2015中國食肆大獎落幕 – Taiyangbao.ca

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Ever wonder what the best Chinese Restaurants in Vancouver
are? The Chinese Restaurant Awards kicked off their annual survey last
month in celebration of Chinese New Year. 19,612 votes later, they’ve
proudly revealed the best Chinese Restaurants in a thriving culinary
industry.

 

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BY

The Chinese Restaurant Awards
folks just released their 2015 Diners’ Choice Awards! 33,759 diners’
votes went in to crowning the 21 Metro Vancouver spots below, which you
might want to make a point of checking out if you haven’t already.

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Chef and owner of Golden Paramount Seafood Restaurant May Chau
appears fairly shy and unassuming for a dim sum chef superstar, but make
no mistake — she’s a wizard at making dumplings. Just last year Chau
won Silver for Best Dim Sum in the Vancouver Magazine’s 2014 Restaurant Awards.

Her intensive training began at age 12 when she started apprenticing
at a top dim sum restaurant in Hong Kong. Since then, she’s been honing
her skills, eventually opening Golden Paramount in Richmond in 2007
(located at 8071 Park Road).

Chau eschews showy fusion cooking and instead concentrates on
transforming traditional dishes into revelatory eating experiences. “My
dim sum is focused more on delicacy, craftsmanship, and ingredients,”
she explains during a chat at the restaurant.

A prime illustration of her dim sum philosophy is her steamed dumpling
with pork and crab meat, which was a Critic’s Choice Signature Dish for
the 2013 Chinese Restaurant Awards. They really are a work of art, with
the dumpling’s wheat starch wrappers so thin that they are almost
transparent. The interior of minced Chinese mushrooms, bamboo shoots,
pork, crab meat, shrimp and cilantro has a fine texture from meticulous
knife work.

 

 

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By Karan Smith

 

Vancouver’s Chinatown has the history, but the suburb of Richmond is
where you need to go. “Chinese food here is absolutely fantastic –
genuinely some of the best you’ll get anywhere in the world,” says Lee
Man, a local food writer and judge of the Chinese Restaurant Awards (chineserestaurantawards.com)
who has lived in Shanghai and Hong Kong. “The competition is crazy. And
Asian culture involves going out to eat. It’s rare that you would
invite someone to your house and cook a Chinese meal. My mom has dim sum
every day and she’s not unusual.”

As we settle into the year of the sheep, Man shares five places to eat out in Richmond.

Hoitong Chinese Seafood Restaurant

“In
Hong Kong, the classic ideal of dining is elevated home cooking. They
call it private-style dining. Hoitong is a complete reflection of that.
It’s very refined, dinner only. They have an excellent sweet-and-sour
pork, very clean and balanced. They use the neck and jowl meat, so it
has a springy bite to it. They make a bitter-melon omelette that has a
grassy freshness and little flecks of dried seafood and ham. It is so
old-school they garnish it with a maraschino cherry – so seventies Hong
Kong.” 160-8191 Westminster Hwy.

Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant

“It’s
a brash room lit up like a dentist office. You order off an iPad.
They’ve got private rooms for VIPs. The food is Cantonese, but with a
lot of northern Chinese inflections. So there’s more pickled elements.
Their roasted squab is lovely. They have lotus root with a cuttlefish
paste that they stir fry with vegetables and white pepper, so you get
that floral white-pepper note. For dessert, they do a steamed sponge
cake that is so white and fluffy, a dim sum classic.” 101-4600 No. 3 Rd., cheftonycanada.com

Top Shanghai

“This
is what a good neighbourhood restaurant would be like in Shanghai:
classic, big flavour, filling kind of Chinese food. They’re open from
morning to night. They do Shanghainese breakfast, including warm spicy
soy milk served with deep-fried doughnuts. They do a soup that’s got
salt pork, tofu and bamboo shoots in it. Another big dish would be a
whole poached chicken in a clay pot with wontons.” 5880 No. 3 Rd., topshanghaicuisine.com

Chef Hung Taiwanese Beef Noodle

“It’s
located in the Aberdeen Centre, which is like a slice out of Hong Kong,
full of Asian stores. Recently what’s opened is a bunch of Korean
restaurants including a place called Man Ri Sung. Chef Hung has won a
ton of awards in Taiwan. They’re famous for their beef noodles served in
a really deep anise-flavoured broth. They have cold salted plum tea and
you can get coconut shaved ice with red bean and black sesame for
dessert.” 2800-4151 Hazelbridge Way, chefhungnoodle.com

Kirin

“A
classic Vancouver take on the dim sum palace is Kirin. It’s big and
crazy loud. If you ask the owners what kind of food they serve, they
don’t say Chinese, they say Richmond food. Their dim-sum menu changes
monthly depending on what’s in season. What’s on their menu all the time
are siu mai, a kind of pork-and-shrimp dumpling. But they
don’t use ground pork, they hand chop the pork so you get this super
succulent, juicy meat texture in a lovely, crispy tofu skin. 200 Three West Centre-7900 Westminster Hwy., kirinrestaurants.com

 

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The latest trend in Chinese cuisine in Richmond, B.C. has new restaurants catering to extremely expensive tastes during the busy Lunar New Year season.


