Kung Fu Restaurants & Bars

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQ65DM8c1I4

the most famous bao zi is gou bu li from Tian Jin

Gou zi was a boy abandoned by his father. He made good bao zi. it was so popular that many people came and waited in line. He was so busy that he ignored them. thus gou bu li.

Yuan Shi Kai was training new army officers for Qing at Tian Jin.

Yuan liked it much. He presented it to empress Ci Xi. She liked it, too. It became an imperial item.

nowadays, they imported flour from cananda and australia. and mixed them half and half to make the dough.

if you are really into money making, try start a chain in your country.

:cool:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7GEAm8DCxY&feature=related

lin chong vs lu zi shen

:slight_smile:

More on Kung Fu Tacos

I got to follow there tweets and find this truck…

Social networking driving lunch trucks
Monday, October 05, 2009 | 7:05 AM
By Kristen Sze

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) – From the East Bay, to San Francisco, to the Peninsula, it seems everywhere you look - there’s a sudden explosion in lunch trucks. But these are not your father’s lunch trucks; they are serving up innovative cuisine and driving in profits, thanks to social networking.

Roast duck with mango salsa and grilled chicken with garlic ginger sauce, doesn’t sound like your standard taco toppings. But then again, Kung Fu Tacos in San Francisco’s Financial District, is not your standard food truck.

“We took traditional Chinese flavors, married it with traditional Mexican tacos,” said Jonathan Ward of Kung Fu Tacos.

But there’s nothing traditional about Kung Fu Tacos’ business approach; its part of a new generation of lunch trucks in the Bay Area, serving high-end cuisine, in what used to be thought of as the lowest of culinary purveyors.

In San Francisco, there is Spencer on the Go, operated by French restaurant Chez Spencer; where you can nosh on escargot, sweetbreads or frog legs and curry. In Emeryville, there’s Seoul on Wheels, cooking up tacos with Korean barbeque meat, garnished with daikon and cream.

“It’s so awesome food trucks showing up. Because they’re so delicious, they seem like they’re exploring new food territory,” said customer Kelly Booth.

Bay Area foodies indulging their champagne tastes on a beer budget are gobbling up the entrees almost always priced under $10.

“It’s good in a recession. That’s for sure,” said customer Chris Kilkes.

The recession is one factor in the sudden explosion of food trucks. Many cooks with a dream can’t afford to open a restaurant, but can buy a truck for under $20,000. And once they have that truck, they go straight into fast lane of the information super highway. This new wave of food truck operators is using tech to grow their business, using Twitter to spread the word on the promotions, locations and more.

It makes sense given the co-owners of Kung Fu Tacos and the operator of Seoul on Wheels has all worked in high-tech. They send out daily tweets, each has nearly 1,000 followers.

“I might decide to do a special the night before or the day of, so it’s a really good way for me to let people know, come to get this, it’s really tasty,” said Seoul on Wheels owner Julia Yoon.

“When I do our night gigs, we tweet about that usually a couple days ahead of time, so people have time to plan,” said Ward.

And if you ask customers, many say they’re here because of what they read on Yelp, Facebook or Twitter.

“My buddy put it up on Facebook. So I looked it up online and saw it was only five blocks away,” said customer Jamie Abenojar.

These haute cuisine trucks are well aware social networking can also destroy them, if customers have a negative experience. They say that’s why they work hard to keep their trucks clean, their food fresh and just as important, their Twitter accounts active.

“I think I might have been successful, but it might have taken longer. It’s like tweet of mouth, instead of word of mouth. It’s just faster, it’s just instant,” said Yoon.

San Francisco’s famous upscale Vietnamese restaurant, Slanted Door, is even planning to start a lunch truck. Charles Phan tells the Wall Street Journal, the business would allow customers to observe the food.

On the WSJ now

Time to grab one of those Real Kung Fu t-shirts with Bruce on it. Because if I was Shannon, I’d be working at shutting their copyright infringing asses down pronto.

* October 23, 2009, 4:25 AM ET

Real Kung Fu, But Not Real Bruce Lee

Today’s WSJ looks at efforts by Bruce Lee’s family to turn the martial arts star into a global brand on par with Elvis Presley and James Dean, more than 26 years after his death. Mr. Lee’s daughter, Shannon, has set up licensing and production companies and consulted with the estates of other celebrities for advice on how to keep a deceased icon alive.

But while Mr. Lee’s image has been officially licensed for use by a range of companies, from jeansmaker Lucky to Nokia (which used it to promote a mobile phone with this inventive commercial),there are plenty of unlicensed image floating around on T-shirts, posters and other memorabilia.

In China, a domestic fast-food chain known as Real Kung Fu (, zhen gongfu in Mandarin) may not use a literal image of Bruce Lee as part of it’s brand, but it’s hard not to associate the company with the legendary martial artist.

