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Señor Big Ed in Cypress: Hearty helpings of Puerto Rican specialties

FEEL THE BREEZE? The bright interior of Senor Big Ed evokes a beach atmosphere, with its sparse, sun-bleached walls. The menu has plenty of hefty helpings of traditional Puerto Rican dishes; the sampler plate is best split between two people.
FEEL THE BREEZE? The bright interior of Senor Big Ed evokes a beach atmosphere, with its sparse, sun-bleached walls. The menu has plenty of hefty helpings of traditional Puerto Rican dishes; the sampler plate is best split between two people.
(Glenn Koenig / Los Angeles Times)
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Special to The Times

Surrounded as they are by taquerías, the non-Mexican Latin American restaurants of Southern California too often feature menus of tangled-together cuisines, slighting many distinct dishes in search of pan-American tastes. And Señor Big Ed, a homey Puerto Rican spot in Cypress, did begin as a Mexican restaurant, folding up tacos and burritos long before it mashed together its first order of mofongo, a dish of plantains, pork rinds and garlic. But the place is purely Puerto Rican these days, with flags, hats and shoes all proudly displayed (and for sale) just inside the door.

Past those patriotic goods are wispy white curtains and sun-bleached walls -- Señor Big Ed is a sparse place, light and bright enough to recall a breezy beach scene despite its landlocked location on Lincoln Avenue. With the slightest breeze, the restaurant seems even more coastal, cooled by fans spinning like pinwheels as they spread every occasional gust around the room.

Hefty platter

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IN CONTRAST to its airy interior, Señor Big Ed sticks to the weighty roots of Puerto Rican cuisine and serves hefty helpings of foods that owe as much to the fried dishes of America’s Gulf Coast as they do to the tropical cues of the Caribbean.

There’s a lot to take in with Señor Big Ed’s menu, and certain logic might steer you toward the sampler plate. With that, you get tostones (green plantains that are fried, pounded into patties, then fried again to resemble chips), pastelillos (excellent empanada-like turnovers stuffed with either meat or cheese), an alcapurria (a green plantain fritter filled with ground beef), a relleno de papa (a fried potato ball filled with a scoop of ground beef) and a single pastel (a Puerto Rican take on the tamale made from either plantain or cassava root). If it sounds like a lot of food, that’s because it is -- the sampler is an order best split between at least two people.

First-time diners at Señor Big Ed might do better with some of the restaurant’s single-item entrees. The carne guisada is a good choice, a plate of beef stewed in a sofrito-based sauce (a staple of Caribbean cooking made mostly of onions, peppers and garlic) that ends up almost like chili.

Even better is the canoa de plátano maduro, a caramelized yellow plantain split open and loaded with ground beef and topped with a layer of cheddar cheese.

The huge canoa (which appropriately translates to “canoe”) looks as close to some sort of banana boat as culinarily possible, one that steers the deep sweetness of the plantain right through the weight of the meat and cheese.

Alongside every entree comes arroz con gandules (Spanish rice flecked with pigeon peas and pork) and another helping of plantains, either sweet maduros or chip-like tostones.

On the side

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THOSE with smaller appetites can do well by ordering two or three items from the restaurant’s so-called sides. MofongoMofongo, a coarse mash not unlike a rough polenta, is a meal on its own. Green plantains are ground up with pork rinds, clove after clove of garlic and a drizzle or two of olive oil for a sharp taste like that of garlic mashed potatoes.

Or try the relleno de papa, a softball-sized sphere of potato with a core of ground beef. Despite its inclusion in the sampler plate, the relleno de papa is better on its own -- break open the crisp exterior and inside is a pleasingly creamy heap of potato.

Wash all that down with a coconut soda or a bottle of malta (a nonalcoholic malt brew that tastes like molasses), and Señor Big Ed really takes you on a Puerto Rican trip. For the most part, that means plates of thoroughly fried food. You can’t beat it for comfort-food fulfillment.

food@latimes.com

Señor Big Ed Puerto Rican Food Location: 5490 Lincoln Ave., Cypress, (714) 821-1290Price: Main dishes, $7.50 to $9Best dishes:Pastelillo de carne, canoa de plátano maduro, relleno de papaDetails: Open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, until 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. All major credit cards. Lot parking.

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