Special Chinese New Year menus at the already upmarket eateries range from a few hundred dollars to $2,400 for a table of 10 people, which sold out weeks ago.

"There’s definitely these restaurants that are opening up that have a lot of swagger to them," said Lee Man, a food writer and a judge for the local Chinese Restaurant Awards.

Chinese cuisine in Richmond, B.C. has long been recognized by many food critics as possibly the best Chinese food in the world.

Man says that upscale dining hasn’t always been the case in the Lower Mainland.

"Chinese restaurants in Vancouver traditionally have been about being low key," said Man. "So this is definitely really new."

Man says it’s not just about charging high prices — these restaurants are catering to a sophisticated crowd that values quality ingredients.

"It’s really about raising the stakes and providing an ever more high-end product," said Man.

"The quality has to be there … You definitely get what you pay for, and there’s definitely a market for it."

4 upscale Chinese restaurants in Metro Vancouver

Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant
Man calls this a "beautiful little restaurant" with excellent Cantonese cooking. Its VIP section costs a minimum $900 for six or seven people.

Peninsula Seafood Restaurant
Renowned for its seafood, Peninsula serves a special fried rice dish that costs $138 a plate. It includes abalone, fish maw and scallops.

Mott 32
This new restaurant at Vancouver’s Trump Towers hasn’t opened yet, but it’s already generating a lot of buzz. Mott 32’s original location in Hong Kong is world renowned.

Chang ‘An
Located under the Granville Street Bridge, Man says the owners likely spent millions on renovations. He says it’s the first restaurant in Canada with a custom oven for barbecue duck.

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A great meal start start off Chinese New Year.

Gung Hey Fat Choy! Happy Chinese New Year. The year
of the Sheep is upon us and I wish good fortune to everyone. My good
fortune is the having the opportunity to try some of the best Chinese
food in the Lower Mainland in my 30 Days Of CNY adventures. Todays adventures takes me back to my favourite meal of the day, Brunch or as the Chinese call it Dim Sum. Top Shanghai Cuisine Restaurant serves up some wicked Xia Long Bao
or XLB, delicate dumplings filled with pork and soup. Top Shanghai
serves up what is commonly referred to as Shanghainese, cuisine
specialized and made popular in the Shanghai region of China. There are a
few places all over Lower Mainland that excel at Shanghainese but Top
Shanghai is one of the best in Richmond according to Stephen Wong, founder of the Chinese Restaurant Awards. Let’s eat!

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Chinese Restaurant Awards ramps up

The Chinese Restaurant Awards has a new category this
year. Adding to the Diners’ Choice Awards and Critics’ Choice for
Signature Dishes, there will be a Bloggers’ Choice Award, featuring four
top Chinese food bloggers. They’ll vote on the best shrimp dumpling,
five-spice beef in Chinese pancake, tea-smoked duck, three-cup chicken
and egg waffle in Metro Vancouver. Diners will also be voting on those
dishes. Diners can vote online at votedinerschoice.com and results will
be announced on March 23. The Critics Choice Awards will be announced at
a gala on April 15.

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by Anya Levykh

Westender

Only a few days remain to vote in the annual Chinese Restaurant Awards for your favourite har gow, tea-smoked duck, fine dining, Shanghainese, hot pot, bakery and more.

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The Chinese Restaurant Awards added star power this
year, attracting some of the best chefs in China. Three of five visiting
Chinese chefs run Michelin-starred restaurants (Michelin inspectors
visit only Hong Kong in China). The superstar chefs joined top-notch
local Chinese chefs, cooking a 10-course Gold Medal Dinner after the
awards ceremony Wednesday.

"This is the most famous collection of
chefs ever assembled outside of China," said CRA founder Craig Stowe in
an interview. "They were all intrigued and excited. They know there’s a
big Chinese population here and that food is important to them. They
know the best Chinese food outside of China is in Vancouver." Some would
say Vancouver outshines China because of the quality of products.

"We
took the chefs to lunch at The Keg restaurant (at 688 Dunsmuir St. in
Vancouver) and they were stunned by the quality of beef. They thought it
was spectacular. It was Triple A Alberta filet mignon," says Stowe.
"They know B.C. Dungeness crab, absolutely, they know Alberta pork, they
know geoduck and they know we have spectacular seafood. The next step
is to showcase Canadian beef." Some 90 tonnes of seafood is exported to
China from Vancouver every week, says Stowe.

