You have that picture in your mind, and feeling slightly uncomfortable and nauseated? Aha, yes – we all do, and if you don’t, you are in need of some culinary education.
Today I will tell you where to go to have anything but the above mentioned.
The Red Chamber.
Owned by a Chinese lady who has been running this authentic
restaurant for almost 30 odd years, speaking a very good English but still with
a heavy Chinese accent – you know you’ve hit the jackpot.
Dark wood with accents of bamboo to break the lighting on
the sides of the restaurant, and proper chopsticks (well not the R0.50 wooden
ones that splinter in your mouth) no silverware present on the tables – this is
the real deal.
Armed with a delicious and curios array of dishes, lamb,
duck, chicken, pork, seafood and of course vegetables, you’ll take a couple of
moments to decide what to take and what to leave; who you can persuade to take
the second dish you would like to try, doing so with the “sharing is caring”
motto.
If all else fails and you still want to order food that
might feed and army, ask the extremely helpful waiters or owner, who will tell
you what the specials are, the most popular dishes as well as how they can
change the dish you want to enhance your experience.
Big juicy spring rolls, packed with veggies and flavour, not
transforming paper to translucent with oil, and a spring onion think-crust
pastry is always the way to start, you will
not regret this, served with a soy, ginger, chilli dipping sauce - what an outright
delight!
The portions are very generous, and ideal to share,
especially if you are planning to indulge in starters and mains. However, I do
not see the problem with a little take-away snack for late night nibbles.
An easy spotted favourite – or easy heard favourite is most definitely
the sizzling duck, beef or kingklip with garlic and chilli. The sizzling and
smokingly hot plates are delivered to tables all around with great fascination and
delightful aroma. A little bit of theatre at the table.
What I love is that you order your own rice or noodles - as much or as little as you like, one portion of noodles is usually enough for 3. Waste not want not.
(I do suggest an ice-cold Chinese beer rather than wine to compliment the flavours).
This is without any doubt my favourite and most authentic
Chinese restaurant in all of Africa (and other countries, perhaps maybe even
China).
Tantalising tastes and wonderful flavour combinations guaranteed
in this humble little place.
One of the very
nicest things about life is the way we must regularly stop whatever it is we
are doing and devote our attention to eating. ~Luciano Pavarotti
Untill we eat again…
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