At Peking Quick One, making Northern Chinese part of Tonawanda | Restaurants | buffalonews.com

2022-06-25 03:36:26 By : Mr. Owen Xu

Get what you need to know about Western New York's dining and bar scene, including restaurant openings and closings, delivered to your inbox every Wednesday.

Poached spicy slices of pork, crispy fish with jalapeno and sour cabbages stew with noodles at Peking Quick One.

Peking Quick One has expanded the definition of Chinese takeout for Tonawandans since 2010. As other businesses came and went in the plaza between Brighton and Eggert, the restaurant at 359 Somerville Ave. has been a steady beacon of Northern Chinese home cooking with an excellent Chinese-American program.

Owner Jinying Lin has shepherded her place through tough times, expanding takeout courier business to make up for the drop-off in dining room numbers from Chinese University at Buffalo students.

Owner Jinying Lin, left, and worker Wen Chen at Peking Quick One.

It’s counter service now, with food presented in takeout containers whether you’re sitting down to eat or not. Little else has changed. The fish tanks remain a balm to people waiting for takeout. Customers still help themselves to chopsticks and free tea, and pour water from pitchers in the dining room cooler.

The Chinese-American repertoire is fundamentally sound and priced to move. Get a load of the lunch deal: $6.95 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ($8.95 otherwise). That brings one of 25 entrees – like roast pork lo mein, General Tso’s chicken, or shrimp with broccoli – with a choice of white rice, vegetable fried rice or vegetable lo mein, plus spring roll or soup.

That said, what most thrills me here is the Northern Chinese offerings.

Split cucumber ($6.95), the cold marinated cucumber salad alive with garlic, chile, cilantro and toasty sesame oil, is so addictively refreshing that when my child away at college was homesick, I sent them an approximating recipe to ease their pain.

Marinated split cucumbers at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

Hot and spicy shredded beef ($10.95) is like marinated beef jerky Sichuan style, jacked with Sichuan peppercorn, anise and orange rind. It arrives in a corona of florescent tangerine-colored chile oil with matchsticked ginger as a vegetal crunch counterpoint to the meaty chew.

Hot and sour shredded potatoes ($7.95) and its less racy brother, stir-fried potatoes with green pepper ($7.95), demonstrate a quality of spuds only Chinese cooks have shown me: raw crunch. Matchsticked, then briefly poached, potato shreds are wokked for smokiness, then dressed with vinegar and chile oil. The effect is a vibrantly flavored pasta salad with snap.

Compared to other Northern Chinese specialists, Peking Quick One has a rudimentary dumpling department, from steamed pork with cabbage ($5.95) to fried pork, leek, shrimp ($8.45). Leekophiles will find big leek veggie fried dumplings ($7.95), a pair of empanada-sized turnovers, a happy place.

Pan-fried tofu with Egg at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

Chinese egg dishes are underappreciated as unchallenging and universally appreciated comfort food. Pan-fried tofu with egg ($8.95), a protein-packed omelet gently browned in a hot pan, made me wish for buttered toast. Stir-fried leek with egg ($8.95) adds an allium cast and tomatoes ($8.95), a Chinese homestyle touch. Stir-fried leek with dry tofu ($9.95) adds a chewier soybean curd, the texture of paneer.

Those are vegetarian triumphs, if you ask for no pork, but vegans can get fed well here, too. Potatoes, string beans minus pork, crispy cabbage, bok choy and mushroom, and an eggplant, green pepper and potato saute are available, along with General Tso’s tofu, and vegetables in garlic sauce.

Sour Cabbages Stew with Noodles at Peking Quick One.

Sour cabbages stew with noodles ($9.95) is one Peking Quick One dish that ought to appeal to Germans, Poles, Slavs and other sauerkraut-loving peoples of the world. Thick-sliced housemade fermented cabbage retains robust crunch after getting simmered with sliced pork and clear, chewy mung bean starch noodles, resulting in a tangy, satisfying munchfest.

Hot and chili chicken ($12.95) offers crispy chicken nuggets Sichuan style, coated in spices and fried twice, emerging half-hidden in a nest of whole chile peppers. The ensuing Easter egg hunt might challenge your chopstick skills, but there’s no finer bite than the last morsel emerging from the jetsam between your bamboo tips.