Now in its sixth
year, the CRA is the go-to guide to Chinese food in Metro Vancouver for
locals and tourists alike. Visitors to the website
chineserestaurantawards.com are split evenly between locals and
tourists.

"Most people have no idea how staggeringly important having good Chinese restaurants is to the B.C. economy," says Stowe.

"The
high quality and variety separates Vancouver and Richmond from every
city in the Western world. It’s our secret weapon in attracting
investment, trade and tourism.

"A lot of people in government and tourism don’t realize it generates interest in business and visits to the city.

"It’s
a mecca and it’s important for investment and immigration. All business
in China is done around a table over lunch or dinner."

This year,
the CRA gave awards for 10 signature dishes in nine categories, down
from the 24 in previous years. Dynasty Seafood on Vancouver’s West
Broadway took two awards – one for the geoduck, done two ways and
another for the hand-shredded chicken with bamboo.

"Diners
discover restaurants and signature dishes they’d never have tried
without the direction of the Chinese Restaurant Awards," says Stowe.
"Local Chinese diners and chefs say they trust the results.
Award-winning restaurants experience a spike in their

sales as a
direct result of media exposure and there’s a sense of pride that
Vancouver and Richmond are recognized as having the best Chinese food
outside of China by the international press."

The awards are like a
shot of adrenalin for local Chinese chefs. Culturally, they hesitate
from tooting their own horns, but the CRA inspires them to up their game
and to use Canadian ingredients.

On the same day, the CRA gave awards for 10 signature dishes in Toronto.

"We want to make sure this is a national organization," says Stowe.

This year, the CRA Award gala was held at the Four Seasons Hotel.

"They’re the only first-class hotel with a Chinese
kitchen," Stowe says. The Gold Medal Dinner, at $5,000 per table, was a
scholarship fundraiser for Vancouver Community College’s Asian Culinary
Program.

The visiting chefs were Mok Kit Keung, from the
two-Michelin starred Shang Palace at Kowloon Shangri-La; Lau Yiu Fai,
from the one-Michelin starred Yan Toh Heen at InterContinental Hong
Kong; Huang Wuhun from the HL Peninsula Catering Group in Guangzhou; Wu
Wenbin from the one-Michelin starred Ye Shanghai restaurant; and Joseph
Tse from Above & Beyond in Hotel ICON.

"They’re all superstars and it’s not about personality or television," says Stowe. "These guys are the real thing."

Last
month, The Diners’ Choice Awards, another component of the CRA, gave
awards to 20 dishes after 20,000 people cast votes online.

mstainsby@vancouversun.com Blog: vancouversun.com/miastainsby Twitter.com/miastainsby

2014 Chinese Restaurant Award Winners

Alaska King Crab – Three Ways Hoi Tong Chinese Seafood Restaurant 8191 Westminister Highway, Richmond, 604-276-9229

Spike Sea Cucumber Soaked in Vinegar Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant 4600 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-279-0083

Fortune Fish: Fresh Fish with Special Rice Noodles Shiang Garden Seafood Restaurant 4540 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-273-8858

Geoduck
Two Ways (Deep-fried quenelles and deep-fried with basil) Dynasty
Seafood Restaurant 777 West Broadway Ave., Vancouver, 604-876-8388

Casserole with Soup, Tofu Stuffed with Meat, Cabbage and Vermicelli NingTu Restaurant 2130 Kingsway, Vancouver, 604-438-6669

Braised Beef Brisket and Tendon Lai Leung Kee Delicatessen 4540 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-247-8893

Deep Fried Chicken with Shrimp Paste Bamboo Grove 6920 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-278-9585

Hand-Shredded Chicken with Bamboo Cane Dynasty Seafood Restaurant 777 West Broadway Ave., Vancouver, 604-876-8388

Perilla Basil Leaf Rolls Spicy Vegetarian Cuisine 4200 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-304-3538

Sesame Egg Tart Golden Paramount Seafood Restaurant 8071 Park Rd., Richmond, 604-278-0873

 

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Earlier this year we listed the Best Chinese Restaurants in Metro Vancouver, now the Chinese Restaurant awards have released a select number of signature dishes worthy of your dollar. 

