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The Mija Chronicles

Mexican food and culture, on both sides of the border

Asian food

Cantonese food at Shun Wang in Elmhurst

July 17, 2013 by Lesley Tellez

Shun Wang restaurant in Elmhurst. Photo by Yelp user PeterK.

Shun Wang restaurant in Elmhurst. Photo by Yelp user Peter K.

Every time I’d walk by Shun Wang, a Chinese restaurant near my house in Queens, my mouth opened a little. Caramel-brown, glistening ducks hung on a hook inside the kitchen, next to what looked like a chunk of pork belly. I’d want to stay and gawk, but usually some surly Chinese dude in a grease-splattered apron was hanging out outside, smoking a cigarette. So I’d look and hurry on, down into the subway, the laundromat, the hardware store.

Shun Wang was always crowded. But what did they serve? It wasn’t clear. Bright construction paper signs in the window showed Chinese characters only. The only other English item was its health sanitation rating, a piece of white paper taped to the window. It was a C.

“You have to try hard to get a C!” my friend said, when I told her about the place. “No really. You have to try HARD.”

I could overlook the sanitation thing. (I lived in Mexico.) The place was almost always crowded, so I went one day with my friend Jeff.

The duck looked beautiful, shining on its oval plate, already cut into pieces. The skin was crackling and crisp, but the meat was a little rubbery. Was this normal? It was also lukewarm. Tried not to think about bacteria multiplying.

The waitress had helpfully suggested a few dishes, since the menu had probably close to 100 items. (Note to self: research Cantonese food before trying the next Cantonese place. I had learned the place was Cantonese from Yelp, by the way, which had two separate listings for the place.) We tried the salt and pepper beef, which had oomph and spice, and gristle. Neither of us could tear into a piece with our chopsticks.

The rest of the food — fried fish, fried tofu, and pea shoots with garlic — was decent and satisfying. We refilled our tea kettle a few times and lingered.

On the way out, I saw a big plate of crullers. Like churros, sort of, but without the ridges. I asked a man smoking outside what they were, and he said they were donuts. I said, “Savory or sweet?” and he looked confused. I said, “How do you eat them?” He looked at us. “Eat?” I said. He cupped one of his hands, and mimicked the motion of dunking the donut in a bowl of soup.

Ahhhh.

Shun Wang opens at 7 a.m., so we are definitely coming back for breakfast. Since my visit, the sanitation grade has changed, too. Now it says “grade pending.”

If you know the best things to order at Cantonese restaurants, please let me know — I’m completely new to this type of cuisine and would love to learn more.

Filed Under: New York City Tagged With: Asian food, NYC, Queens

Homemade barbecue pork buns, rigged for Mexico

August 4, 2010 by Lesley Tellez

Some of my fellow bloggers have opined recently about the lack of good Asian food here in Mexico City. It’s true: if you want good Asian food, with a few exceptions, you’re pretty much going to have to make it yourself.

Alice recently came back from a trip to the States, where she ate homemade barbecue pork buns (known as char siu bao) at her mom’s house every day. She was dying for more, but they’re not easy to find here. So she decided to make her own.

She called me and mentioned she was doing this, so I invited myself over to hang out and take pictures. I don’t know much about buns, but I do know a good photo-and-cooking opportunity when I see one.

…

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Filed Under: Recipes Tagged With: Asian food

Hot pot, tea eggs and other Chinese delicacies in Flushing, Queens

June 25, 2010 by Lesley Tellez

I’m visiting New York this week, and more specifically, Queens, which is the land of fabulous ethnic food. A few days ago, my friend Joy and her friends Dora and Gene took me out for Chinese hot pot. (I’d been begging for anything Asian.) We went to Flushing.

You know how people visit large ethnic neighborhoods, and they can’t believe how many signs are in a different language, and they say, “It’s like little [insert country here]”? I never really identified with those sayings, because obviously the neighborhood wasn’t really like China/Mexico/whatever, it was built in America. No matter what the area has an inherent Americanness, because this is what America is all about — different languages and cultures, mishmashed together with our own.

