• pc090026.jpg
    Frustrated insurance man Bao Ton opened this sleek restaurant with his family in 2003. Bao smartly relied on his mother’s central Vietnamese recipes. Little Saigon has never been the same. The sprawling epicenter for authentic Vietnamese food in the U.S. has spawned several fashionable imitators, but none can match Quan Hy’s big flavors or low prices. Quan Hy means “happy” in Vietnamese, and that’s exactly what you’ll be after a meal there.

    pc090041.jpg
    Two big fish tanks divide the stylish dining room. A bridged, bamboo-lined goldfish pond resides near the entrance. Since it’s holiday time, the pond-adjacent bamboo forest included a Christmas tree and lanterns. The lone decoration on the tree: a miniature replica of the Orange County Department of Environmental Health’s “A” letter grade.

    pc090040.jpg
    Other interesting design elements included shelves of Vietnamese pottery and woodwork, plus mounted Vietnamese stringed instruments and a large panoramic black-and-white photograph of a castle in Hue, where Bao’s parents are from.

    pc090038.jpg
    Cha Gio ($8) were golden-fried rolls featuring thin rice paper wrappers, filled with luscious crab, shrimp, pork and green onions. They were served with a plate of pickled daikon and carrots, cucumber slices, lettuce and herbs for wrapping. I avoided the greenery, opting to dip the rolls directly into a dish of fish sauce seasoned with finely chopped garlic and both red and green chiles. The cha gio weren’t quite as ethereal as I remember them in the past, but they were certainly in the upper echelon of Southern California’s egg rolls.

    pc090034.jpg
    Bun Thit Bo Nuong Dac Biet ($8.45) featured rice vermicelli with thin-sliced grilled beef, shrimp and shrimp cakes, plus little piles of crisp bean sprouts, sesame seeds, grilled onions, chile paste, green onions, cilantro, jalapeno slices, and pickled carrots and daikon. Below the surface was Romaine lettuce. We mixed everything together and poured on some more seasoned fish sauce.

    pc090032.jpg
    Goi Mit ($10) was jackfruit salad, mixing firm flesh-colored fruit with halved shrimps, strips of pork belly, scallions, cilantro, shaved onions and grilled onions. We piled the mix on crispy rice crackers studded with black sesame seeds.

    pc090036.jpg
    Com Ca Chien Bo Sa Lach ($8.45) was salmon cooked in butter served with steamed rice and salad. The fillet of fish was perfectly cooked, very moist. It came with a scoop of white rice and a Romaine salad with jalapeno slices, pickled carrots and daikon, cucumbers and tomatoes.

    With the salmon, we received a small bowl of seemingly simple soup, effectively flavored with cabbage, scallions, herbs, salt, pepper and minced shrimp.

    pc090031.jpg
    We each ordered an interesting drink from the long list of beverages. Nuoc Rau Ma ($2.50) was chilled sweetened liverwort juice, made from low-lying plants that look like ferns. It tasted kind of like spinach juice, helped by the massive sugar infusion. Soda Xi Muoi ($2.50) was iced soda water with a bed of pungent preserved plum and sugar granules. Ca Phe Sua Da ($3) was classic take on Vietnamese iced coffee, made with condensed milk.

    pc090042.jpg
    Instead of ordering a syrupy dessert from the menu, we opted for crispy sesame-crusted fritters filled with yellow mung bean paste (4 for $2), which were piled high in a case near the cash register. A bite revealed yellow bean paste. The flavor and texture of fritter was outrageously delicious. Not a single fritter survived the ride home.

    It had been almost two years since my last meal at Quan Hy. Happily, the quality level was still quite high. On Chowhound.com, posters often turn their backs on ethnic restaurants that have the nerve to display style or achieve popularity. Bao Ton and his family have proven with Quan Hy (and nearby Quan Hop) that popularity doesn’t have to prompt compromise.

    Hours:
    Daily: 10 AM - 9 PM

    No Comments Yet

    You can be the first to comment!

    Leave a comment