• Washington DC |
  • New York |
  • Toronto |
  • Distribution: (800) 510 9863
Thursday, June 11, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
New Edge Times
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Arts
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Nick Reiner, Accused of Killing Parents, Asks to Use Trust Fund for His Defense

    Nick Reiner, Accused of Killing Parents, Asks to Use Trust Fund for His Defense

    Video: Maximalism Is Back at the Tonys

    Video: Maximalism Is Back at the Tonys

    2026 Tony Awards: What to Expect

    2026 Tony Awards: What to Expect

    Video: ‘Ask E. Jean’ Illuminates Cultural Shifts

    Video: ‘Ask E. Jean’ Illuminates Cultural Shifts

    Video: Why Do Most New Movies Look Meh?

    Video: Why Do Most New Movies Look Meh?

    Andy Halliday, a Star of ‘Vampire Lesbians of Sodom,’ Dies at 73

    Andy Halliday, a Star of ‘Vampire Lesbians of Sodom,’ Dies at 73

    Tribeca Festival 25th Anniversary: An Interview With Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, Rebecca Glashow

    Tribeca Festival 25th Anniversary: An Interview With Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, Rebecca Glashow

    Azniv Korkejian on Bedouine’s ‘Neon Summer Skin’

    Azniv Korkejian on Bedouine’s ‘Neon Summer Skin’

    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Tony Awards 2026 Red Carpet: See the Looks of Broadway’s Biggest Stars

    Tony Awards 2026 Red Carpet: See the Looks of Broadway’s Biggest Stars

    Rubio Suggests U.S. Return to Global Vaccine Program in Rebuke of Kennedy

    Rubio Suggests U.S. Return to Global Vaccine Program in Rebuke of Kennedy

    Video: The Fashion References in ‘Cats: The Jellicle Ball’

    Video: The Fashion References in ‘Cats: The Jellicle Ball’

    Marilyn Monroe Fans Descended on Palm Springs For Her 100th Birthday

    Marilyn Monroe Fans Descended on Palm Springs For Her 100th Birthday

    Dua Lipa Wears Bianca Jagger-Inspired Wedding Look to Marry Callum Turner

    Dua Lipa Wears Bianca Jagger-Inspired Wedding Look to Marry Callum Turner

    Giant Stone Urns Hint at the Death Rites of a Lost People in Laos

    Giant Stone Urns Hint at the Death Rites of a Lost People in Laos

    Dijon Chicken, Tomatoes and Scallions

    Dijon Chicken, Tomatoes and Scallions

    By September, Nearly a Third of Americans Will Live in States With Legal Aid in Dying

    By September, Nearly a Third of Americans Will Live in States With Legal Aid in Dying

    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Arts
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Nick Reiner, Accused of Killing Parents, Asks to Use Trust Fund for His Defense

    Nick Reiner, Accused of Killing Parents, Asks to Use Trust Fund for His Defense

    Video: Maximalism Is Back at the Tonys

    Video: Maximalism Is Back at the Tonys

    2026 Tony Awards: What to Expect

    2026 Tony Awards: What to Expect

    Video: ‘Ask E. Jean’ Illuminates Cultural Shifts

    Video: ‘Ask E. Jean’ Illuminates Cultural Shifts

    Video: Why Do Most New Movies Look Meh?

    Video: Why Do Most New Movies Look Meh?

    Andy Halliday, a Star of ‘Vampire Lesbians of Sodom,’ Dies at 73

    Andy Halliday, a Star of ‘Vampire Lesbians of Sodom,’ Dies at 73

    Tribeca Festival 25th Anniversary: An Interview With Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, Rebecca Glashow

    Tribeca Festival 25th Anniversary: An Interview With Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, Rebecca Glashow

    Azniv Korkejian on Bedouine’s ‘Neon Summer Skin’

    Azniv Korkejian on Bedouine’s ‘Neon Summer Skin’

    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Tony Awards 2026 Red Carpet: See the Looks of Broadway’s Biggest Stars

    Tony Awards 2026 Red Carpet: See the Looks of Broadway’s Biggest Stars

    Rubio Suggests U.S. Return to Global Vaccine Program in Rebuke of Kennedy

    Rubio Suggests U.S. Return to Global Vaccine Program in Rebuke of Kennedy

    Video: The Fashion References in ‘Cats: The Jellicle Ball’

    Video: The Fashion References in ‘Cats: The Jellicle Ball’

    Marilyn Monroe Fans Descended on Palm Springs For Her 100th Birthday

    Marilyn Monroe Fans Descended on Palm Springs For Her 100th Birthday

    Dua Lipa Wears Bianca Jagger-Inspired Wedding Look to Marry Callum Turner

    Dua Lipa Wears Bianca Jagger-Inspired Wedding Look to Marry Callum Turner

    Giant Stone Urns Hint at the Death Rites of a Lost People in Laos

    Giant Stone Urns Hint at the Death Rites of a Lost People in Laos

    Dijon Chicken, Tomatoes and Scallions

    Dijon Chicken, Tomatoes and Scallions

    By September, Nearly a Third of Americans Will Live in States With Legal Aid in Dying

    By September, Nearly a Third of Americans Will Live in States With Legal Aid in Dying

    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending
No Result
View All Result
New Edge Times
No Result
View All Result
Home Lifestyle Food

Restaurant Review: A Postcard to Chinatown, Mailed from the Lower East Side

by New Edge Times Report
July 25, 2023
in Food
Restaurant Review: A Postcard to Chinatown, Mailed from the Lower East Side
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Potluck Club opened last summer on Chrystie Street on the Lower East Side — outside the old boundaries of Chinatown, in an area where younger Chinese businesses sidle up against tattoo parlors, oyster bars and candlelit cocktail lounges with disguised speakeasy entrances. It’s a perfect location for a neo-Cantonese restaurant that looks at Chinatown traditions from a slight distance, through the eyes of young people who grew up eating in and around the neighborhood but have spent most of their adult lives in other places.

