Both aren’t typical dim sum restaurants. There are no roving carts. There’s not even any service staff to refill your water or tea. At All That 'N Dim Sum, you order first at the cashier, pay, then stake out a table.
At Dim Sum Box, you tap in your order on a touch-screen kiosk, insert your credit card, and then wait at any table as your dim sum is prepared.
Though they are similar in the way it eschews old school dim sum restaurant service, there is a difference in the way the food is prepared between the two restaurants–at least in the way the end product tastes.
The food at All That 'N Dim Sum has the consistency and character of something that was reheated. The skin on the har gow stuck to the basket, and the cheong fun was thick and not particularly delicate.
Dim Sum Box, on the other hand, seems to take particular care in preparing everything to order.
A pan fried bun was scalding hot and possessed a crisped brown bottom.
And an order of tripe, though not the usual kind you’d find in dim sum menus that’s heavy with ginger, was flavored with chili and soy, tasting as though it was freshly wok stir-fried. The egg custard cups were delicate and not too sweet.
If I had to choose between the two for a return visit, it would be an easy decision to pick Dim Sum Box since what I haven’t mentioned is that the price points are nearly identical at around $5 per dish.
While I’m on the subject, when did dim sum get so expensive?
All That 'N Dim Sum
8518 Gale Ave, Rowland Heights, CA 91748
Dim Sum Box
3648 Nogales St #A, West Covina, CA 91792
We were amazed at all the new places in our former 'hood Elmo! Though HK Plaza looked depressing. Jiou Chu Dumplings had just opened when we were there and was all the rage.....funny, we used to go to the laundromat in Yes Plaza all those years ago.
ReplyDeleteHK Plaza is depressing, especially Hong Kong Fishball House, which is just horrible now...and expensive!
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