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Restaurant Ratings

The ratings are based mostly on the degree to which the food excites us, and a little on environment, service, and other considerations. I rate restaurants relative to all other restaurants in the New Orleans area. Here's what the stars mean to me:

starstarstarstarstar
Among the best locally.

starstarstarstar
Excellent and ambitious.

starstarstar
Worth crossing town for.

starstar
Recommended.

*
Acceptable.

No star
Unacceptable.

Cost Ratings
Each dollar sign indicates a ten-dollar range, including a normal meal for the restaurant (dinner, if they serve other meals), not including drinks, or tips. So, for example. . .

1$--$5-15
2$--$15-25
3$--$25-35

. . . and so on, with no upper limit. While this scheme may suggest mathematical precision, know that perception of price varies from diner to diner as much as the star ratings do. So consider this an estimate.

All reviews are based entirely on meals I have personally taken at the restaurant and paid for from my own pocket. I don't take free review meals, nor am I reimbursed by anybody for my restaurant expenditures.

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Trey Yuen

Chinese.
Mandeville: 600 Causeway Blvd. 985-626-4476. Map.
Hammond: U.S. 51 North at Columbus Dr., 504-345-6789. Map.
Lunch Sunday-Friday. Dinner seven nights.
Nice Casual
AE DC DS MC V
Website

WHY IT'S NOTEWORTHY
No major restaurant attracts as wide a range of customers on the North Shore as does Trey Yuen. Diners converge from all over the area, even Baton Rouge. Few local Chinese restaurants can match its kitchen for versatility and ambition; almost none are even close in terms of surroundings. In its specialties (anything with seafood or tong cho sauce), it's consistently excellent.

WHY IT'S GOOD
The Wong brothers--all of whom are chefs--emphasize fresh, local food, particularly in the seafood department. Trout, alligator, soft-shell crabs, crawfish, local shrimp and oysters--all of them figure prominently. They introduced tong-cho sauce to the area, which right there set the place apart. (It's a translucent, sweet-heat sauce that seems to go with anything.) The bar, wine list, and desserts are also significantly better than standard Chinese restaurants offer.

BACKSTORY
Trey Yuen set new standards for New Orleans Chinese restaurants when it opened in 1981. Until then, even the best Chinese places were essentially neighborhood cafes, slinging the food out in minimal surrounding at minimal prices. The Wong brothers, who had been successful in Hammond for years, built an impressive restaurant in Mandeville (and, a few years later, another one in Hammond). They made up a much more ambitious menu than had previously seen hereabouts, and defined themselves (quite rightly) as gourmet chefs. Since then, all Chinese restaurants have been compared with it.

DINING ROOM
An impressive domed dining room, flanked by two smaller rooms with windows giving onto the lush, exotic Asian gardens planted outside. The dining areas are extensively furnished with genuine Chinese antiques. The service staff is on the young side and not always up to speed on the fine points of the food. But the Wongs are always there, and they can explain everything.

ESSENTIAL DISHES
Spring rolls (with pork or vegetables).
Pot stickers.
Spicy chicken wings.
Hot and sour soup.
Moo shu pork, chicken, or vegetables.
Tong cho duck, seafood combination, chicken, or pork.
Scallops imperial.
Szechuan alligator.
Honey pecan shrimp.
Crawfish with lobster sauce.
Steamed or fried whole fish.
Soft-shell crabs any style.
Shrimp and crawfish in a cloud.
Dragon boat flounder.
Lobster with black bean sauce.
Smoked tea duck.
Presidential chicken.
Spicy lemon chicken.
Choo-choo chicken (fried, spicy).
Braised spicy lamb.
Steak kew.
Black pepper steak.
Braised tofu with fancy vegetables.
Kung po tofu (spicy).
Lotus banana.

FOR BEST RESULTS
Go for dinner rather than lunch. Ask whether dishes are stir-fried rather than deep-fried; the latter seems to be taking over the chicken department in particular. And for goodness sake, forget about all those old dishes you've eaten in every other Chinese restaurant of your life, and get something new.

OPPORTUNITIES FOR IMPROVEMENT
The Wongs have the ability to produce the most innovative Chinese cooking in the area, but the menu has been static for too long. They need to work up some new dishes and specials.

FACTORS OTHER THAN FOOD
Up to three points, positive or negative, for these characteristics. Absence of points denotes average performance in the matter.

SPECIAL ATTRIBUTES

This review was updated with new information on 3/16/2010.


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