For some, Jing Fong might be intimidating: Itās marked by giant escalators, a vast dining room and walkie-talkieātoting waiters marshalling diners. But it has remarkable dim sum.
Location
This luxe restaurant has been wowing midtown diners since the ā70s. Whether you prefer Cantonese, Shanghai or Szechuan food, youāll find it done in style. The menu offers no fewer than five duck entrĆ©es and a slew of nontraditional items, such as Lily in the Woods (Chinese cabbage hearts simmered in broth and served with black wood mushrooms). Waiters theatrically assemble your tableās centerpieceāvegetables skillfully carved into animal shapes.
Staff
The menagerie heralds the arrival of the fancy food: moist shredded duck or Neptuneās Net, a potato nest bursting with scallops, shrimp, lobster and sea bass. The experience doesnāt come cheap, but for top-notch regional cuisine served graciously beside a taro dove, there is no other choice.
One can manage without eating flesh,
but one cannot manage without the bamboo.
Dining
Where China borders Mongolia in the colder north, the food reflects the terraināitās rustic and comforting, loaded with rich lamb and focused more on wheat-flour noodles and buns than the rice ubiquitous elsewhere. Thanks to a change in immigration patterns, Flushing has seen an increase in Northern Chinese restaurants like the seven-year-old Fu Run, whose owners are from Dongbei (what was once known as Manchuria). They call their justly celebrated dish the āMuslim lamb chop,ā but itās more like a half rack of ribs: A platter of bone-in, fatty meat is braised, then battered and deep-fried, the whole juicy slab blanketed with cumin seeds, chili powder and flakes, and black and white sesame seeds.
Try it with a wonderfully greasy beef-stuffed pancake called a bing, and cold saladesque dishes like the bright, fresh ātiger vegetableā (shredded scallions, cilantro, chilies and tiny shrimp) or liang pi noodles, transparent mung-bean noodles listed as āgreen-bean sheet jellyā and tossed with chili oil, peanuts and crushed cucumbers.
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