Tim Ho Wan – Chatswood – Saturday 4 April 2015 – Lunch

Steamed prawn dumplings

Steamed prawn dumplings

This is a big deal. Tim Ho Wan is awesome in Hong Kong, and it has come to Australia blazing a distinct trail.

There is one comparison to Melbourne’s The Fat Duck and that is the incredible foodie fever that is swept up by it. That is the only comparison. Tim Ho Wan in Chatswood does not (generally) take bookings, serves several hundred people in a day, and is at the opposite end of the price spectrum. It does not matter if you are from an investment bank and have generated a computer program that unfairly gets you several gold tickets for your clients for The Fat Duck; you need to wait in line for THW so loosen your tie.

Glutinous rice and baked pork buns

Glutinous rice and baked pork buns

It is raining heavily outside and has been for several hours, leading to the cancellation of today’s horse racing “Championships” and also to the line being kept inside rather than down the stairs and around the corner. We waited almost two hours (1:55 to be exact), starting close to the other end of the fancy food court being spruiked by Poh. The wait is an experience in itself. I had time to go and get Cheezels from Woolies, some green tea red bean paste buns from Bread Top, and a takeaway coffee nearby while Catherine waited in line. There was families complete with obligatory pram in tow, and all walks of life young and old, but the placement in Chatswood is a no brainer – it is perfect for a crowd who know their har gow from their siu mai.

Having been to several very good Hong Kong restaurants for dim sum in December, we have some recent experience to compare Tim Ho Wan to. There are many aspects the same as our experience at Tim Ho Wan in Central such as receiving the order form prior to seating (to speed up service), the discipline behind the food being served, and the efficiency of the many floorstaff. The prices have been kept in check too. On the whole I was staggered to find the dishes like the famous baked pork buns to be only $6.80 for three.

Carrot cake

Carrot cake

The baked pork buns are delicious with the THW characteristic sweetness in the bun, which is baked rather than steamed to produce a firmer texture, offsetting the beautiful roasted pork inside. The sweetness in certain bites was quite pronounced from the exterior of the bun, taking away some of the balance, but on the whole they are a good replica of the dish that has made THW famous across Asia. The glutinous rice is perfectly wrapped in the lotus leaves. It’s almost too perfectly set out with a surprise mushroom on the outer of the rice, the one piece of blood sausage at one end and stacks of flavoursome chicken and pork throughout. To replicate this time after time is an artform in itself. Equally there is nothing wrong in a dish such as this to be a little random too.

The steamed prawn dumplings are as good as I’ve found around Australia over many years. Perfect wrapper; full of fresh and juicy prawns cooked to the second; and even better with the chilli and soy offered on the table. The har gow aficionados are surely more than satisfied. Last of the savouries we tried was the “carrot cake”. It is a nice dish with certain accents of carrot and meat but it is not in the same class as the prior three in my opinion.

Mango pomelo sago

Mango pomelo sago

As dessert lovers, we had to try both on offer. The mango pomelo sago is light with a balance between creamy sweetness and the slightly savoury tapioca and pomelo well distributed through the sago. The tonic medlar brings back happy memories of Hong Kong and is a dish I have only tried overseas. It is jelly, but more than that. It has slight sweetness again, balanced with delicate osmanthus flowers, and a texture that is firmer than you expect. Adding to this it is a fantastic way to aid digestion after a fair amount of rich food.

Tonic medlar and osmanthus cake

Tonic medlar and osmanthus cake

There is one main issue with THW and it has nothing to do with the wait, or the food. Describing the tea as “peasant tea” would be kind to it. I’m not sure what is going on, but the tea is nothing like we enjoyed in good quantities around Hong Kong (including at THW Central), or indeed at our locals like Tao Tao House in Hawthorn. I can’t work it out but there is no two ways about it, it is hard to drink.

There is a fever about THW in Chatswood and I’m glad. It is exciting to have world renowned restaurants entering the Australian market, and it is great to see the reception provided. The logistics behind this operation are too staggering to think about. They are turning over around one hundred people every hour (that is an understatement). It is an honour for Australia to accept a THW branch and it is fantastic to see they are delivering on the experience they no doubt want to duplicate from the other side of Asia.

Tim Ho Wan on Urbanspoon

Impressions of Hong Kong – December 2014

Eight nights and eight days of eating in the intersection of the world’s palates is a luxury of tastes, textures and amazement. While the most culinarily diverse place on Earth is Australia, Hong Kong has food that is true to its origins, mashed with some of the best the rest of the world has to offer.

Tim Ho Wan waiting area in Hong Kong Station

Tim Ho Wan waiting area in Hong Kong Station

What the rest of the world has to offer is at a high expense given the challenges of bringing ingredients across from other continents. What Hong Kong brings in local Asian, particularly Chinese, is remarkable and remarkably cheap for travellers. There is a Michelin starred restaurant that you can eat at, and be fully satisfied, for around A$15 a person in Tim Ho Wan (several branches), but there is so much more than that.

