MARY FURR -- Dining Out
- Share via
How can you resist a restaurant named Village Green? The restaurant,
which opened last month on Slater Avenue and Ward Street in Fountain
Valley, offers food as fresh as any garden, prepared with authenticity by
owner Andy Chan from Hong Kong and his brother, Jackie, who is no
relation to the box-office star of the same name.
Together they have developed a place with truly fresh ingredients in a
simple, friendly atmosphere. Open the door and Andy is there with a menu
and a pot of tea. You won’t believe the prices -- 30 lunch choices from
$4.95 to $5.75. Family dinners, which can be enjoyed at the big, round
tables with a lazy-susan center, run from $7.95 to $11.95.
The egg flower soup with lunch is thick with egg whites and crunchy
with bits of water chestnuts. Family dinner soups include hot and sour,
won ton and, my favorite, sizzling rice. The chicken broth is filled with
fat shrimp, thinly sliced white asparagus, carrot, snow peas and
mushrooms that sizzle and pop when squares of fried rice are dropped in,
sending up a cloud of aromatic steam. Indulge sometime and order a bowl a
la carte ($6.75).
My lunch plate of crisp, fresh snow peas, celery, carrots, peas and at
least a dozen of the big and tender shrimp ($5.75) was a delicious dish
sprinkled with sesame seeds and only a whiff of garlic. Seasonings are
mostly modest here but can be as spicy as you request.
If you are looking for vegetables, order Rock Cod ($5.75) with bright
fresh broccoli, carrots, onions, bok choy (Chinese cabbage) and
mushrooms. With lunch comes fried rice and crisp,
fried-in-100%-vegetable-oil egg rolls with a still-crisp vegetable
stuffing -- not overcooked.
You’ve got some choices if you decide on Three Ingredients in Sizzling
Platter ($11.50). It’s a combination of shrimp, beef and chicken in one
of three sauces -- Szechwan (mild), black bean or kung pao (hot and
spicy). the dinners come with good egg rolls, a not-so-good won ton with
only a dab of meat in a big square of won ton skin, foil-wrapped chicken
with an excellent and potent dark sauce, two fried shrimp and two
barbecued spare ribs.
It’s an appetizer platter prepared with variety and fresh ingredients.
However, Village Garden tends to use lots of chicken in proportion to the
beef and shrimp in this selection, as well as in others.
If you like beef, go for Beef with Black Mushrooms ($11.95), which has plenty of tender pieces along with mushroom caps that are as big as
silver dollars. They are fleshy and sensual -- a taste to savor and
remember. This is a heavy dish, and an a la carte order of Chinese
Vegetables ($7.50), Snow Peas ($6.25) or String Beans ($6.50) would be a
good addition to be shared family-style.
Desserts are limited -- a nice cooling order of Lychees ($1.95), seven
white cherry-sized fruit on ice, is good.
According to Andy, the most popular dishes are those with authentic
Szechwan ingredients or the sweet-and-sour selections prepared by Jackie.
Steamed fish is also popular, a specialty prepared Cantonese-style.
Village Garden is true to its name, a bright spot on the Fountain
Valley scene, where if you prepare good, fresh food, they will come.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments
or suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
FYI
Village Green
WHERE: 10585 Slater Ave., Fountain Valley
HOURS: 11 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday, noon to 9:30 p.m.
Sunday
CALL: (714) 962-1700
MISC.: Beer and wine are served. Take out is available. Credit cards
accepted.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.