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Chocolate lava cake at a Chinese restaurant? It’s true, it’s true!

January 3, 2024 by Blogfinger

 

Paul's dessert at the Peking Pavilion

Paul’s  chocolate lava cake dessert at the Peking Pavilion

 

By Eileen and Paul Goldfinger–Blogfinger.net

 

We like to go to the Peking Pavilion in Manalapan every few months. This is not your mother’s Chinese restaurant.  It is a fine American restaurant owned by the Kuos family, serving spectacular Chinese cuisine. In 2007 it was rebuilt after a fire and is a striking building with a big red front door.  It is spacious and modern–like a Soho restaurant.  There is a lively bar scene where you can eat and watch Chinese sports like American football.   Most of the help are Chinese, and the service is superb.

He greeted us out front, but he didn't speak a word of English, or Chinese, for that matter. PG photo

He greeted us out front, but he didn’t speak a word of English, or Chinese, for that matter. He used to be a terra cotta soldier before going into the restaurant business.   PG photo

We have been going there for years and we  always have the same thing:  peppercorn calamari appetizer  (share) and then Peking Duck (share–allow about 20 minutes to prepare).  This recipe is identical to the kind served in Beijing.  It is now considered the national dish of China  (but not because we eat it all the time.)

They brought over the duck and carved it as we watched.  The dissection was perfect, and the waiter held up the finished product and showed it off while flashing a big smile.  He prepared  the perfectly cooked and moist meat in thin pancakes with bits of crispy duck skin, celery and scallions.  There also were crispy drumsticks and legs on the side.  The hoisin sauce was dark and tasty.

The people next to us were eating giant shrimp with a glaze. We also saw wonderfully prepared steaks and big bowls of wonton soup. Also they have spicy sautéed soft shell crabs, grilled halibut over shiitake mushrooms, moo shu vegetables and many other choices. No one was using chop sticks. That’s good because I would not have been able to eat the rolled up duck with chop sticks.

The wine list was fine, the hot steamy tea arrived in little tea pots, and the white rice was sticky.  We each had a glass of wine. Eileen chose an Italian Pinot Grigio while I got the 5 River Pinot Noir from California.

We usually skip dessert, and Eileen did, but this night, after a bad week, I refused to deny myself.  It was the first dessert we ever ordered there and it was marvelous. The lava cake  interior is warm molten chocolate.  Accompanied by a scoop of high grade vanilla ice cream and a single shot espresso, it was something.

In keeping with the tradition of Chinese take-out, we took home enough left-over food for 1/2 a dinner the next night.  I even, believe it or not, took home half my chocolate lava cake after eating all the ice cream.

Next night, at home,  Eileen made sweet and sour duck/beef meatballs with fresh asparagus  for the other half of the meal—a recipe by a Chinese chef.  We finished it with a half bottle of Louis Jadot Burgundy  (smooth and light–about $12.00)  No need for a salad. No dessert at home. The lava cake is still waiting in the fridge for me to have a weak moment.

We have never had  bad luck or bad duck at the Peking Pavilion, located at 110 Route 33 west.  It is right after business 33 joins highway 33.  The prices are reasonable ($15.00-$25.00 per most entrees—except ours). Our meal was about $80.00, but I don’t have the exact breakdown because I usually toss away the receipt without looking too closely–an old habit that makes  Eileen  mutter.  In fact she’s the mutter and I’m the fatter.  I think the duck was about $42.00, but it was for two and lasted into the next day.   Note that we did get a fortune cookie and my fortune, as usual in a Chinese restaurant, was dopey–something about feeling like a million bucks–all green and wrinkled.

 

 

CINDY SCOTT  with a Jerome Kern song that makes me seasick and romantic at the same time:

 

https://blogfinger.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/10-on-a-slow-boat-to-china.mp3
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Posted in Blogfinger News, Food and Restaurant | Tagged Dinner out with the Goldfingers, One from column A? | 5 Comments

5 Responses

  1. on August 10, 2021 at 2:34 pm Blogfinger

    A great tradition has been lost: Chinese restaurants do not include an actual fortune inside the cookie–instead you get a one sentence lecture.

    I always enjoyed the idea of looking into my future, unless it said “You will meet a tall dark stranger” That’s not my type.


  2. on February 25, 2017 at 7:26 am Blogfinger

    Reblogged this on Blogfinger and commented:

    The Peking Pavilion is a terrific Chinese restaurant, but isn’t practical for take-out in OG.


  3. on April 28, 2013 at 10:12 pm Tom P.

    Doc,

    Winter melon soup, salt baked squid and Peking duck. Duck is served with
    buns not pancakes. This place is worth the ride to Philadelphia. Good food and service
    but not much more than a storefront so bring a crossword or a KenKen puzzle.

    Tom

    http://www.leehowfook.com/


  4. on April 26, 2013 at 8:01 pm Ogbess

    FYI the Kuo’s son, Victor opened a restaurant in Red Bank a couple of years ago. The restaurant is called “Temple” and is equally as good as the Peking Pavilion. We have eaten at both.


  5. on April 26, 2013 at 6:51 am ML

    I want to go there now!



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