Bruce Lee and the Oldest Chinese Restaurant in Seattle

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
  • One of the restaurants Bruce Lee frequented when he was living in Seattle is the oldest Chinese restaurant in Seattle today - Tai Tung 大同.
    Timestamps:
    0:37 Tai Tung
    0:57 Tai Tung 1960's
    2:58 Tai Tung now
    4:46 Ruby Chow's
    References:
    - • Bruce lee interview 1965
    - • Seattle 1955 HD - Home...
    - • HD TVB 人海孤鴻 李小龍 49秒 19...
    - • Oyster Sauce Beef at B...
    - • Dragon (The Bruce Lee ...
    - • Dragon: The Bruce Lee ...
    - Ruby Chow's Menu: digitalcollections.lib.washin...
    - Tai Tung Menu: www.worthpoint.com/worthopedi...
    - taitungrestaurant.com/

Комментарии • 19

  • @andyzhang7890
    @andyzhang7890 3 месяца назад +2

    Visited Tai Tung on my trip to Seattle 2 summers ago… I’ve heard Cantonese food where I live (Scarborough/Markham, Toronto) is some of the best in the world, but this place blew me away, their beef ho fun absolutely amazing

  • @ometofu
    @ometofu Год назад +2

    Keep doing what you doing! This is most awesome channel for Chinese American….. once you done in US. Go North for Canadian Chinese or south to Mexican Chinese. Pure Gold!

    • @AmericanChineseFoodShow
      @AmericanChineseFoodShow  Год назад

      Wow, that's one big compliment. I do think American Chinese food history is such an amazing way to tell part of our story. You're not the first person asking for some Canadian Chinese content, maybe I'll push that up after all (I have so many episodes lined up haha).

  • @relathan1
    @relathan1 Год назад +1

    Your videos get better and better! And they were great to start with!

    • @AmericanChineseFoodShow
      @AmericanChineseFoodShow  Год назад

      Aw, thanks! It's really nice to get feedback because I really don't know how I am doing with these videos. 🤣 I sure have fun making them!

  • @algernon5776
    @algernon5776 2 месяца назад

    What fantastic & entertaining channel.

  • @hultonclint
    @hultonclint 7 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, they also have Filipino lechón on the menu. Plus, the pancit is 粉丝, which means a special kind of pancit.
    I ate at Tai Tung 6 years ago, but it is funny: I don't remember this menu! I only remember that I order some green vegetable and some meat. I think they thought I was weird. I was laughing as the waiters furiously filled other customers' glasses with ice water, constantly. It made me remember the old-style restaurants of my childhood, where it seemed like waiters must have been told that "Americans" drink lots and lots of ice water, and you must refill their glasses even if they have taken only one sip! That was a showing of "good service," maybe meaning good tips!!! Sometimes it drove me crazy: You could not eat in peace because every time you took a sip of water, a waiter would swoop in to fill the glass. And everything was so icy. I am grateful, now, for "normal" Chinese service, where you just call the waiter if you want something :)

    • @AmericanChineseFoodShow
      @AmericanChineseFoodShow  7 месяцев назад +1

      OMG I completely didn't draw the connection between pancit and 粉絲! Haha, according to Yelp reviews, the "norma"l Chinese service now is rude service.

    • @hultonclint
      @hultonclint 7 месяцев назад

      @@AmericanChineseFoodShow Yes, those Yelpers think they are clever! Asian Americans / ABCs keep coming up with ideas and then they eventually spread to non-Chinese Americans, who think they have the "secret". Like: "If the reviews for a Chinese restaurant on Yelp are bad, it's actually a good restaurant; it just got rated poorly by non-Chinese reviewers who didn't "understand" that rude service is the mark of an "authentic" restaurant" Ha! Sometimes these ideas come close to feeling rather racist, other times they are more innocent but just silly. But I suppose that is getting off topic!
      More relevant, in my experience, is the evolving view of Chinese restaurants in America. I think the status of Chinese food as "comfort food" for Americans has stayed pretty constant. However, what has changed is that Chinese restaurants used to be a place to go where the diner felt like they were doing something *slightly* "fancy. Or rather, it was a modest level of fanciness that was in the reach of poorer or lower-middle class people, for whom a truly fancy dining experience was inaccessible. More recently, with these notions of authenticity grounded in things like "rudeness," the value has shifted from "working class elegance" to a sort of "it's quick and dirty, that's why we like it." I often see statements like "You can't get good Chinese food anymore," which is absurd because good Chinese restaurants in US are (arguably) easier to find than ever. What I think those people mean is that they used to get that "elegance" and now what they find, more often, is a Panda Express aesthetic-fewer waiters in vests filling water glasses on white linen tablecloths, etc. Quite possibly, they are correct to an extent: If we only look at American-style Chinese food, and ignore all of the excellent China-style restaurants, we find fewer that are cooking the America-style dishes with care. More often, America-style Chinese food is in fast food or careless restaurants (and this clientele has yet to discover the truly elegant China-style restaurants).

  • @davec3964
    @davec3964 Год назад

    Nice bit of history! Thanks for the episode, keep up the great work!

  • @sergea6446
    @sergea6446 Год назад +1

    Wonderful job like always!

  • @user-os4ze1mj8k
    @user-os4ze1mj8k 3 месяца назад +1

    i love the Menu Price...... he....

  • @art0925
    @art0925 4 месяца назад

    I think Tai Tong has the look of an old style Chinese American restaurant. But over the years, some of their menu items cater to the Chinese palates have evolved to a similar offerings comparable to the rest of the ChInatown/ International District (ie: modern Toisanese flavor which is much stronger taste then what we Hong Kongers used to back home).
    I remember 20+ years ago they have Beef and Tomato Rice (茄牛飯) on the menu, which I think was the best I had in town. However, went back again recently and it's no longer available.

    • @AmericanChineseFoodShow
      @AmericanChineseFoodShow  19 дней назад

      They have the tomato sauce beef, I am not surprised it's not the same anymore. I know exactly what you mean by 茄牛飯. We just have to make the food at home if we want to recreate what we ate when we were kids back in HK.

  • @skiboy1046
    @skiboy1046 3 месяца назад

    👍❤️

  • @pamallinder3287
    @pamallinder3287 14 дней назад

    Everything changed for us in the international district, its to dangerous to attend cid