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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, January 7, 2007

Hong Kong's fusion food an acquired taste

By Sylvia Hui
Associated Press

HONG KONG — In a nod to steak house tradition, sirloins served at Hong Kong's Goldfinch Restaurant are accompanied by a sauce and a side. But don't go looking for American-style sauce and the ubiquitous baked potato with sour cream.

This is the wonderfully weird world of Canto-Western cuisine. The meat arrives on a sizzling iron plate, smothered with a soy sauce and garlic gravy that bubbles furiously. The side? Fried rice with egg and peas.

It may sound odd to Western palates, but at this Hong Kong restaurant, it's the only right way to eat steak.

For decades, waiters have served up dishes best described as Western fare with Chinese flair: borscht spiked with soy sauce, wok-fried spaghetti with meat sauce, and a watery cream of corn soup with strips of pink ham floating in it.

Canto-Western cuisine grew out of the numerous steak houses and other Western-style restaurants that opened during the '60s and '70s in Hong Kong, in those days a British colony.

At the time, the food — which acquired the nickname "see yauh sai chan," or "soy-sauce Western" — was a novelty. For locals, the restaurants were a more affordable and relaxed experience than authentic Western eateries, which catered mostly to expatriates.

"You could call this Hong Kong's earliest fusion food," said Lau Kin-wai, Hong Kong Economic Journal food columnist.

"Chinese people were trying to handle what they saw as exotic food at the time. They were applying their own flavors and culture to the Western dishes they were exposed to," he said.

But as Hong Kongers have developed more sophisticated tastes, once-classy venues such as Goldfinch — at one time the only option for a steak or pasta — have become quaint relics.

"In the past, this was one of the very few upmarket Western restaurants around. It wasn't so easy to come in here," says Wong Kin-wing, a Goldfinch manager. "Only people with some money could afford to, and they only came for special occasions, like Christmas."

But today, high-end Western foods are widely available, he says. And that leaves the few remaining soy-sauce Western restaurants trying to capitalize on their nostalgic appeal. And it seems to be working.

Goldfinch, which opened in 1962, has become popular again after Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai chose its dark and musty interior as the backdrop for a romanticized '60s in his sultry "In the Mood for Love," as well as for a scene in the movie "2046."

Soy-sauce Western meals typically begin with soup served with a sweet bun, or a salad of prawns and fruit that comes with a dollop of salad cream, similar to mayonnaise. Dessert usually is something old-fashioned, such as ice cream or sweet milk over orange gelatin.

The main course typically is a sizzle-plate steak with fried rice, spaghetti or fries. Other popular mains include a fried rice that is baked with a layer of a cream or tomato-based sauce.