Chicken congee

Chicken congee

I tried my first congee at Hong Kee Congee Shop, a little east of Causeway Bay, in an enclave that is worth discovering (Tin Hau). That was A$5. And it was divine. We had Hainanese chicken rice in Kowloon at Good Satay for A$7 after an arduous trek in search for several other restaurants that had closed. It was prepared with monotonous experience and it was fantastic.

Hainanese chicken rice

Hainanese chicken rice

We went out to dim sum at busy, dynamic, horrible shopping centre train stations; in gorgeous, ornate, glamorous rooms purpose built; and in places that almost spoke of their transformation into gastrotemples. We ate noodles on the 12th floor of Hysan Place shopping centre at Ho Hung Kee; and in holes in the wall like Mak’s Noodles with facilities you would have rather not discovered. They were there because of the skill of the chefs and the dedication of the staff and owners.

Honey glazed barbecue pork at West Villa

Honey glazed barbecue pork at West Villa

Many places have lost their soul through redevelopment and relocation. Really lost soul. But the food speaks to some of what is left behind from the loss. Some you don’t have a clue they are restaurants and then you walk into another world. Some, like West Villa, you find are on top of Dior et al and are probably a shell of what they were before relocating, that is but for the incredible food.

Decadence at Lee Gardens

Decadence at Lee Gardens

It is hard for me, having not been here for ten years, to fathom the change this city has seen. It is one thing to see a place a decade apart. Actually living through that change would be exciting, scary and difficult. One of my most powerful experiences was happening upon the protest camp in Admiralty. I believe in what they are doing, and luckily I don’t need to fight for these types of freedoms in Australia, or sleep on six lane highways that look more like the Walking Dead set in Atlanta. Desperately sad but extremely important for HK.
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The money in this city has staggered me for the first time having visited as a child, and as a young adult previously. Sure, you can eat cheaply and very well, but what I consider conveniences in Australia like quality and reasonably priced Italian, French, breakfast, coffee, beer, wine and cocktails, is very difficult or impossible to find.

The dessert trolley at Grissini!

The dessert trolley at Grissini!

Instead we had a delightful Italian meal at Grissini, but really paid for it considering lunch is comparatively cheap. Well I haven’t recently paid almost A$300 for two people to eat an Italian lunch recently! At least the food, service and wine were quality.

Duck with raspberry sauce and lentils at Grisini

Duck with raspberry sauce and lentils at Grisini

The best meal, not surprisingly to anyone who has heard of this restaurant, was Lung King Heen. It is really, really expensive. But it is really deserving of its accolades and it is an impeccable example of taking tradition and finding a modern edge without overdoing it. The subtlety is deafening. As is the complexity.

Braised abalone cube with star garoupa fillet in supreme oyster sauce

Braised abalone cube with star garoupa fillet in supreme oyster sauce

I learned a great deal from this trip. You can find exquisite French patisseries in HK, around the corner from cafés that do a single origin natural Ethiopian, down the road from one starred dim sum, across from an old Pawn Shop that is serving locally brewed IPA a few lanes down from egg tarts that there are lines for! It is like Flinders Lane but has the beauty of not knowing how great it is.

Fake security cameras at the entrance of Pawn! - Passions patisserie in Wan Chai - Kam Fung Cafe has amazing egg tarts - you can find brilliant coffee

Fake security cameras at the entrance of Pawn! – Passions patisserie in Wan Chai – Kam Fung Cafe has amazing egg tarts – you can find brilliant coffee

I learned that sipping tea at dim sum definitely aids digestion; that you cannot judge HK food by its cover; there is extreme competition in some places that creates happy hours that should be renamed crazy hours; that drinking 118 floors up in the air is cool (and cold outdoors); and that sometimes the view and the cake are better than the weak cocktails (at A$35 a pop!)

Banana split cake at Suvva - Happy hour Southside at Lily - Fook Lam Moon's decadent room

Banana split cake at Suvva – Happy hour Southside at Lily – Fook Lam Moon’s decadent room

In the end, there is no doubt this is the New York of Asia without some of the facade that you can experience in some of the greatest cities that I also love. Even with low levels of English speaking in many places you receive hospitality and respect that I wish we could offer across the board in Australia. All this when I know intuitively that these people, so many of them, are really struggling to make ends meet. If this place is expensive to me, imagine paying the constantly increasing rent (and other expenses) on low incomes, and not knowing the future of your great city.
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Hong Kong is a city I am comfortable in. It is inviting, intriguing, and indulgent. Just be prepared for the associated expense and be open to the restaurant that doesn’t look or feel like home. You are a world away.