Hot and chili chicken at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

Poached spicy slices of pork ($12.95) is my other nomination for heat-seekers. Not for its blazing chile levels, but the flavor and sensations of carefully calibrated dual heats: tingly-numbing Sichuan peppercorn against resonant chile oil, a combination called “ma-la” in Chinese cuisine.

A chile oil slick hides cabbage, bean sprouts, sliced pork and chewy cellophane noodles, meant to be dragged out of the soybean-paste-enriched substrate, onto rice. (Not a soup. Do not drink.)

Poached spicy slices of pork at Peking Quick One in Tonawanda.

Less fiery, twice as rich, is spicy double-cooked pork ($12.95). That’s braised pork belly sliced and tossed in spices before meeting a hot pan, crisping amid a welter of chiles and garlic, plus an umami blast of fermented soybean paste. Bell peppers add vegetable bites, but this is some straight-up pig pleasure.

The big pig option is the braised pork hock ($15.95), a skin-on joint the size of a slow-pitch softball that’s been cooked so you can cut it with a spoon. Layers of skin, fat and meat give diners options.

Crispy fish in jalapeno ($12.95) offers impeccably fried slices of whitefish wok-fried with jalapeno chiles, a treatment whose texture survives takeout delays.

Crispy fish with jalapeno at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

From mild to wild, these homestyle Northern Chinese dishes are fun for the whole family, at budget-friendly prices, ready in about 20 minutes. It’s better than fast food: it’s Peking Quick One.

359 Somerville Ave., Tonawanda, 716-381-8730

Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Wednesday through Monday. Closed Tuesday.

Prices: lunch specials, $6.95; dinner combos, $8.95; entrees, $7.95-$15.95.

Wheelchair accessible: no, 6-inch step.

Send restaurant tips to agalarneau@buffnews.com and follow @BuffaloFood on Instagram and Twitter.

Get what you need to know about Western New York's dining and bar scene, including restaurant openings and closings, delivered to your inbox every Wednesday.

I am on a mission to find the best new sensations and old favorites. Send me a note and tell me about that dish I ought not to miss. I know I know nothing without my readers, who give me the clues to the buried treasure.

Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items.

One thing is for sure, Andrew Z Galarneau writes. "This ain’t your dad’s KFC."

These are restaurants, bakeries and an ice cream shop that folks in a local gluten-free support group on Facebook mentioned when asked: Where do people with celiac disease choose to eat out?

“When you’re here, you really feel like you’re at someone’s house drinking a beer.”

Here is Andrew Galarneau's highly personal list of places that go above and beyond in their culinary endeavors, making them addresses you might head to just for the eats.

In 1993, Virawat “Tim” Thavisin was a forerunner, introducing pad Thai and coconut curries to a populace whose knowledge of Thai culture was thin outside of a certain Yul Brenner movie. Now, with more than 50 restaurants in the Buffalo area offering or specializing in Thai cuisine, here’s what still sets Jasmine Thai apart.

As bars seek to offer beverage choices that appeal to more people, non-alcoholic drink options are becoming increasingly popular. Here are five Buffalo restaurants that have curated zero-proof options that are as flavorful as any craft cocktail.

Black Restaurant Week, organized by Buffalo Urban League Young Professionals for Sunday through June 19, highlights more than 50 Black-owned eateries.

"Getting to witness the metamorphosis of an operator from a food truck rookie to a restaurateur capable of not only cooking delicious food, but running a fully staffed and operational restaurant is as rare as hen’s teeth," writes Andrew Z Galarneau. "So there’s an extra ration of satisfaction in showcasing Casa Azul, the Mexican-inspired restaurant and bar at the corner of Allen and Elmwood, the former Cantina Loco space."

J.J. Richert, a chef whose work is distinctive and gutsy enough to be heard through the din, took over the kitchen at Soho in January.

Hot and chili chicken at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

Pan-fried tofu with Egg at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

Poached spicy slices of pork, crispy fish with jalapeno and sour cabbages stew with noodles at Peking Quick One.

Owner Jinying Lin, left, and worker Wen Chen at Peking Quick One.

Sour Cabbages Stew with Noodles at Peking Quick One.

Poached spicy slices of pork at Peking Quick One in Tonawanda.

Crispy fish with jalapeno at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

Marinated split cucumbers at Peking Quick One Chinese restaurant in Tonawanda.

Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device.