 

10 Must Try Signature Chinese Restaurant Dishes in Vancouver

Alaska King Crab – Three Ways
Hoi Tong Chinese Seafood Restaurant

#160-8191 Westminister Hwy, Richmond (604) 276-9229

Spike Sea Cucumber Soaked in Vinegar
Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant
#101-4600 No.3 Road, Richmond (604) 279-0083

Fortune Fish: Fresh Fish with Special Rice Noodles
Shiang Garden Seafood Restaurant
#2200-4540 No.3 Road, Richmond (604) 273-8858

Geoduck – Two Ways (Deep Fried Geoduck-quenelles and Sliced Geoduck Deep Fried with Basils)
Dynasty Seafood Restaurant 
#108-777 West Broadway, Vancouver (604) 876-8388

Casserole with Soup, Tofu Stuffed with Meat, Cabbage and Vermicelli
NingTu Restaurant
2130 Kingsway, Vancouver (604) 438-6669

Braised Beef Brisket and Tendon
Lai Leung Kee Delicatessen
#1360-4540 No.3 Road, Richmond (604) 247-8893

Deep Fried Chicken with Shrimp Paste
Bamboo Grove
6920 No.3 Road, Richmond (604-278-9585)

Hand-Shredded Chicken with Bamboo Cane
Dynasty Seafood Restaurant 
#108-777 West Broadway, Vancouver (604) 876-8388

Perilla Basil Leaf Rolls
Spicy Vegetarian Cuisine
#132-4200 No.3 Road, Richmond (604) 304-3538

Sesame Egg Tart
Golden Paramount Seafood Restaurant
8071 Park Road, Richmond (604) 278-0873

 

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By Mia Stainsby, Vancouver Sun
March 13, 2014

The diners have spoken. As part of the sixth-annual Chinese Restaurant Awards, diners cast their votes on best restaurants for 20 different dishes.

 

 
More than 19,000 diners vote for best Chinese dishes
 

Best
Szechuan Boiled Beef at S&W Pepper House in Burnaby. A Diners’
Choice Awards part of the 6th annual Chinese Restaurant Awards.

The
diners have spoken. As part of the sixth-annual Chinese Restaurant
Awards, diners cast their votes on best restaurants for 20 different
dishes. This aspect of the awards began two years ago and project
manager Rae Kung says participation was up by 14 per cent over last
year. Some 19,612 people cast their votes online, she said. The Critic’s
Choice Awards take place on April 23 at a gala at the Four Seasons
Hotel. These are the results of the Diners’ Choice Awards:

Best wonton noodles: Max Noodle House (Richmond)

Best Szechuan boiled beef: S&W Pepper House (Burnaby)

Best honey garlic spareribs: Bamboo Grove (Richmond)

Best Taiwanese bubble tea: Dragon Ball Teahouse (Vancouver)

Best egg tarts: Lido Restaurant (Richmond)

Best service: Peninsula Seafood Restaurant (Vancouver)

Best fine dining: Peninsula Seafood Restaurant (Vancouver)

Best dim sum: Sea Harbour Seafood (Richmond)

Best Cantonese: Jade Seafood (Richmond)

Best Northern Chinese: Peaceful Restaurant (three locations in Vancouver)

Best Shanghainese: Long’s Noodle House (Vancouver)

Best Szechuan: Golden Szechuan Restaurant (Richmond)

Best Hunan: Lucky Noodle Chinese Restaurant (Vancouver)

Best Taiwanese: Bubble World Tea House (various locations)

Best hot pot: Landmark Hot Pot (Vancouver)

Best congee and noodle: Old Buddies Seafood (Richmond)

Best vegetarian: Po Kong Vegetarian (Vancouver)

Best Hong Kong style: Deer Garden (Richmond and Vancouver)

Best bakery: La Patisserie (Vancouver and Richmond)

Best food court stall: Wai Yuen Noodle House (Yaohan Centre, Richmond)

 

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The dining public was invited to nominate
their favourites from February 3 to 9 and vote from February 10 to March
9. The 20 Best Chinese Restaurants in Vancouver 2014 editions has been
revealed.

After more than twelve months of anticipation, diners were eager to
nominate and vote for their annual favourite restaurants. The
competition heated up about halfway into the voting period when several
restaurants were in the lead. The top three in each category were
announced daily on the awards’ website, making the voting process more
exciting and transparent.

McNoodle House won the title of Best Wonton Noodles. Diners were
impressed by the chef’s skill in balancing the combination of soup,
noodles, and wonton all in one bowl. S&W Pepper House won Best
Sichuan Boiled Beef by maintaining the authenticity of a classic dish.
Bamboo Grove, the oldest Chinese restaurant in Richmond, knows a thing
or two about making the Best Honey Garlic Spareribs, a delicacy that was
invented right here in Canada.

The Peninsula Seafood Restaurant at Oakridge Centre quickly won
diners’ hearts with its outstanding performance, after only four months
of operation. The restaurant took first place in the Best Service and
Best Fine Dining Restaurant categories. In the Best Egg Tart category,
Lido Restaurant was the top contender throughout the competition. It won
the title by carefully crafting the Hong Kong-style pastry that is
adored by many. Last but not least, the title of Best Taiwanese Bubble
Tea was bestowed on Dragon Ball, a small café at the corner of West King
Edward Avenue and Oak Street that has gained a loyal following.

