Five lunching ladies got together for dim sum brunch at Qi this past weekend. Pretty much impeccable, from the decor to the place settings to the food, and especially the company as our group has bonded over food for many years now. And everything tastes better amidst friendship and laughter, though Qi's food and presentation does not need much assistance.
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From the entrance on 6th Street, the wine walls form two private dining areas. |
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Main dining area, with kitchen to the back and bar to the right. Could see a number of women preparing foods at the counter. |
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Our table, in the smaller of the two more private areas was called the birdcage table on our bill. Throughout the restaurant, there were beautiful embroidered Chinese robes on the walls. I would love a time to just study the decor in there! |
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Beautiful plates, nice heavy crystal water glasses, and even the chopsticks had a nice weight and feel to them. |
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In order of how we received the food. First up, sticky rice with Chinese sausage. |
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Snow pea shoots |
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Zha Jiang noodles, kind of a Chinese bolognese. I believe they said the meat was a combo of beef and lamb, and you mix everything together before serving. Loved this! |
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The utterly divine crab fish maw soup dumplings. You could taste the sweetness of the crab meat. We should have ordered more of these! The accompanying sauces were soy, chili, and a light vinegar (plum?) with julienned ginger that was lovely with the soup dumplings. |
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Scallion pancake curry dip. This is the one dish that wasn't as great as everything else. The curry sauce was very flavorful, but the pancake was thick and almost tough, without any of the real flakiness I expect from scallion pancakes. |
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They changed our plates out partway though. |
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Steamed barbecue pork buns; nice flavor in the pork. |
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Chicken with cashew dumplings. This isn't a dumpling combo I have had before, and I really liked them. |
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Shrimp har kaw. |
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The adorable little creatures are lobster dumplings with a hint of truffle in them, making them extra decadent! |
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Even the restrooms spared no design expense. From my travels to Japan, I have learned there is an Asian fascination with toilets. These had the motion activated lids, warm seats and automatic flush. (If you haven't used them before, you don't always know what to expect or even how to operate them at times!) Gorgeous carved wooden sink, very much a masculine-feeling space. |
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Here's our order. And it came out to $37/person with tax and tip. Not bad at all! |
Qi was fantastic, and I can't wait to go back! Have you been and if so, what were your favorites?
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