Shanghainese Dinner @ Wang Jia Sha

Monday, October 12, 2009 21:19

Wang Jia ShaAs much as I like Shanghainese food, I was getting a little tired of alternating between Mei Long Village and Shanghai Xiao Chi every time I have a craving for it, so it came as pleasant news when I heard about Wang Jia Sha. The small restaurant is further east and north of where I usually go for my Chinese food fix, but it was worth the trip.

After we ordered, the waiter plopped down a little plate of pickled vegetables. I’m not sure if they pickled the vegetables in house or just combined the mixture in house, but it was appetizing. The salty-sour pickles reminded me more of something my Cantonese mom would serve, but hey, I’m not complaining.

Wang Jia Sha

A standard vegetarian Shanghainese dish is kou fu, which I almost always order whenever I’m at a new Shanghainese restaurant. Wang Jia Sha’s was pretty good. Like most dishes from the region, it was slightly sweet as well as savory. It also had none of the canned kou fu taste, so I assume and hope that this was made in house as well.

Wang Jia Sha

Xiao Long Bao is another usual I order. It was only okay at this restaurant. The filling didn’t stand out as excellent and the wrapper had some inconsistencies. I’m not a stickler for super-thin XLB wrapping, but this one was just too thick at the top. Being too thick up there makes it doughy because the wrapper can’t be cooked through all the way.

Wang Jia Sha

We also ordered some steamed vegetable buns. These were filled with mushrooms and ji cai. It’s the ubiquitous leafy green we see in a lot of Shanghainese dishes. The filling was decent and the bun part was light and delicate, but this isn’t somewhere I’d go specifically for buns.

Wang Jia Sha

Our stir fried string beans dish fared better. By just looking at it, I didn’t think they had cooked this at high enough heat. The skins were not as puckered or browned as other places made it, so I thought it was underdone, but one bite changed my mind. The beans had a nice, lingering smokey aftertaste to them even though they weren’t as stir fried as I’d prefer.

Wang Jia Sha

For my meat dish, I ordered the Shanghai short ribs. They look kind of like what you’d get from Panda Express, don’t they? Luckily, they’re about fifty times better. The bite-sized pieces of meat are first battered and deep fried, then stir fried in a sticky savory and sweet sauce. Don’t worry about the sauce being too sweet. It was a good balance. These were cooked perfectly so that the batter was still crispy while also being coated in sauce — not an easy feat.

Wang Jia Sha

Of course, we also ordered the stir fried nien gao with ji cai. These were disappointing. The nien gao (rice ovals) were too soft and mushy when they should have been soft and chewy. A Shanghainese restaurant should know how to make the perfect nien gao!

Wang Jia Sha

Although we should have called it quits by then, I was a glutton and it was the night of the Moon Festival so I ordered dessert: a small serving of jiu niang tan yuen which is a sweet fermented rice porridge with black sesame-filled rice balls (mochi). This came piping hot and delicious. It usually comes with egg stirred in, but I asked them to leave it out because of the BF. The porridge was more water than fermented rice, which was great because I don’t think either of us could have eaten more rice. The mochi balls were chewy, soft, and satisfying. What really stands out in this dish is inclusion of osmanthus flowers which lends a sweet, floral scent to the porridge without having it be cloyingly sweet.

Wang Jia Sha had some hits as well as misses. It’s good to have another Shanghainese place to go dine at and I’m planning on returning again maybe with more people so we can try more dishes. I’m glad that we ended up getting dessert because having such a delicious bowl of hot porridge to top off dinner certainly made me remember this place in a favorable light.

Wang Jia
[map it]
156 S San Gabriel Blvd
San Gabriel, CA 91776
(626) 291-2233

Louise absolutely LOVES filthy, cheap places! (See more of her posts). You can also find more of Louise's writing at her own website NakedSushi.

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10 Responses to “Shanghainese Dinner @ Wang Jia Sha”

  1. MaxMillion says:

    October 27th, 2009 at 5:32 pm

    Hi! you wrote “A standard vegetarian Shanghainese dish is kou fu,” — was that in ref to the photo above? That dish looks like meat to me, yet you say it is vegetarian.

    Please tell me a bit more about that particular dish.

  2. Louise says:

    October 27th, 2009 at 5:36 pm

    @MaxMillion
    Yes, it’s the dish above. It’s wheat gluten and completely vegetarian. It looks like meat and can be used as a substitute as meat in a lot of Chinese dishes. The Shanghainese preparation is to braise it in a sugar + soy sauce with spices like star anise. Sometimes it has other things in it like shiitake mushroom, dried lily flower, and bamboo. It can be eaten hot, but most restaurants serve it as a cold appetizer plate. I like it but it might be weird if you’re having it for the first time because it has a spongy, chewy texture.

  3. MaxMillion says:

    October 31st, 2009 at 11:39 am

    Interesting. Thanks, Louise. I always learn so much from your posts.

  4. glutster says:

    November 3rd, 2009 at 11:35 am

    Ah…so ko fu is what that dish is called?

    I’ve had something really similar that at Lunasia Dim Sum last time, cooked with mushrooms and deep, salty caramel like sauce (not oyster sauce).

    Anyways, nice photos!

  5. Louise says:

    November 3rd, 2009 at 11:58 am

    Hm, I’ve never had it at dim sum before, but your description of it sounds the same. I guess the correct pinyin is ‘kao fu’ but I always write ‘kou fu”.

  6. Pepsi Monster says:

    November 5th, 2009 at 12:09 am

    It never hurts to order XLB in a Shanghai restaurant.

    I’m a little curious, do they have any Ham Hock in this place or the pork knuckle? If they have it, I’ll be there.

    It’s a shame they didn’t do a good job on the Shanghai Rice Cakes (Nien Gao). It’s like making Pad Thai at a Thai Restaurant, it’s not very hard to cook Nien Gao correctly at a Shanghai place.

  7. Jack Murray says:

    December 23rd, 2009 at 12:52 pm

    @Louise In my restaurant I make “A standard vegetarian Shanghainese dish is kou fu”. I cover shiitake mushroom, dried lily flower and bamboo with Indian patan ghee. Its aroma changes the flavor of the dish and feels like meet while eating ..Cheers

  8. Sandwich says:

    January 2nd, 2010 at 3:57 pm

    Most of these pics looks very delicious. I will give it a try next time I drive up from San Diego ! Thanks for the tip !

  9. Harold (SMM) says:

    February 19th, 2010 at 2:48 pm

    Sounds like a great place to eat. Had to laugh at your Panda Express comment. Glad to know that they outscored them by a country mile.

  10. dan says:

    July 23rd, 2010 at 4:15 pm

    FYI, We overlooked buying this blog because you completely offended somebody who didn’t forget you.

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