All winners of the Diners’ Choice Awards
will be invited to the opulent awards ceremony at the Four Seasons
Hotel Vancouver on April 23. The judging panels of the Critics Choice
Awards in Metro Vancouver and Greater Toronto have finished their
tasting journey and summited their ballots to EY Canada for audition.
The results will also be announced at the ceremony.

2014 Diners’ Choice Awards Winners

Best Wonton Noodles 
Max Noodle House
#185 – 8291 Alexandra Road, Richmond
604-231-8141

Best Sichuan Boiled Beef 
S&W Pepper House
6400 No. 3 Road, Richmond
604-304-0118
4500 Kingsway, Burnaby
604-451-3916

Best Honey Garlic Spareribs
Bamboo Grove
6920 No. 3 Road, Richmond
604-278-9585

Best Taiwanese Bubble Tea
Dragon Ball Tea House
1007 W King Edward Ave, Vancouver
604-738-3198

Best Egg Tart
Lido Restaurant
#150-4231 Hazelbridge Way, Richmond
604-231-0055

Best Service Restaurant
Peninsula Seafood Restaurant
#140 – 650 W. 41st Ave, Vancouver
(604) 428-9999

Best Fine Dining Restaurant
Peninsula Seafood Restaurant
#140 – 650 W. 41st Ave, Vancouver
(604) 428-9999

Best Dim Sum Restaurant
Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant
150-8888 River Road, Richmond
604-232-0816

Best Cantonese Restaurant
The Jade Seafood Restaurant
8511 Alexandra Road, , Richmond
604-249-0082

Best Northern Chinese Restaurant
Peaceful Restaurant
110-532 W. Broadway, Vancouver
604-879-9878
43 East 5th Avenue, Vancouver
604-559-9511
2394 4th Avenue W, Vancouver
(604) 559-9533

Best Shanghainese Restaurant
Long’s Noodle House
4853 Main St, Vancouver
604-879-7879

Best Sichuan Restaurant
Golden Szechuan Restaurant
3631 No. 3 Rd, Richmond
604-288-9058

Best Hunan Restaurant
Lucky Noodle Chinese Restaurant
3 – 3377 Kingsway, Vancouver
604-430-8818

Best Taiwanese Restaurant/BBT Café
Bubble World Tea House
7980 Granville St, Vancouver
604-263-6031
#2-3377 Kingsway, Burnaby
604-451-7658
1325 Robson St, Vancouver
604-689-8987
555 North Rd, Coquitlam
604-931-8788
1136 – 8328 Capstan Way, Richmond
604-232-5222

Best Hot Pot Restaurant
Landmark Hotpot House
4023 Cambie St, Vancouver
604-872-2868

Best Congee and Noodle Restaurant
Old Buddies Seafood Restaurant
#1120-8391 Alexandra Road, Richmond
(604) 370-4833

Best Vegetarian Restaurant
Po Kong Vegetarian Restaurant
1334 Kingsway, Vancouver
604-876-3088

Best Hong Kong-Style Café
Deer Garden Signatures
2015-8580 Alexandra Road, Richmond
604-278-9229
#1118-3779 Sexsmith Road, Richmond
604-278-3779
6270 Fraser Street, Vancouver
604-322-6116

Best Bakery Shop
La Patisserie
8278 Granville St, Vancouver
604-269-0002
#2- 6360 No.3 Road, Richmond
604-270-3092

Best Food Court Stall
Wah Yuen Noodle House, Yaohan Centre
3700 #3 Rd, Richmond
604-231-9080

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Written by: Bob Kronbauer

The votes have been tallied in the 6th annual Chinese Restaurant Awards!

vancouvers-best-chinese-restaurants

Listed below are the top 20 in the Diner’s Choice. See all of the winners in the Critic’s Choice and Diner’s Choice at chineserestaurantawards.com.

Best Wonton Noodles
McNoodle House

Best Sichuan Boiled Beef
S&W Pepper House

Best Honey Garlic Spareribs
Bamboo Grove

Best Taiwanese Bubble Tea
Dragon Ball Tea House

Best Egg Tart
Lido Restaurant

Best Service Restaurant
Peninsula Seafood Restaurant

Best Fine Dining Restaurant
Peninsula Seafood Restaurant

Best Dim Sum Restaurant
Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant

Best Cantonese Restaurant
The Jade Seafood Restaurant

Best Northern Chinese Restaurant
Peaceful Restaurant

Best Shanghainese Restaurant
Long’s Noodle House

Best Sichuan Restaurant
Golden Szechuan Restaurant

Best Hunan Restaurant
Lucky Noodle Chinese Restaurant

Best Taiwanese Restaurant/BBT Café
Bubble World Tea House

Best Hot Pot Restaurant
Landmark Hotpot House

Best Congee and Noodle Restaurant
Old Buddies Seafood Restaurant

Best Vegetarian Restaurant
Po Kong Vegetarian Restaurant

Best Hong Kong-Style Café
Deer Garden Signatures

Best Bakery Shop
La Patisserie

Best Food Court Stall
Wah Yuen Noodle House, Yaohan Centre

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CRA2014

Do you share pictures of all your meals to social media? Talk all day about food? Eat for a living?

