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Mandarin Chicken - Local Version Is Different
Posted on 2/24/15 at 7:33 pm
Posted on 2/24/15 at 7:33 pm
Saw Mandarin Chicken mentioned in another thread and was wondering how many here knew that the local (N.O./La.) was very different from what the rest of the country knows as "Mandarin Chicken".
From Fitzmorris: (NSFW due to racial slur)
From Fitzmorris: (NSFW due to racial slur)
quote:From a national perspective (Ask.com):
Mandarin chicken is fried chicken with a brown sauce–one made essentially with a roux and soy sauce as the main ingredients. How it became as popular as it is in New Orleans Chinese restaurants is hard to fathom. In the dark days when people were afraid of Chinese food, the Chinese restaurants came up with a dish that the round-eyes found unchallenging. People can get used to anything, and many of them developed a taste for this. So many people ask me for this that, in a weak moment, I got tips from a few chefs and concocted this.
quote:I know this because this is my wife's favorite (the local version) and I wanted to make it for her.
Q: What is Mandarin chicken?
A: Mandarin chicken is a recipe featuring seasoned chicken served in a mandarin sauce which frequently consists of various spices along with orange juice, orange marmalade and mandarin oranges. Mandarin oranges look like an orange but have a flatter shape.
This post was edited on 2/24/15 at 8:00 pm
Posted on 2/24/15 at 7:34 pm to Stadium Rat
Yup, it's one of my faves.
Posted on 2/24/15 at 7:51 pm to Stadium Rat
Mandarin Chicken is my go to when getting a Chinese food.
Posted on 2/24/15 at 8:56 pm to TypoKnig
I am a "local" perspective guy and prefer the dark brown sauce. Used to get it here in Lafayette at Tony's Canton City but he retired. What are your go to places in and around NOLA and/or the North Shore?
Posted on 2/24/15 at 9:05 pm to Stadium Rat
Pretty neat. Thanks for sharing
Mandarin chicken (local) is one of my go tos. I love that brown sauce.
Mandarin chicken (local) is one of my go tos. I love that brown sauce.
Posted on 2/24/15 at 9:33 pm to Stadium Rat
My wife made me read this thread to prove to me that other people like Mandarin chicken (brown style), because I always tell her that it sucks 

Posted on 2/24/15 at 9:37 pm to Epic Cajun
It does suck.
This post was edited on 2/24/15 at 9:38 pm
Posted on 2/24/15 at 9:50 pm to RetiredTiger
quote:
What are your go to places in and around NOLA and/or the North Shore?
I love Mandarin Chicken. It is not authentic chinese cuisine in the least but it is damn fine comfort food. The Chicken Fried Steak of the Chinese Restaurant world if you will. The freshest I have found on the Northshore is Empress just off Hwy 190 on Louis Prima Drive. I haven't been to Trey Yuen in years but I grew up eating it there and before that Hammond and it was always great. Royal China on Vets does great Dim Sum but also "normal" chinese well- always a good meal but rarely venture off the Dim Sum menu. I do however,from time to time, have a bite of my dad's Mandarin Chicken from there and it was damn good.
This post was edited on 2/24/15 at 9:52 pm
Posted on 2/25/15 at 9:27 am to BigAppleTiger
I agree and thank you!
Posted on 2/25/15 at 9:29 am to RetiredTiger
quote:
What are your go to places in and around NOLA
August Moon. It's my go to for American Chinese take out in general.
Posted on 2/25/15 at 10:12 am to Stadium Rat
Trey Yuen in Hammond is my go to spot when I want Mandarin Chicken. I will drive there from Baton Rouge because I have not found a place in BR that even comes close. I guess in a pinch I will go to China Express in BR. When in New Orleans I either go to China Doll on the Westbank or Five Happiness.
Posted on 2/25/15 at 10:17 am to TigerWise
Will have to try it as well,thank you.
Posted on 2/25/15 at 10:18 am to TigerWise
Will have to try it as well,thank you.
Posted on 2/25/15 at 10:24 am to BigAppleTiger
quote:
It is not authentic chinese cuisine in the least
Interesting TSO Chicken documentary on Netflix regarding things like this
Posted on 2/25/15 at 10:24 am to Stadium Rat
Shouldn´t it be lound eye?
Posted on 2/25/15 at 2:37 pm to Dandy Lion
Fitzmorris has a recipe for Mandarin Chicken on his website. Use it at your own risk. It's written by a man who despises the dish and the guy who puts tumeric, cardamom, nutmeg and wine in his New Orleans Hot Tamale recipe.
Posted on 2/25/15 at 3:16 pm to Stadium Rat
I have a recipe for Mandarin Chicken that was printed by FONGS on Williams Blvd.
Posted on 2/25/15 at 3:35 pm to lacajun069
Vic asked for this recipe, last printed in July of 2005. It was requested that year and months went by, until a reader in Ohio sent it with this note: "I am originally from Metairie. I used to go to Fong's Chinese Restaurant in Kenner, and they used to have the best Mandarin Chicken dish. They had the recipe posted on the wall as you exited the dining room, but that was 20 years ago."