The chain, based in the south China city of Guangzhou, uses as its logo an image of dark haired man in a kung fu pose, wearing a yellow top that looks a lot like the famous yellow track suit worn by Mr. Lee in the posthumously-released Game of Death. Many of the chain’s 300-plus restaurants across China feature large, black and white murals of a man who bears a strong, albeit blurry, resemblance to Mr. Lee.

A spokeswoman for Zhen Gongfu said the company did not engage in discussions with Mr. Lee’s family before using the images and added that they are not meant to represent Bruce Lee.

In that case, it seems we have a shanzhai Bruce Lee on our hands, and just because it’s Real Kung-Fu doesn’t mean it’s real Bruce Lee

The food is perhaps a bit more authentic (by fast food standards) with a Cantonese twist. On the menu: steamed chicken and mushrooms, egg custard with preserved pork and fish ball noodle soup.

I really want one of you NYCers to try this place…

…in fact, if one of you posts a review on this thread and then IMs me your address, I’ll send you something cool like an ugly Bruce Lee patch or a headband or something. :wink:

In Which We Finally Try Kung Fu Bing
By Sarah DiGregorio in DiGregorio, Featured
Monday, Nov. 2 2009 @ 12:01PM

When Fork in the Road first walked by the still-under-construction Kung Fu Bing, it aroused our curiosity. What’s a bing? (It’s the Mandarin word for “pancake.”) What’s a kung fu bing? (A bing with so much MSG that you might completely tweak out after eating it.) And why the attack panda, brandishing chopsticks? We still don’t know the answer to that.

After the place opened, Joe DiStefano went and checked it out for Serious Eats, and reported back that it was greasy, gave him an MSG hangover, and was just generally wrong. But he had chosen the sausage and cheese filling, and that, surely, was his mistake. The bing is a greasy, flaky flatbread, much like a paratha or a roti canai. Filling it with more grease is too much. So we went and blithely ordered a bing filled with an egg, plus the standard lettuce and tomato.

In front of the griddle is a large window that looks out onto the street. An old man pressed his nose up onto the glass and stared at the Kung Fu Bing counterwoman for a good 10 minutes, as though she were a zoo exhibit. It wasn’t a terribly interesting show: The woman forked up a round of dough from a container, and put it on the the large griddle. She took an unmarked spice shaker and shook out a bunch of some sort of seasoning onto the bread. The she cracked an egg and dispensed a large amount of the seasoning onto that as well. After a while, the bread puffed up and became golden. She put the egg in the pancake, folded it up with lettuce and tomato, and added several more vigorous shakes of the seasoning.

The egg kung fu bing is not actually very substantial, and at $3 it borders on overpriced. Still, it was reasonably tasty–the bread stretchy, light, and oily, although there’s no sign of the scallion that’s reportedly supposed to be in there. The seasoning imparted a deep, meaty, hard-to-pin-down flavor that must have been pure MSG. Now, we love MSG. It makes things taste good. But ingesting about a tablespoon of pure MSG? That is not something you want to do. Heart racing, extremities tingling, we scurried back to the Voice offices.

Kung Fu Bing strikes again! And apparently, there are plans for the panda to spread around town. Eeek!

79 Division Street
212-226-2838

for the panda alone… I am so gonna check it out

Awesome!

We look forward to your review.

I’m thinking a kamikaze headband would look mighty fine on you, lkfmdc.

Kung Fu Kitchen and Sushi? WTF?

Kung Fu Kitchen and Sushi is a lot like Ninja Restaurant and Dim Sum…:rolleyes:
So if you’re ever in Miami…

Hell’s Kitchen Alum Joshua Wahler Now Executive Chef of Kung Fu Kitchen at Catalina
By Jackie Sayet in Restaurant News

Being shown the door by Gordon Ramsay is like facing the martial arts whoopass of Jackie Chan in Brett Ratner’s Rush Hour series, only a bit more brutal.

Josh Wahler, a former contestant of Hell’s Kitchen 3 (quite possibly its best season on record,) survived one such exit rather elegantly, and has now samboed his way from Doral’s 5300 Chop House into the role of executive chef of Kung Fu Kitchen and Sushi at The Catalina Hotel and Beach Club. New breakfast, lunch and dinner menus will launch in three weeks.

“I left my last employer at the end of August because I was looking for a new challenge leading up to the season,” says Wahler. "This amazing opportunity presented itself with open arms. There is a single unified vision for this restaurant between our ownership and management.

We are going to shake up the South Beach culinary community with our new and innovative menu, experienced front of house management and extraordinary atmosphere that will make Kung Fu a destination restaurant."