Look no further than the Chinese Restaurant Awards 2014 if you’re all about showing your love for food. Now in its 6th
year, this annual awards event is the authoritative Chinese dining
guide to Canada’s Chinese restaurant scene, and is currently
Vancouverites’ and Torontonians’ go to source for finding the
“crème-de-la-crème” (cream of the cream) to visit when the craving hits.

To have your opinion heard for this year’s edition to the dining guide, you can head over to www.ChineseRestaurantsAwards.com before March 9th
to nominate and vote for your favourite restaurants. Currently, public
voting for the awards (aka the Diners’ Choice Awards) is only for the
Greater Vancouver, sorry Torontonians. However, critic voting (aka the
Critic’s Choice Signature Dish Awards) will be for both Metro Vancouver
and Greater Toronto areas.

Also, you can recommend dishes to the judging panel through email at critics@ChineseRestaurantAwards.com or through social media via Facebook ChineseRestaurantAwards or Twitter @CRADiningGuide

The Diners’ Choice Awards will hand out 20 awards in Greater Vancouver for the following categories:

  1. Best Wonton Noodles*
  2. Best Sichuan Boiled Beef*
  3. Best Honey Garlic Spareribs*
  4. Best Taiwanese Bubble Tea*
  5. Best Egg Tart*
  6. Best Service Restaurant*
  7. Best Fine Dining Restaurant
  8. Best Dim Sum Restaurant
  9. Best Cantonese Restaurant
  10. Best Northern Chinese Restaurant
  11. Best Shanghainese Restaurant
  12. Best Sichuan Restaurant
  13. Best Hunan Restaurant
  14. Best Taiwanese Restaurant/BBT Café
  15. Best Hot Pot Restaurant
  16. Best Congee and Noodle Restaurant
  17. Best Vegetarian Restaurant
  18. Best Hong Kong-Style Café
  19. Best Bakery Shop
  20. Best Food Court Stall

*New for 2014

Under Critic’s Choice Signature Dish Awards, 10 awards will be handed
out in Metro Vancouver and 10 awards for Greater Toronto. Critics for
Metro Vancouver this year include the founding Chair of the Chinese
Restaurant Awards, Stephen Wong, along with Lee Man, Brendon Mathews and
Foodie Yau. In Greater Toronto, critics include Jen C, Jennifer Kwan,
Renée Suen and Charles Yu.

For more information about this year’s Chinese Restaurant Awards, visit www.ChineseRestaurantsAwards.com

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Where To Get Vancouver's Best Chinese Food - Forbes Travel Guide

Vancouver’s Chinese restaurants regularly rank among the best in North America, but how do you figure out where — and what — to eat?

If you’re ready to venture beyond egg rolls and sweet-and-sour pork, check out the Vancouver Chinese Restaurant Awards,
an annual critics’-pick list of the region’s top Chinese dishes. At
this year’s recent awards ceremony, the judges named 20 must-try plates
from restaurants across Vancouver and the nearby suburb of Richmond.

Since even 20 dishes can be a lot to digest, here’s our
getting-started guide — five easy-to-navigate restaurants, their
award-winning plates, and tips on what else to order.

Dynasty Seafood Restaurant

The first-rate Cantonese dim sum in this spacious dining room
comes with views of the downtown skyline. The don’t-miss dish? Baked
lemon BBQ pork pie — sweetened barbecued pork punched up with tangy
citrus and packed into a scrumptiously flaky pastry. Round out your meal
with a mix of traditional and contemporary small plates, from classic har gow
(steamed shrimp dumplings) to Buddha’s feast (mixed vegetables). For
dessert, try the unusual baked sago and black sesame pudding.

Kirin Restaurant

In a building opposite Vancouver City Hall, this high-end Cantonese
restaurant took prizes this year for three elaborate creations:
deep-fried boneless chicken with minced prawns, glutinous rice and
chestnut paste; geoduck (giant clam) prepared two ways; and smoked live
lobster with assorted mushrooms. But you can dine well on simpler fare,
too; steamed whole fish and various Chinese greens are always impeccably
fresh. If you’re still hungry, add a hearty platter of fried noodles.

Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant

This upscale Richmond dining room has earned more top-dish notices
than any other local Chinese restaurant, for creative Hong Kong-style
cuisine, ranging from pan-fried prawns with soy to fried squab to the
inventive braised chayote squash with pork and preserved vegetable.
You’ll find this year’s winning dish, deep-fried pumpkin sticks with egg
yolk sauce, at dim sum, where the photo-filled menu makes it easy to
order.

Bamboo Grove Restaurant

If you were hunting for a sophisticated Chinese restaurant, you’d
walk right past this unassuming Richmond storefront. Step inside,
though, for white tablecloths, polished service, a lengthy wine list and
fine Cantonese fare. Its winning dishes are surprising, too; this
year’s award went to the double-boiled almond chicken and pear soup.
Pair this rich broth with addictive spare ribs in sweet vinegar sauce or
meaty tiger prawns stir-fried with eggplant and salty minced pork.

New Spicy Chili Restaurant

Prefer fiery Sichuan fare? There’s plenty of heat in this modest
Richmond eatery. Just don’t expect General Tso’s chicken or other
westernized chow — its winning plate is sliced beef and beef tripe in
“special spicy sauce.” If that sounds a little too bold, try the other
Sichuan classics, such as nutty dan dan noodles, mapo
tofu, or chili-laden “water-boiled” fish. Ask the staff for more
recommendations (just tell them your heat tolerance), or look at what
other tables are ordering. In North America’s best Chinese restaurant
city, most diners are happy to share their food finds.

Photos Courtesy of Tracey Kusiewicz Foodie Photography

 

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By Alexandra Gill

I’ve
always been of two minds about high-end Cantonese cooking. On the one
hand, I appreciate the fresh, clean flavours stripped down to their
simplest essence through deceptively complicated, time-consuming
techniques. On the other hand, all that purity can sometimes taste
incredibly bland.

Then I visited Hoitong Chinese Seafood Restaurant. At this small,
unassuming, family-owned establishment tucked in the back corner of a
Richmond strip mall, austerity and intensity collided in the most
savoury salt-based chicken I have ever had the pleasure of devouring.

Over
the years, I’ve eaten many salt-baked Chinese chickens (which are
usually roughly cleaved, not torn into strips). I’ve had them
salt-poached and served cold with dimply skin and ginger sand on the
side; roasted and piled on a pyre of bones with a crispy hide stretched
over top; and marinated in spicy Szechwan pepper, sesame oil and wine.

The
best renditions are free-range and locally raised with yellow skin, a
thin layer of fat and tender meat that tastes profoundly like chicken.
Not salty, not sweet, not sour – just pure chicken.

But none has
come close to matching Hoitong’s juicy morsels of breast and crunchy
golden wings, lightly bathed in a clear, deeply concentrated, velvety
mouth-coating, smile-inducing chicken sauce multiplied to the 10th
factor. It’s sheer umami bliss.

We arrive early on a Saturday
night, about a half-hour before the restaurant’s seven tables fill up.
(Reservations are highly recommended.) A sharply dressed waiter happily
informs us that the chef is in a good mood.

Yiutong Leung, now in
his early 70s, was once a top chef in Hong Kong, where he worked in
several exclusive clubs, including the private dining room at the Hong
Kong Stock Exchange.

Long admired among a certain set of
discerning diners who don’t mind paying top dollar for sophisticated
Cantonese cooking, Hoitong has recently begun capturing mainstream
attention.

At the 2012 Vancouver Magazine restaurant awards, it
earned silver for best casual Chinese. It also made an impressive
showing at the 2012 Chinese Restaurant Awards, winning three gold medals
in the critic’s choice signature dish awards – for dailang fried milk,
bitter melon omelette and pork belly with pickled vegetable and soy
beans, all of which we are about to try.

Dinner starts off with
that sublime salt-baked chicken. Oh, wait. First, there is a small plate
of peanuts that the chef earnestly roasts himself.

Palates
primed, we move onto a rarefied version of old-school mashed taro duck,
which you need to order in advance. The multilayered terrine has a
sliver of crispy skin on the bottom topped with flattened duck slowly
steamed off the bone, a thick middle of whipped taro root and a lacy
head of fried duck-taro flakes.

What sets this version apart from most taro ducks is that it seems to be assembled in separate layers.

Next up is fluffy dailang
fried milk, a soft creamy cloud stir-fried with egg whites, tossed with
fresh picked crab, and dusted with dried seafood and finely minced
cured ham.

It’s followed by bitter melon omelette, actually more
of a frittata, stuffed with gently sautéed, mouth-puckering melon that
works its strange magic on the bitter fanatics in the group – while
efficiently cleansing the rest of our palates.