Given all the threats facing Chinatown, Potluck Club could have come across as sentimental or wistful, but it’s not. It offers a fresh, energetic look into Chinese culture, and has fun with it, too. It isn’t a great restaurant, but it knows how to have a good time.

The atmosphere helps to put the idea across. The host stand is a green booth with a pagoda roof that looks like a ticket window out of the Sun Sing or the Music Palace, two long-gone Chinatown theaters where you used to be able to catch Shaw Brothers wuxia films. Just past that is a display of movie posters from the golden age of Hong Kong and Taiwanese cinema. A mural celebrates “Shaolin Popey,” the 1994 slapstick martial arts movie featuring two ass-kicking boy monks.

Zhan Chen, the chef, and Peter Chen, his sous-chef, are brothers and Chinatown natives who cooked Mediterranean and Italian food before coming to Potluck Club. They fill their menu with classic Cantonese dishes like rice rolls and pot stickers, then bring in flavors from outside the neighborhood.

On weekends, Potluck Club doesn’t serve dim sum. Instead it serves brunch, the most American meal of the week. You can get milk tea made with oat milk or an egg sandwich filled with bacon char siu. The restaurant keeps switching back and forth between cultures like this, a move that a lot of kids and grandkids of immigrants will recognize right away.

The dish that best sums up Potluck Club may be a platter of fried chicken in a lacy, salt-and-pepper-style shell. It’s served with raised biscuits that might have been airlifted from a North Carolina dinner table, except that they’re flavored with scallions. A three-dimensional play on a scallion pancake, the biscuit can be split open, spread with sweet and smoky chile-plum jam, and dressed with a wheel or two of pickled jalapeño for a very entertaining chicken sandwich. When the biscuit’s gone, you’ll still have a few pieces of chicken and the jam to keep you company.

Then again, the rice roll noodles with asparagus and oyster mushrooms may capture the restaurant’s spirit more succinctly. The dish is virtually a straight throwback to vegetable chow fun (or beef chow fun, if you have ordered it with hanger steak). In this version, though, the char from the wok is more emphatic than usual and the sauce contains a spoonful of chile paste, which a cook on Mott Street would probably leave out. Best of all are the noodles, fresh and tender and almost transparently thin; when you bite through one of the rolls, you can feel what seems like every single layer.

The salt-and-pepper chicken should not be confused with the “crispy drunken chicken.” That one is marinated in Shaoxing wine and other flavorings. It isn’t bad, but tastes as if two or three recipes were locked inside it, each struggling for supremacy.

Potluck Club’s version of that Chinese-banquet standby, fried shrimp with candied walnuts, improves on the original. The mayonnaise, usually just plopped on the platter as a dip, is seasoned with Calabrian chiles and brushed all over the tiger shrimp, which gain some fire and keep their crunch.

In its homage to Chinatown’s vanishing traditions, both of living and cooking, Potluck Club resembles another fairly new local restaurant, Uncle Lou’s, on Mulberry Street. Uncle Lou’s tries to appeal to all generations; as the website says of its Cantonese dishes, “The ‘lo wah kiu favorites’ takes grandparents back to the Cantonese villages in Toisan, Sunwui, Enping, and Hoiping. ABC’s and ‘jook sing’ are comforted by classic meals they enjoyed between Chinese school and playing in Columbus Park.”

Lo wah kiu are older Chinese immigrants who were born overseas, while ABC means American-born Chinese, and it’s the ABC sensibility that Potluck Club reflects. It’s a restaurant for younger diners who grew up going to weddings at Jing Fong and eating at Nom Wah before it was cool. The Chen brothers give them the food they remember from childhood, but they’re well aware that their customers’ palates have been shaped by everything that’s happened to Asian cooking in New York since Momofuku Noodle Bar; they use more salt and chiles, pay closer attention to meats and produce, and summon a greater intensity overall.

Occasionally you may come across ingredients that should not have made the cut. The snow-pea stems in a stir-fry were a little tough and woody. The candied walnuts with the tiger shrimp were made from nuts that might have spent too long in storage.

Such lapses are made up for by the sweet and fat-moistened Berkshire pork in the pot stickers and the deep, rolling seafood flavor that XO sauce gives to the fried rice.

And there is the drinks menu, built for people who have moved decisively beyond Tsingtao. Potluck Club has located a green-peppercorn pilsner, Jade Scorpion, brewed in Hong Kong; a pale ale made from puffed rice by a craft brewer on the mainland; and a few other cans and bottles that will be new to many New Yorkers. More familiar, but still welcome, is the assortment of bottles from natural winemakers like Vinyes Tortuga in Catalonia and Meinklang in Austria.

Previous Post

Tiny Love Stories: ‘Gay, Dominant, Single, White, Female’

Next Post

Tornado at Pfizer Warehouse Likely to Worsen Shortage of Surgical Drugs

Related Posts

Dijon Chicken, Tomatoes and Scallions
Food

Dijon Chicken, Tomatoes and Scallions

by New Edge Times Report
May 31, 2026
My Name Is Becky and I Brought Coleslaw to the Potluck
Food

My Name Is Becky and I Brought Coleslaw to the Potluck

by New Edge Times Report
May 21, 2026
Video: Original Plum Torte
Food

Video: Original Plum Torte

by New Edge Times Report
May 19, 2026
Leave Comment
New Edge Times

© 2025 New Edge Times or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending

© 2025 New Edge Times or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In