh reality is that most American politicians and cultural activists have simply ignored Asian communities until fairly recently, even in places like the Bay Area, which is full of people of Asian descent.

    For those in the Asian diaspora, sharing a meal is quintessential to forming and nurturing bonds.
    For those in the Asian diaspora, sharing a meal is quintessential to forming and nurturing bonds.

    And so, coming together to eat, talk and celebrate is the joyful form of advocacy that Jew has been craving. Some of the esteemed guests in attendance at the Golden Generation dinner included contemporary artist So Youn Lee, “Beef” actor Young Mazino, and journalists Mariecar Mendoza, Tim Chan and Dion Lim.

    Anti-Asian violence reached a peak nearly three years ago, during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. But Asian Americans are still vulnerable to racially charged hate crimes, especially in San Francisco.

    “The violence that was happening within our communities in the Bay Area was upsetting and disheartening, but it also brought us together,” Jew says. “We want to continue using that momentum we’ve created in our communities, and continue to have forums where we come together, celebrate each other and have a place to check in with each other and strengthen our connections.” Through this demonstration of organized community building, Golden Generation itself becomes political — a sign that silence and isolation are things of the past.

    For people in the AAPI community, simply coming together is a radical act of resistance.
    For people in the AAPI community, simply coming together is a radical act of resistance.

    This shift brings an intentionality to Jew’s style of cooking and organizing, but he has always hoped his culinary pursuits can fundamentally change how Chinese food is perceived. His career took him from his training in Italy to working in Shanghai, and then in 2008 to San Francisco, where he initially experienced some pushback to this type of reimagining of Chinese fare, even in one of the most Asian and progressive regions of the country. “I was determined to open a Chinese restaurant, but it was tough at the time,” he says. “People did not understand what I was trying to do.”

    Jew’s story sounds painfully similar to the initial reaction that San Francisco residents had toward Chinese restaurateurs in the mid-1800s, when Chinese people were still seen as shady undesirables in America. And even though this experience happened literal centuries ago — and under entirely different circumstances — it goes to show that America is not the infinitely compassionate melting pot we were promised. It’s probably for the best: We shouldn’t have to “melt” into anything to thrive together.

    Chinese food continues to play an integral role in bridging the gaps between AAPI communities, and there’s more work of all types to be done. It just so happens that in some spaces, that work is warming, satisfying and ripe with unspoken affection.

    Source link

  • MSG Is Finally Getting Its Revenge

    MSG Is Finally Getting Its Revenge

    Updated at 1:45 p.m. ET on May 17, 2023

    In March, the World Health Organization issued a dire warning that was also completely obvious: Nearly everyone on the planet consumes too much salt. And not just a sprinkle too much; on average, people consume more than double what is advisable every single day, raising the risk of common diseases such as heart attack and stroke. If governments intervene in such profligate salt intake, the WHO urged, they could save the lives of 7 million people by 2030.

    Such warnings about salt are so ubiquitous that they are easy to tune out. In the United States, salt intake has been a public-health issue for more than half a century; since then, the initiatives launched to combat it have been deemed by health officials as “too numerous to describe,” but little has changed in terms of policy or appetite. The main reason salt has remained a problem is that it’s a major part of all processed food—and, well, it makes everything delicious. Persuading Americans to reduce their consumption would require a convincing dupe—something that would cut down on unhealthy sodium without making food any less tasty.

    No perfect dupe exists. But the next best thing could be … MSG. Seriously. Last month, the FDA proposed reducing sodium in certain foods using salt substitutes. One candidate that has research behind it is monosodium glutamate, the white crystalline powder that has long been maligned in the West as an unhealthy food additive. A common seasoning in some Asian cuisines, MSG was linked in the late 1960s to ailments—headaches, numbness, dizziness, heart palpitations—that became known as Chinese Restaurant Syndrome. The health concerns around MSG have since been debunked, and the FDA considers it safe to eat. But it still has a bad rap: Many products are still proudly advertised as MSG free. Now the chemical may soon get its revenge. Given the chance to replace salt in some of our food, it could eventually come to represent something wholesome—perhaps even something close to healthy.

    The concerns with MSG originated in 1968, when a Chinese American physician, writing in The New England Journal of Medicine, described feeling generally ill after eating Chinese food, which he suggested could be because of MSG. Other researchers quickly produced studies that seemed to substantiate this claim, and MSG became a public-health villain. In the ’70s, the Chicago Tribune ran the headline “Chinese Food Make You Crazy? MSG Is No. 1 Suspect.” All the attention “renewed medical legitimacy [for] a number of long-held assumptions about the strangely ‘exotic’, ‘bizarre’ and ‘excessive’ practices associated with Chinese culture,” the historian Ian Mosby wrote in 2009. That’s not to say that all symptoms associated with MSG are bunk; people can be sensitive to MSG—like any food—and may experience broad symptoms such as headaches after eating it, Amanda Li, a dietary nutritionist at the University of Washington, told me. But “research has shown no clear evidence linking MSG consumption to any serious potential adverse reactions,” she said.