 

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By Linsay Evans

Richmond has the highest
proportion of immigrants of any Canadian city, and of those, almost 27
percent are from China and 23 percent are from Hong Kong, as of the 2006
census. With such a large Chinese population, you’d be correct if you
expected to find some great Chinese restaurants in town. In fact, more
than 20 of the 2011 HSBC Chinese Restaurant Awards were given to
Richmond establishments. Whether you crave Cantonese dim sum, barbecue,
or Hong Kong-style street food, Richmond can provide.

HK B.B.Q. Master

HK
B.B.Q. Master (no website; 145-4651 No. 3 Road; Richmond; 604-272-6568)
received the HSBC Critic’s Choice and Diner’s Choice awards for best
Chinese barbecue. The restaurant specializes in semi-fat pork loin,
ordered fresh daily, roasted with five-spice and Muigweloo wine.

Sun Sui Wah Seafood Restaurant

Sun
Sui Wah Seafood Restaurant (sunsuiwah.com) was awarded the HSBC
Critic’s Choice award for King Crab. As well as a selection of live
seafood, including geoducks, prawns and potato eels, Sun Sui Wah offers
roasted squab and dim sum.

Shiang Garden

Shiang
Garden Chinese Restaurant (no website; 2200-4540 No.3 Road; Richmond;
604-273-8858) received the HSBC’s Critic’s Choice awards for lobster and
pork. The restaurant creates its own blend of soy sauce using
ingredients such as shallots, leeks and wine.

Hakkasan Contemporary Chinese Cuisine

Hakkasan
Contemporary Chinese Cuisine (hakkasan.ca) won the HSBC Diner’s Choice
award for best service. Hakkasan creates modern versions of traditional
Chinese dishes. Specialties include braised plum duck, quail and fungus
soup, and Hakka ancient-style salt-baked chicken.

Kirin Restaurant

The
Kirin Restaurant (kirinrestaurants.com) won the HSBC Diner’s Choice
awards for best fine dining and best dining environment. The menu
features Cantonese cuisine with an emphasis on seafood, with specialties
such as braised shark fin and abalone with jelly fish.

Jade Seafood Restaurant

The
Jade Seafood Restaurant (jaderestaurant.ca) received the HSBC Critic’s
Choice award for chicken and the Diner’s Choice award for best Cantonese
dim sum. Dim sum selections include traditional steamed prawn, wild
mushroom and steamed eel with tangerine peel.

Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant

The
Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant (no website; 3711 No. 3 Road; Richmond;
604-232-0816) took the HSBC Critic’s Choice awards for prawns and squab.
Specialties include local spot prawns fried in soy sauce and dried,
2-week-old squab that have been fed with special food.

Deer Garden Signatures

For
Hong Kong-style street food, the HSBC Diner’s Choice award went to Deer
Garden Signatures (deergarden.ca). This Richmond café serves a lunch
menu featuring build-your-own soups with ingredients such as fish, crab
cakes, mushrooms and beef brisket topped with your choice of noodles and
broth.

Rainflower Seafood Restaurant

For
the best Chinese desserts in Richmond, the HSBC Critic’s Choice award
went to Rainflower Seafood Restaurant (no website; 3600 No. 3 Road;
Richmond; 604-278-7288). The dim sum-style desserts feature ingredients
such as durian, blue cheese and fermented tofu inside warm, flaky
pastries.

Red Star Seafood Restaurant

For
innovative Chinese cuisine, the HSBC critics picked the Red Star
Seafood Restaurant (no website; 2200-8181 Cambie Road; Richmond;
604-270-3003), a central Richmond eatery that uses organic and wild
ingredients. Specialties include fresh crab on a bed of Zizania wild
rice, dried scallops and free-range eggs.

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Chinese culinary master chef Tony Wu showed off his noodle making skills at the HSBC Chinese Restaurant Awards held at the River Rock.

Chinese
culinary master chef Tony Wu showed off his noodle making skills at the
HSBC Chinese Restaurant Awards held at the River Rock.

Photograph by: Fred Lee, Vancouver Courier

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Camel meat making inroads in Vancouver

Exotic meat supplier Hills Foods Ltd. has started selling camel meat in
Vancouver although so far it has only been for special events.

The company has had more success selling the meat in Toronto to
members of that city’s Muslim community, which like it because it is
prepared in accordance with traditional Halal practices.

Local chefs, however, are starting to express interest.

“I would serve it for sure,” Sean Heather told Business in Vancouver.

He owns about a half dozen Vancouver restaurants including the Irish Heather and the Everything Café.

“We
could make a stew out of it so people would get the flavour, which is a
little different, but is in a format that they’re familiar with. You
could put that into a pot pie with some vegetables and some nice gravy.”

Robert Wong is similarly curious about the exotic meat.

Wong is well known in the Chinese community for being a judge of the Chinese Restaurant Awards. He told BIV that he plans to open a new restaurant in February that will include some exotic meat offerings.

Read BIV

 

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