411111MINIMINIMINIMMNIIMMIIIMINMPW . 30 , tf .) riday, January .41 13 1984 PasgOv-ei -cle'v-el-Oped from two separate holidays: Hag Hamatzot, the Festival of Unleavened Bread, and Hag Hapesach, the Festival of the Paschal Lamb. —Alfred Kolatch THE Dy'ROIVJRIRI! Expancied- Hoiirs for Dental Clinic The dental clinics of Oak- 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. For information contact land County Health Di- vision will now be open the dental clinic, Oakland until 8 p.m. on Mondays. County Health Division, Regular daytime hours are 424-7036. Danny Raskin 'S rThe Best of Everythi;g1 FOR YEARS, the only Chinese cooking familiar to Americans was Cantonese . . . introduced by first group to emigrate here . . . but the beginning of 1970s marked a revolution in American awareness of other Chinese cuisines . . . varying wildly according to unique ingre- dients and seasonings found in each region of that huge country. New diplomatic relations sparked an American fasci- nation with chinoiserie .. . and the preoccupation with natural foods has added to an interest in Chinese cook- ing, which is generally less fattening and more easily digested than American or European food . . . Meat dishes contain a relatively small amount of beef, chic- ken, etc. . . . thinly sliced or finely shredded, mixed with fresh vegetables. Cream and butterfat aren't used in Chinese cook- ing, and the amounts of oil are minimal . . . Rice is a good source of carbo- hydrates and protein .. . and contains fewer calories than similar amounts of potatoes or pasta. Toot Regardless of the geo- graphical region, all 1920's BIG. CITY BRUNCH Chinese chefs prepare food stir- or deep-fried, steam- with Doug Jacobs & ing, stewing or red-cooking (cooking slowly with large THE amounts of soy sauce), RED MARTEN. creating four main cuisines BAND of China: Cantonese . . . The EVERY SUNDAY 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. cuisine of southeastern Adults $9.95 Senior Citizens $7.95 China. Rice is the basic Children under 12 $5.25 grain. Canton is a coastal port, so seafood is an impor- Cali 559-6500 for Reservations tant part of the diet . . . Dis- Michigan inn • 16400 J.L. Hudson Dr. • Southfield, MI 48075 hes tend to be somewhat bland or sweet. Szechuan and Hunan . . . The hot and spicy cuisine of western China .. . Very hot peppers predomi- nate . . . Hunan is a more rural cuisine (fewer elabo- 3920 GRAND RIVER Free Parking TE 3-0700 OPEN 11-12:45 a.m. MON.-SAT. rate sauces) for hard- 12-12 . 45 a.m. SUN. Private Banquet Rooms for wedding parties. working peasants with Famous Chop Suentonese Food • Steaks • Chops • Sea Food Serving the World's Finest Steaks, Chops and CARRY OUT SERVICE EASY PARKING hearty" appetites . . . Por- CHOP HOUSE Sea Foods for more than 50 years. All Beef aged 322 W McNICHOLS. Bet. Woodward & Second 868-7550 tions are large . . . by in our cellars. Chinese standards . . . and even the chopsticks are longer and heavier than dining room, carry-out and trays SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE & AMERICAN elsewhere in China. • lunch • dinner breakfast • Mon.