    On the whole, MSG does seem better than salt itself, considering that excessive salt consumption poses so many chronic health risks. A relatively small amount of MSG could be used to rescue flavor in reduced-salt products without endangering health. This is possible partly because of MSG’s molecular makeup. It satisfies the need for salt to a certain extent because it contains sodium (it’s right there in the name, after all)—but just a third of the amount, by weight, that salt does. The rest of the molecule is made of the amino acid L-glutamate, which registers as the savory, “brothy” flavor known as umami.

    MSG isn’t a one-to-one replacement for salt, but that’s what makes it such a promising alternative. It is a general flavor enhancer, meaning that it can amplify the perception of salt and other flavors that are already in a dish, as well as add an umami element, Soo-Yeun Lee, a sensory scientist and the director of Washington State University’s School of Food Science, told me. One secret to this effect is that unlike salt, which imparts a blast of flavor and then quickly dissipates, MSG stays on the tongue long after food is swallowed, producing a lasting savory sensation, Lee said.  It may amplify saltiness by increasing salivation, letting sodium molecules wash over the tongue more freely, Aubrey Dunteman, a food scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, told me.

    All of this gives MSG the potential to play into a salt-reduction strategy. A 2019 study in the journal Nutrients found that substituting MSG (or other similar but more obscure chemicals) for some of the salt in certain foods could have major impacts: Adults who eat cured meats could cut 40 percent of their intake; cheese eaters, 45 percent. Another study from researchers in Japan found that incorporating MSG and other umami substances into common Japanese condiments, such as soy sauce, seasoning salt, and miso paste, could cut salt intake by up to 22.3 percent. Doing the same in curry-chicken and chili-chicken soups, Malaysian scientists found, could be used to reduce the recipes’ salt content by 32.5 percent.

    Take those findings with a grain of, uh, MSG. Recent studies have uniformly found that MSG is a safe, promising salt replacement, but many, including both the Nutrients study and the Japanese one, were funded at least in part by Ajinomoto Co.—the company that introduced the first commercial form of the substance—or the International Glutamate Technical Committee, a trade group. Lee and Dunteman have also received funding from Ajinomoto for some of their MSG work, including a study showing that the substance could improve the flavor of reduced-sodium bread. Lee said she aimed to show that MSG substitution for salt is “feasible, so if any food companies want to take that up and try it on their own systems,” they have a basis for doing so. Her goal, she added, “is not to sell bread with MSG.” (The paper, along with the two others mentioned that received industry funding, were independently peer-reviewed.)

    Clearly, more independent research is needed, but food companies have plenty of incentive to help find a better alternative to salt. More than 70 percent of Americans’ salt consumption comes from processed and manufactured food, and if the FDA decides to crack down on salt intake, its policies will largely target the food industry, Lee said. Already, some manufacturers of canned soup and fish are experimenting with salt substitutes.

    Deploying MSG in a sweeping sodium-reduction campaign would not be straightforward. MSG is more expensive than salt, Dunteman noted. More crucially, in many foods, salt provides more than flavor; it can also act as a preservative and regulate texture by, say, adding juiciness to lean meat or stabilizing leavened dough. In their study on bread, Lee and Dunteman found that removing too much salt reduced chewiness and firmness, even when MSG made up for taste. Among common processed foods, bread is a prime target for future MSG research, because it is the biggest contributor to U.S. sodium intake—not only because of its salt content but also because of the sheer amount of it that Americans consume. When MSG is used instead of salt to enhance flavor, “foods can taste just as delicious but without affecting hypertension,” Katherine Burt, a professor of health promotion and nutrition sciences at Lehman College, whose writing on MSG was not industry funded, told me. It’s “a great way to make foods exciting and healthy.”

    MSG can also be used to deliberately reduce salt intake at home. Adding a new ingredient to a home pantry can be daunting, but consider that MSG is already in most kitchens, occurring naturally in umami-rich items such as Parmesan cheese and mushrooms and added to processed foods such as Campbell’s Soup and Doritos. These days, it’s easy enough to find it online or in stores, sold in shakers or packets, much like salt. Li recommends that the MSG-curious start seasoning their food with a 50–50 mixture of MSG and table salt. When eating processed foods, choose low-sodium versions of products (not “reduced sodium” goods, which may not actually have low levels of salt). They’ll likely taste terrible, so add MSG in increments until they taste good, Lee said.

    We still have much to learn about MSG as a salt substitute, but the biggest challenge to it taking off is cultural, not scientific. To a certain degree, tastes are changing: Celebrity chefs such as David Chang champion it, and one highly acclaimed New York restaurant now serves an MSG martini. But the perception that MSG is unhealthy still persists, despite evidence to the contrary. Words such as “sneaky,” “disguised,” and “nasty” are still used to describe it, and grocery stores such as Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s make a point of mentioning that their foods have no MSG. Nevertheless, as long as old misconceptions about MSG persist, they will continue to hamper the potential for a better salt substitute. America’s aversion toward MSG may be intended to promote better health, but at this point, it might just be doing precisely the opposite.


    This story originally stated that the New England Journal of Medicine letter about MSG was a hoax. This was once believed but has since been disproved.

    Yasmin Tayag

    Source link