That said, my mind felt totally blown in Flushing. The closest I’ve come to Asian culture in Mexico was the time I walked those two blocks near Parque Alameda that are lined with Chinese food restaurants. And then there was one time we had Chinese food for Alice’s birthday.

But this…

this….

Wow.

I did feel like I was in China. Like, seriously transported.

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Filed Under: New York City Tagged With: Asian food, NYC

From the Recipe Exchange files: Korean Fried Chicken

August 10, 2009 by Lesley Tellez

Korean Fried Chicken, waiting to be eaten

I’m sorry I don’t have a better picture of the Korean Fried Chicken we whipped up last week. It was so good — crispy, and sticky, and sitting under a warm Mexico City sun just begging to be eaten — that I only managed to snap one photo before digging in. And then licking my fingers. And then wondering: what the heck else can I put this sauce on? (It turns out, it also goes fabulously with grilled hot dogs.)

So yeah. Korean Fried Chicken. Crayton first told me about it last year, gushing when he got back from one of his New York City trips that he’d tried the best chicken ever. I vowed to search for it in Dallas, but promptly forgot about it, obsessing over quinoa and homemade bread and all the other things that fill my brain on a given day.

Then, a few weeks ago, I saw a Korean Fried Chicken recipe on the excellent Viet World Cooking blog. The chicken — thick chunks of thigh meat, fried until crispy, and then mopped with a sweet-and-spicy, sesame seed-studded sauce — sounded heavenly. It was my turn to host our recipe exchange anyway. I hit the Korean markets intending to buy two ingredients: red chile paste and toasted sesame seeds. I ended up buying both and a wee bit more.

So, the girls arrived last Wednesday afternoon and everyone brought something. Julie brought a warm spinach salad with goat cheese and balsamic dressing. Tricia brought a truly sinful brownie pie with Reese’s crumbles on top. Alice brought pickled cucumber and daikon. Daniela brought a fabulous green veggie dip with yogurt and cilantro, which I need to get the recipe for. And there was Rosé. And melty camembert drizzled with honey and topped with almonds. And Korean snacks that tasted strangely like cereal.

I’d already marinated the chicken for a few hours in grated onion and garlic, and so we munched and talked, and eventually created the thick, gluey batter. A few others made the chili sauce, using the paste, ketchup, sugar and lemon juice. (The lemons, a rarity in Mexico City, had been discovered that morning at Mercado San Juan.)

When it came time to fry it all up, Alice manned the pot of hot oil. Daniela oversaw batter-dunking responsibilities. The rest of us watched and ate more Camembert.

Frying up the Korean Fried Chicken

Freshly fried chicken

By the time the chicken was done, Alice and Daniela were sweating, and we’d set up our folding table outside, to eat on the terraza.

When we sat down — a platter of warm chicken in the center, and a big bowl of salad, and each of us with a small glass of Rosé — Alice said: “I feel like we’re on a cooking show!”

And that was really the nicest thing she could have said, because I did too. You know that part at the end of the show where everyone sits down and eats, and laughs and talks? I always feel a teensy bit jealous during that part, because it’s one of life’s pleasures to cook something in your own kitchen and then eat it surrounded by friends. Yet here we were. Each of us contributing, and each of us bringing something valuable to the world in our own way. I felt blessed to know so many smart, cool women.

Our table, right before we dug in

Thankfully, the chicken was pretty darn amazing, too: spicy, with just a hint of sweetness. And covered in a thick, crackly crust.

Recipe below, if you’re interested.
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Filed Under: Recipes Tagged With: Asian food, chicken

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Who is Mija?


Mija is Lesley Téllez, a writer, mom, and culinary entrepreneur in New York City. I lived in Mexico City for four years, which cemented my deep love for Mexican food and culture. I'm currently the owner/operator of the top-rated tourism company Eat Mexico. I also wrote the cookbook Eat Mexico: Recipes from Mexico City's Streets, Markets & Fondas.

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