Family was in Richmond visiting the temple, so we thought to have lunch in the area before leaving! Saw this new place have their "Grand Opening" sign up, so we decided to give it a try, it used to be the location of South Ocean.
Location: 150-4751 Garden City Road, Richmond
Cuisine: Chinese, Seafood, Dim Sum
Price range: $15-$25/person
Date of visit: October 10, 2016
Atmosphere: 4/5
Staff/service: 4.5/5
Food variety: 5/5
Food quality: 2/5
Buck worthy? 1/5
There wasn't a long wait in line for tables although it looked crowded, we were
seated after about
15 minutes of waiting. The inside is quite nicely furnished now, but still the same small space. There is a
$1/person charge, and the
tea quality justifies this surcharge, it was
very nice tea-- fragrant and
light.
I was looking through the menu while we waited, so we could place the order right as we sat down (hungry peeps). First to arrive was the
Halibut with Scallions and Ginger in Premium Soy Sauce ($8.25). The halibut was
cooked perfectly,
juicy and
flakey inside with a
crispy exterior that was
evenly coated with the
soy sauce. Not overly seasoned, I quite enjoyed the piping hot fish. Wish there were more pieces considering the price we paid.
My mom really loves
Rice Roll Wrapped with Donut ($5.25), but this was an
utter disappointment. The
rice roll itself was
mediocre, chewy but not quite "smooth". The
Chinese donut was
hard as a rock and over-fried. Normally it should be crispy on the outside with a bread-like interior. At least they
put the soy sauce on the side.
When I first went for dim sum in Hong Kong, one thing I really enjoyed were their "combo" dishes-- basically dishes with more than one item in it, so you could have dim sum alone AND still have variety. I saw the
Beef Ball, Spare rib, Chicken Feet combo ($4.75) and was sold immediately. Sadly, this wasn't quite up to standard. The
chicken foot was
nice, and the
beef ball was a
good size and
average texture/
taste. The
spareribs were actually
seasoned nicely but more than half of it was tiny bits of meat with
chunks of fat. There was ONE piece with bone in it (I like the ones with bone). So basically this was one
super oily dish.
Annnnd for my Elephant,
Deep Fried Sesame Ball with Seasame paste ($4.75). This wasn't freshly made to order, but was still relatively warm.
Crispy outside but the
dough inside
wasn't chewy enough. The
sesame paste was too
gritty and
sweet that it didn't flow nicely.
Being a lover of anything Tom Yum, I ordered
Beef Omasum in Tom Yum Sauce ($5.50). It was like any other omasum dish, but I like their concept of putting in Tom Yum. I'd say it's a rather personal taste, since I
enjoyed this dish, but my
mom said it was weird.
Didn't settle for regular shrimp dumplings, so we got
Meat Rissoles with Crab ($5.75). Fancy sounding enough (it has this even fancier sounding name in Chinese). Probably the
most disappointing dish of the whole meal, possibly my whole dim sum eating life. The
wrapping was
soft and
soggy,
fell apart when touched,
not chewy at all. The
filling did indeed
contain real crab, but it also
did not hold and so... the
dish just
all fell apart before it reached any bowl. Similar to any good sushi, your dumpling is not meant to break apart before it reaches your bowl, the wrapping should be strong enough to hold it, yet still be soft, smooth, and chewy.
Another combo dish,
Steamed Tri-Buns ($4.75) should contain a
custard bun, a
BBQ pork bun, and
a chicken bun. I say "should" because I
got double of the BBQ pork bun *sadface* I asked a waiter to confirm I wasn't being stupid and not able to differentiate the two remaining buns (custard is round and easily distinguishable from the other two). These were
good, the
custard bun had
flowy filling, as advertised and
tasted pretty legit. The
buns themselves were
good texture and
taste. I just wish I had a taste of that chicken bun now.
Something with a fusion twist to it, since I don't think truffle is commonly in Chinese dishes, the
Pork Shiu-Mai with Truffle ($5.50) arrived. These
looked normal, with some truffle sauce on top. I
did not like the taste of the truffle, it was
slimey and tasted
like concentrated Chinese mushrooms. The shiu mai itself was made with
ground pork and had
good bite to it.
Average size.
Lamb isn't commonly in dim sum, and I'm a sucker for lamb so...
Pan Fried Lamb Pastry with Leeks ($6.25) was ordered. These buns were
not worthy of the price we paid. Pan fried to a
golden exterior with the
bun being
soft and
moist, and the
filling being all
lamb, I
liked the
flavors. However, there were
only three small buns. THREE.
Still hungry, we ordered a
Wonton Noodle Soup ($7.80/bowl) expecting the usual wontons, but were surprised when they showed up more like
pork and chive dumplings with no shrimp. The
meat wasn't very fresh inside the dumplings, the
wrapping was
chewy and
smooth though.
Noodles weren't anything
special, but I
like the added touch of greens.
I saw the
Pan Fried Tofu with Shrimp Paste ($5.25) come out of the kitchen a few times and they were
huge! Must order. The
tofu was a big chunk with shrimp paste on top.
Nicely fried, it was
crispy and I like how they placed the
sauce on the side.
Shrimp paste met the
average standards.
Normally we don't eat a lot, but boy was I surprised when I saw
our bill was $124.74!! Then I looked to see that they had
charged us 55 people's worth of tea-- no wonder! Luckily I caught it, and they changed it.
But still,
paying more than $10/person for dim sum is a rarity for my family, so this was a surprise, but hey, being adventurous means you have to suffer the consequences too! =P Overall, good service, high quality tea, hit or mostly miss dim sum.