MARY FURR -- Dining Out
When a restaurant owner like Kenny Sue is all over -- picking up dishes,
offering menus, greeting diners by name -- you know that restaurant is a
good place to go. Fu Wing Low in Fountain Valley is a place Sue loves to
be. No question about it.
Splurge with the No. 3 Family Dinner. At $11.50 per person, it’s a
gastronomic adventure in south China cuisine.
First comes a big bowl of wor wonton soup. “Wor” means “with meat,” and
there are four types -- slices of barbecued pork, beef, chicken and a
fat, pink, curled-up shrimp. Technicolor green snow peas, golden carrots
and mushrooms also float in the clear chicken broth. It’s as fresh as
spring, and you can ladle all you want.
Next comes a round, divided appetizer plate with a tiny, lighted hibachi
in its center and two each of fried shrimp, foil-wrapped chicken, wontons
and thin-skinned, vegetable-stuffed egg rolls with a strip of beef on a
skewer. They are all cooked, but its fun to warm them on the flaming
hibachi.
For the 16 years Fu Wing Low has been in Meadowlark Park Plaza, the high
quality of the appetizers has been the same. Parts of this mini-mall may
be in need of repair, but not this restaurant. In this rapidly changing
world, that’s good to know.
Now the entrees. There is moo shu pork wrapped like a burrito in a
transparent wonton skin with a healthy mix of bean sprouts, shredded
cabbage and peas. It has an open top to add the thick, dark, pungent plum
sauce. Our server advised just picking it up to eat -- the “best taste,”
she said. It’s a fragile bundle of mixed flavors with that sauce seeping
down through the vegetables.
Less impressive in appearance, but with an invasive, complex and spicy
sauce, is the kung pao chicken with celery, water chestnuts, little green
onions, mushrooms, tender chicken and peanuts. It’s the best I’ve had in
a long time.
In contrast is the very simple dish of eight plump shrimps with broccoli
flowers and carrots. This is what Kenny Sue means when he suggests
ordering contrasting dishes -- one spicy and one with a milder, natural
flavor such as this one prepared in a light soybean oil, as are all of
his fried dishes.
Fu Wing Low is a family restaurant run by a family team -- brother Pak
Sue in the kitchen is assisted by brother-in-law Gai Zhu. Food is
prepared in traditional fashion. However, the Sue family can accommodate
any changes you’d request, especially where allergies are concerned.
Kenny calls it “customer-made” food.
Fu Wing Low seems familiar -- the kind of Chinese restaurant you went to
with your parents. It’s a place that’s comfortable and reassuring as if
you’d been there but with food that’s too good to forget.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments or
suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
FYI
FU WING LOW
WHERE: 16545 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley
HOURS: 11:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, till 10 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, 12:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday.
CALL: 839-4481
MISC.: Credit cards accepted.
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