-Thurs., 11-10, Fri. & Sat. 11-11, Sun. 12-10 Mandarin ... Generally after-theater • kiddie menu • describes the cooking of CARRY OUT • CATERING EILLaartTiriiiA open tuesdays thru sundays northern China . . . Wheat 8410 W. NINE MILE, W. of Livernois 544-1021 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. replaces rice as the main lincoln shopping center, 101/2 mi. & greenfield. oak park 968-0022 grain . . . Thin pancakes and noodles are popular .. . -Dishes are oilier and gener- OPEN 7 DAYS YOUR HOST: HOWARD LEW A Tradition ally milder compared with SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE "UAL -7-016444/ AND AMERICAN FOOD Since 1934 western regional cooking t COMPLETE 24480 W. 10 MILE (IN TEL-EX PLAZA) . . . lamb, chicken and duck sine eaning and Lockiaih CARRY-OUT West of Telegraph 353-7848 1 the prime sources of protein AVAILABLE Fred Bayne at the organ nightly . . . There aren't many ex- 1128 E. Nine Mile Road (1 1/2 Mile East of 1-75) clusively Mandarin restau- (313) 541-2132 Restaurant Remoulded by AAA & Mobile Guides rants in the United States, 22106 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE In A & P Shopping Center although most establish- Specializing in DINE IN & CARRY-OUT ments include some Manda- 398-5502 or 398-5503 Cantonese Food rin dishes on their menus. SZECHUAN, MANDARIN, CANTONESE & AMERICAN CUISINE Open Daily 11 to 10:30, Sat. 11 to 12 Mid., Sun. 12 to 10:30 Shanghai . . . The OPEN 7 DAYS—Mot.-Thors. 11-10, Fri. & Sat. 11-11, Soo. & Holidays 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. Carry Out Service Free Parking cuisine of eastern China .. . 547-4663 • Banquet Facilities 13715 W. 9 MILE ROAD, OAK PARK Your Chef: FRANK ENG Most of the trained chefs ••••• OPEN 7 DAYS from China come from e l iliiilitili A WEEK Shanghai, Szechuan and Mandarin. Szechuan & Cantonese ood Hunan restaurants . . . Sea- 26196 GREENFIELD, LINCOLN CENTER, OAK PARK food makes up a large part Mon.-Thurs. 11 to 10:30 968-3040 VI SERVING YOUR FAVORITE EXOTIC; 3350 Auburn Rd. of the diet . . . Ingredients Fri. 11 to 11. Sat. 11 to 12 Carry-Out Service 852.8280 lei DRINKS & CHOICE COCKTAILS Sun. 12 noon to 10 are usually shredded, un- N. Catering To Parties Available Exotic Cocktails lei PRIVATE DINING ROOM like the northern cuisine, 18 1 MN lei I • BANQUETS • PARTIES • BUSINESS MEETINGS I MIO which uses larger pieces. 18 I MB UM ;Si Latest to join the parade Your host ... HENRY LUM 1m. lac of Mandarin, Szechuan, etc. 181 gm. Businessmen's Luncheons • Carry outs • Catering 1118 EXPRESSLY FOR YOUR DINING lair is Wing Hong at both his lo- 35135 Grand River, Farmington =I UN cations . . . 10 Mile and lei len. (Drakeshire Shopping Center) 476-9181 181 WM Southfield . . . and Orchard at Lake Rd. and 14 Mile . . . At the Wing's Southfield site, it • Owned & Operate• combines with Cantonese of Sy 1A4yy & so many years . . . In West &Mph•• Too Mo• Bloomfield, it is added to 24535 W. 12 MILE RD. AT TELEGRAPH Cantonese . . . and Japanese • Private Dining Room • Businessmen's Luncheons dining. MON.-THURS. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. NOW FEATURING The Best. The Biggest. THE BRUNCH. TAKE ME FAMILY OUT TO DINNER KOW KOW INN . CARL'S FUNG LIM'S THE GOLD COIN — GOLDEN BOWL HOA KOW INN TT TT. E GPEAT WALE I'. KING LIM'S GARDEN NEW KING LIM'S FLOWN IN FRESH ENGLISH DOVER SOLE KINGSLEY INN 642-0100 CHINA CITY FRI. & SAT. 11 a.m.- 12 mid. SUN. 12 noon-10:30 p.m. • COMPLETE CARRY - OUT 354-9077 SPECIAL COMBINATION PLATE ALMOND BONELESS CHICKEN WITH WON TON SOUP, EGG ROLL, $350 FRIED RICE & TEA PUS OTHER SPECIALS FROM $2.50 M $3.85 SERVED ANYTIME 7 DAYS 119ra GreeitNichteut... TrY WAV/ ► C, GIN" EAMCIAC MANDARIN & SZECHUAN SPECIALTIES AT BOTH LOCATIONS • • • • • SIZZLING RICE SOUP HONG KONG STEAK MONGOLIAN BEEF TWICE COOKED BEEF SZECHUAN_BEEF SOUTHFIELD am W. 10 mill RD. & SOUTHFIELD RD. 569-5527 Mon.