Sounds like strict corporate messaging to us, but hopefully Wahler will flex culinary creativity worthy of the restaurant’s name. Stay tuned, folks.

Kung Fu Kitchen and Sushi
(305) 674-1160
1732-1756 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach

Another restaurant to review

Now this place sounds freaking great… just like those ninja restaurants.

Making a name in kungfu kitsch
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-12-04 11:42

Making a name in kungfu kitsch

Down a small, dusty side street next to a couple of convenience stores and several new highrise apartment buildings in Haidian district sits a bamboo shack that appears anachronistically out of place.

It is meant to look that way.

The shabby structure is home to Feng Bo Zhuang, a kungfu-themed eatery intended to take diners on a martial arts-infused food journey back to a half-fantasized Chinese past filled with evil monks, heroic swordsmen and fair-skinned maidens.

The restaurant’s concept takes inspiration from famous martial arts author Louis Cha, known to his readers by his pen name Jin Yong. Virtually a literary movement, more genre than author, Cha’s novels of chivalry and romance have captured the imagination of millions of Chinese for more than half a century.

Since Feng Bo Zhuang was established in Hefei province in 2000, the restaurant has expanded exponentially across China. There are now 500 locations, 10 of which are in Beijing. The first overseas branch opened in Singapore last year.

All have a similar ambience. Light wooden walls are lined with ample kungfu kitsch: various swords and fighting sticks mixed with calligraphic banners and warrior-filled paintings.

Guests are expected to bang on a large, red drum to announce their arrival after which the wait staff, decked out in appropriate marshal arts garb, greet clientele as “swordsmen” and “swordswomen” and guide them to modest tables surrounded by low, and not exactly comfortable, wooden benches.

From there, the experience slides back further into China’s past. There are no menus. Instead, staff take it upon themselves to decide for the table what humble grub best suits the palates of kungfu masters who have entered from fighting modern-day battles on Beijing’s busy streets.

Making a name in kungfu kitsch

For four people, a spread of six dishes served on replicated ancient warrior pottery from Anhui province is usually selected. Rice-covered chunks of meat and egg, also known as “big power meatballs”, are always included in the mix.

Other popular selections include fried prawns, bean curd with chicken soup and a spicy fish soup with peanuts and broiled greens. The average price of a dish is around 25 yuan. For those looking to splurge, a platter of roasted donkey meat is available for 75 yuan.

These can all be washed down with a silver flask filled with the restaurant’s strong brew of homemade wine.

If any of the platters fail to suit the palates of guests, staff will eagerly replace them with another Chinese culinary creation at no extra charge (unwanted food is bizarrely disposed of in a trash can in front of guests).

Feng Bo Zhuang is frequented mostly by Chinese looking to relive at least a small piece of the kungfu fantasies that filled their childhood imaginations as well as recall a vast period of Chinese history that subtly floats underneath the country’s rapidly modernizing reality today.

A few foreigners come as well. However, for them, the experience may not be as endearing as it is for those longing to taste memories that transcend lifetimes, generations and entire chapters in time that make up the cultural lifeblood of the country itself.

Meng Jing contributed to the story

Add: No 75 Baofusi Road, Haidian district

Tel: 62652729

“big power meatballs” yea, there are some forum members here that could use a serving of those…:stuck_out_tongue:

[QUOTE=GeneChing;974478]Now this place sounds freaking great… just like those ninja restaurants.[/QUOTE]

…worth it for the roasted donkey platter alone!:eek:

There is one on 86th St in Brooklyn, N.Y.

hey Sam, we both know, the only REAL Kung-Fu restaurant was the “Bamboo Forest” in Chinatown…:smiley:

Kfk

Just in case you’re in FL and don’t have plans for NYE yet…

Catalina Hotel and Kung Fu Kitchen Host Chef’s Club and New Year’s Eve
By Jacob Katel in Coming Attractions, Food Industry
Tue., Dec. 29 2009 @ 11:30AM

There were no kicks fast as lightning, it wasn’t frightening, and the staff showed expert timing when the Catalina Hotel’s Kung Fu Kitchen and Sushi recently hosted South Florida’s Chef’s Club on their South Beach rooftop lounge.

Chef Josh Wahler, of Hell’s Kitchen fame, and Nobu South Beach and Los Angeles pedigree, is the new chef in charge at the Kung Fu.

He says, “Besides being a Jewish kid from northern Jersey, Asian food is what I do. I had a pair of chopsticks in my hand as soon as I could hold them.”

Chef Wahler prepared a variety of party snacks for his guest including sushi rolls, a salmon tartare and fried gyoza take on chips and dip, and fried pork dumplings.

