Martin Yan's M.Y. China and the upscale Hakkasan add to the Chinese scene

APPETITE Style-over-substance at popular restaurants grew old in my Los Angeles days. A pretty package matters little if food isn't excellent. In SF, we tend towards the other direction. Thank goodness for places like Gitane, Bix, Foreign Cinema, which manage both — a little style is welcome. With the entry of two new, upscale Chinese restaurants, we get style aplenty. One, the international Hakkasan chain, feels oh-so LA or NY, and the other, M.Y. China, is inside a mall (very Southern California) from famed chef Martin Yan.
Buzz has been nonstop about these two, where I've spent a pretty penny, from lunch to dessert. I disagree with the racist-tinged complaint that typically cheaper, ethnic cuisines shouldn't cost more, but the reason any cuisine should is quality of ingredients and reinvention or reinterpretation of classic dishes. Stir-fry, for example, shouldn't cost double what it would in a hole-in-the-wall if it's virtually the same dish. After multiple visits, my assessment is mixed, each restaurant boasts strong points, but neither reinvents Chinese cuisine, which begs the question: are the prices worth it?
HAKKASAN
Early on, Hakkasan succeeds on a number of points: seamless service from a team that seemed to work in sync from opening day. Though the second floor restaurant overlooking Market Street is a bit scene-y, especially around a large, central bar, I can't help but applaud a space that says "night on the town"... particularly when the food is quite good. Similar to dining at the subterranean London Hakkasan, I find the overall experience satisfying if someone else is paying.
Drinkwise, I'm delighted with a refreshing, elegant Plum Sour of Yamazaki 12 year Japanese whisky, umeshu plum liqueur, lemon, Angostura bitters and egg white, or a robust Smoky Negroni (Rusty Blade, Carpano Antica, Campari, smoke-infused Grand Marnier), but the $12-15 cocktails aren't superior to or necessarily equal to lower-priced cocktails around town. Similarly, roasted silver cod in a Champagne honey sauce is silky and lush but at $39? Countless Japanese restaurants worth their salt serve a fantastic version of similar miso cod at half that price.
As with M.Y. China below, dim sum is a highlight, but $7–$26 for a few dumplings is a struggle when far cheaper, quality dim sum is plentiful around town. Worthwhile dishes are atypical dim sum, like roasted duck pumpkin puffs or black pepper duck dumplings. Whether noodles ($12–$39) or stir-fry ($12–$58), I haven't had a bad dish here. But leaving lunch for two over $100 lighter, or the same for drinks and a couple appetizers, I can't help but conclude: food, drink, and service shine... on someone else's dime.
1 Kearny, (415) 829-8148, www.hakkasan.com/sanfrancisco
M.Y. CHINA
Growing up, I loved watching "Yan Can Cook." To this day I'm inspired by Martin Yan's energy and childlike exuberance. His anticipated SF restaurant opening, M.Y. China, is more affordable than Hakkasan, conveniently under the dome at the Westfield Center mall for a post or pre-movie meal. Despite all the noodle attention, including a world-champion noodle puller and noodle pulling stations viewable while dining, spectacle doesn't necessarily equal stellar noodles. For example, squid ink snap noodles ($18), more like torn pasta squares, tossed with shrimp, scallops and calamari in Shaoxing wine, fail to exude much flavor. Dan Dan noodles ($12) are a stronger choice, and the favorite of everyone I've talked to is lush scissor noodles ($14), cut by kitchen scissors then wok-cooked with wild boar.
Related articles
Spiced ribs and dreamy Natchez: the Mission BBQ makes a tasty comeback
Intriguing Asian hotspots Muguboka, Ramen Shop, and Roku arouse the senses
Also from this author
Spiced ribs and dreamy Natchez: the Mission BBQ makes a tasty comeback
New cocktail and bite combinations to light up winter nights
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- touchy! Sorry you're so - May 24, 2013
- So, not even a hint of objectivity, impartiality and non-bias? - May 24, 2013
- I fall in and out of the habit of listening to talk radio, - May 24, 2013
- I fall in and out of the habit of listening to talk radio, - May 24, 2013
- It's no more "greedy" for a landlord to want a market rent than - May 24, 2013
- So true. I've been a landlord for 15 years and have had four - May 24, 2013
- Why not a cap on the number of - May 24, 2013
- Lilli, on what credible basis can you claim to know that - May 24, 2013
- Yes, I don't know why gays want to marry either. - May 24, 2013
- The above comment - May 24, 2013









Comments
Post new comment