Fong's Mandarin Chicken
EGG BATTER
2 cups flour
2 tablespoons cooking oil
2 eggs
1 cup cornstarch
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon Accent
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
3 drops yellow food coloring
2 cups water
Mix all ingredients in the two cups of water and let sit at room temperature for four hours, then refrigerate.
GRAVY
2 cups oil
1 cup flour
2 cups chicken broth
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon Accent
3 tablespoons Kitchen Bouquet
Heat oil and add flour; cook until brown. Add all other ingredients and simmer.
TO COMPLETE
Deboned chicken parts
Deep fat for frying
Shredded lettuce
Chopped green onion tops
Dip deboned chicken parts into batter and drop in deep fat (325 degrees) and cook five to 10 minutes. Cut chicken into bite-size pieces and place on a bed of lettuce topped with gravy and green onion tops.
Fong's Mandarin Chicken
EGG BATTER
2 cups flour
2 tablespoons cooking oil
2 eggs
1 cup cornstarch
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon Accent
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
3 drops yellow food coloring
2 cups water
Mix all ingredients in the two cups of water and let sit at room temperature for four hours, then refrigerate.
GRAVY
2 cups oil
1 cup flour
2 cups chicken broth
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon Accent
3 tablespoons Kitchen Bouquet
Heat oil and add flour; cook until brown. Add all other ingredients and simmer.
TO COMPLETE
Deboned chicken parts
Deep fat for frying
Shredded lettuce
Chopped green onion tops
Dip deboned chicken parts into batter and drop in deep fat (325 degrees) and cook five to 10 minutes. Cut chicken into bite-size pieces and place on a bed of lettuce topped with gravy and green onion tops.
This post was edited on 2/25/15 at 4:10 pm
Posted on 2/25/15 at 3:39 pm to lacajun069
Recipe for Mandarian Chicken...
Vic asked for this recipe, last printed in July of 2005. It was requested that year and months went by, until a reader in Ohio sent it with this note: "I am originally from Metairie. I used to go to Fong's Chinese Restaurant in Kenner, and they used to have the best Mandarin Chicken dish. They had the recipe posted on the wall as you exited the dining room, but that was 20 years ago."
Fong's Mandarin Chicken
EGG BATTER
2 cups flour
2 tablespoons cooking oil
2 eggs
1 cup cornstarch
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon Accent
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
3 drops yellow food coloring
2 cups water
Mix all ingredients in the two cups of water and let sit at room temperature for four hours, then refrigerate.
GRAVY
2 cups oil
1 cup flour
2 cups chicken broth
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon Accent
3 tablespoons Kitchen Bouquet
Heat oil and add flour; cook until brown. Add all other ingredients and simmer.
TO COMPLETE
Deboned chicken parts
Deep fat for frying
Shredded lettuce
Chopped green onion tops
Dip deboned chicken parts into batter and drop in deep fat (325 degrees) and cook five to 10 minutes. Cut chicken into bite-size pieces and place on a bed of lettuce topped with gravy and green onion tops.
Vic asked for this recipe, last printed in July of 2005. It was requested that year and months went by, until a reader in Ohio sent it with this note: "I am originally from Metairie. I used to go to Fong's Chinese Restaurant in Kenner, and they used to have the best Mandarin Chicken dish. They had the recipe posted on the wall as you exited the dining room, but that was 20 years ago."
Fong's Mandarin Chicken
EGG BATTER
2 cups flour
2 tablespoons cooking oil
2 eggs
1 cup cornstarch
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon Accent
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
3 drops yellow food coloring
2 cups water
Mix all ingredients in the two cups of water and let sit at room temperature for four hours, then refrigerate.
GRAVY
2 cups oil
1 cup flour
2 cups chicken broth
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon Accent
3 tablespoons Kitchen Bouquet
Heat oil and add flour; cook until brown. Add all other ingredients and simmer.
TO COMPLETE
Deboned chicken parts
Deep fat for frying
Shredded lettuce
Chopped green onion tops
Dip deboned chicken parts into batter and drop in deep fat (325 degrees) and cook five to 10 minutes. Cut chicken into bite-size pieces and place on a bed of lettuce topped with gravy and green onion tops.
Posted on 2/25/15 at 5:15 pm to lacajun069
To me, a good Mandarin Chicken has a brown/thick/spicy/peanut gravy.
I did not know it was different in other parts of the country.
My 2 favorite places for Mandarin Chicken are China Doll on the Westbank and Cathay Inn on Airline across the street from Zephyr Field.
I'm sure it;s good at other NOLA Chinese places, but it is something I do not get often.
I did not know it was different in other parts of the country.
My 2 favorite places for Mandarin Chicken are China Doll on the Westbank and Cathay Inn on Airline across the street from Zephyr Field.
I'm sure it;s good at other NOLA Chinese places, but it is something I do not get often.
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