The Catalina Hotel is hosting a Spam Allstars New Year’s Eve. A $95 all access pass gets you entry to three buildings, the Spam Allstars performing live, DJ’s spinning, a “lavish super buffet” from 8 p.m. to midnight, open bar, champagne toast and breakfast buffet.

Here are some more pics from the Chef’s Club dinner.

I don’t know about a kung fu restaurant, but how about a teahouse in Hangzhou?

Not quite a restaurant - a SALOON!

Kung Fu Saloon in Austin, TX, no less.

Monday, January 25, 2010, 12:30pm CST
Kung Fu Saloon, Haiti fundraising that’s fun
Austin Business Journal

West 6th Street entertainment venue Kung Fu Saloon will donate 25 cents to Haiti for every game played between Jan. 22 and Feb. 1, officials said recently.

The bar at 510 Rio Grande St. operates 19 vintage arcade games that cost a quarter per play. For the rest of the month, 100 percent of game proceeds will benefit the American Red Cross, which is leading several earthquake relief initiatives in Haiti.

“This is the least we can do to help those that have been affected by this unimaginable tragedy in Haiti,” Kung Fu co-owner Nick Adams said.

Kung Fu is also collecting new or used shoes that will be donated to Karavel Shoes and passed to Haiti earthquake survivors.

[QUOTE=GeneChing;968654]Kung Fu Kitchen and Sushi is a lot like Ninja Restaurant and Dim Sum…:rolleyes:
So if you’re ever in Miami…[/QUOTE]

well to be fair ~G, even with your great publication, and numerous others and the consternation of many a martial artist, many north american people can still not recognize the difference between various asian cultural practices, language, arts etc.

It’s all a hodge podge of asian people.

I’ve been in kungfu schools that have japanese stuff everywhere! Look at SD for instance, if that isn’t an asian dogs breakfast, then I don’t know what is.

No offense SD-ers, just pointing it out and adding that you guys aren’t the only ones who consistently make this gaff. There are plenty who mix and match as they see fit, make up characters and all sort of other outright falseness.

Who knows why. I think there is more revealed about the warped nature of humanity everyday. Especially when it comes to cooptation!

You forget, I’m Californian, David

We love fusion cuisine here in CA. Potstickers with nacho sauce? Yum. :stuck_out_tongue:

I just like to point out the distinctions. It makes me look more knowledgeable. :wink:

Meanwhile Real Kungfu seems to be doing well.

China, HK stocks gain in cautious session

HyComm Wireless Ltd (0499.HK) surged 18.54 percent, after it said it was in preliminary discussions with Stanley Choi and Cai Dabiao, founder of China’s “Real Kungfu” Chinese fast food chain, regarding the proposed formation of a consortium for acquiring Fu Ji Food and Catering Services (1175.HK).

[QUOTE=GeneChing;988639]We love fusion cuisine here in CA. Potstickers with nacho sauce? Yum. :stuck_out_tongue:

I just like to point out the distinctions. It makes me look more knowledgeable. :wink:

Meanwhile Real Kungfu seems to be doing well.[/QUOTE]

Do you have SUSHI LOCO out there?
“Combining The Asian Art Of Sushi With The Flavors Of The Southwest”

http://www.sushiloco.com/

potstickers with nacho cheese?

mmm, I’ve never tried that and probably am not that quick to want to, but if it was presented in front of me, I would try it.

still, I prefer the red wine vinegar with those.

as for distinctions, we had a guy training with us for about a year and who couldn’t/wouldn’t stop calling practice “karate class” lol.

poor guy.

anyway, as a martial artist, but not a career martial artist, I pretty much avoid conversations about it in mixed company these days. If someone isn’t already into kungfu, they’re not gonna get much reference to it or find much about it on my facebook page or that sort of thing.

I was running out of the kind of sighs that you let out when the 9000th person asks “kungfu? what’s that?” or “seafood? that’s a funny name for a teacher” or better when they get all racist, squint and brandish their front teeth and make some comment about my brack bert while calling me charie chan #1 son! :rolleyes:

But I digress…

Bumping this in support of hot meals at fair prices.

Actually, Real Kungfu is almost pricier than McDonalds. When you are living on China wages, these places are occasional treats. For tourists, however, I would really recommend Real Kungfu. Delicious hot Chinese food in a clean location. If you’ve never been to China you’ll understand when you arrive why this is such a breakthrough. AND it’s cool eat with Bruce Lee images all around you.

Thankfully for me, there are a host of copycat places that have sprung up that do the same for cheaper. Ate at a place today that offered meals the same sort of cool bowls as Real Kungfu and was exceptionally clean: a main dish of mushroom and chicken, a side of vegetables, soup and rice all for 16 yuan.

I think Real Kungfu could be a hit in America, as long as the prices were comparable to McDonalds.