-Fri., 11 to 10:30 Saturday 11 to 1 Sunday 12 to 10 ALSO OUR CANTONESE FAVORITES • • • • • SZECHUAN CHICKEN SZECHUAN SHRIMP SZECHUAN SCALLOP HOUSE SPECIAL BEEF HOUSE SPECIAL CHICKEN FARMINGTON 31455 W. 14 MILE RD. I, ORCHARD LAKE RD. JAPANESE STEAK HOUSE 851-8600 M-Th. Lun. 11:30-2:30, Din: 5:30-10 Fri. & Sat. Dinner 61 12 Mid. Sun. 12-9 CANTONESE & NORTHERN CHINESE Sun. 11:30-4, Fri. & Sat. Din. 4 to 2 a.m. 851-7400 BEAUTIFUL GIOR- GIO'S in the Great Ameri- can Bldg. on Woodward in Birmingham, is dream of George Golematis- . who took over the former site of Tweeney's . . . Wood walls, table cloths, fresh flowers, alcove booths, lattice ceil- ing, modernistic design of woods and blue tones. This is the 109-seater that George oversees in all its European-look elegance .. He takes care of the floor chores, making certain ev- erything is correct . . . but don't let the business suit fool you . . . George still pre- pares all those delicious sauces himself . . . plus whatever prep work is necessary. The kitchen at Giorgio's is completely new . . . plus a huge semi-round ultra- modern grill for cooking in sight . . . presenting open cooking so much a favorite of many. Fine waiters like Mar- tin Wunder of Windsor provide an example of the courteous, efficient and personable ways that George has always insisted upon to go with his excellent food and most reasonable prices. About that pistachio cream pie George used to serve on Greenfield . . . yes, wife Maria still makes the delicious wonder. THERE'S INFORMAL modeling now during lunch every Thursday . . . at Stage and Co. on The Boardwalk, Orchard Lake Rd. just south of Maple . . . Fashions are from The Boardwalk shops . . . including Begadim, Marni's, Shayna's Place and The Clothes Pin. YOU'D EXPECT dishes out of the ordinary when TV Channel 7's Jack (of all trades) McCarthy puts on a party . . . and that's what the people got recently at Mr. Everything's Birming- ham public relations offices. Jarlsberg cheese spread with red onions and mayon- naise, by sisters Mary Beat- tie and Sue Litwin, McCar- thy cohorts; sesame beef balls with Grand Marnier sauce (plus lychee and loquats) prepared by excel- lent Chinese food authority and authoress Elizabeth Chiu King; curried chicken balls with toasted almonds, chutney, curry and chicken rolled in coconut by Sue; hot artichoke dip by Mary; crab and cream cheese dip by Mary; cheese-dough- wrapped stuffed green olives by Jack's gracious wife Carol; guacamole dip, nachos and botanas by Jack; salami and cream cheese stacks, meatballs in bar- becue sauce by another Mary, Mary Kelly, pr asso- ciate of Jack's. Also, caviar pie spread prepared by Sue, also an associate of Jack's (egg salad base with chopped on- ions and cream cheese, top- ped with black caviar and a bright red tomato rose); bourbon franks (all beef frankfurters cut into bite- size pieces and simmered in bourbon sauce); fresh veg- etable platter with sour cream and leek dip, and something Sue calls "Chicago Dip" because she discovered it in the Windy City . . . luscious cream cheese with chocolate chips, raisins and sour cream. From the 44-seater Cozy (Continued on Page 31)