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Column: The vanishing old-school Chinese restaurants of the San Gabriel Valley

Customers inside Ocean Star restaurant
Customers inside Ocean Star restaurant during lunchtime in 2006. The restaurant, which opened in 1982, closed this month.
(Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times)
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Food Columnist

Ocean Star Restaurant on Atlantic Boulevard in Monterey Park opened its massive dining room in 1982. With a capacity of 900, it was among the largest restaurants in the city, and for years it held court as one of the premier dim sum destinations in the city: massive weekend crowds, wobbly Lazy Susans and wheeled carts packed with cheong fun, BBQ pork buns and chewy chicken feet.

The Cantonese restaurant abruptly closed its doors May 1. Sunny Wan, president of Ossa Miramar Inc., the restaurant’s operating group, said in an email that “the management team found it became more and more difficult to manage such a large-scale restaurant.”

Although weekends at large dim sum dining rooms see healthy crowds, weekday business can drop off noticeably. “Traditional Chinese banquet spaces aren’t as sought after as they used to be,” Wan said.

It’s the latest shutter in Chinese-restaurant-dense San Gabriel Valley, which has seen a wave of major closures in recent months. Older restaurants and large-scale banquet halls, which frequently are Cantonese-style dim sum specialists, have been hit especially hard: Besides Ocean Star, Empress Harbor Seafood Restaurant and Lincoln Seafood in Monterey Park, Embassy Kitchen in San Gabriel, and East Gourmet Seafood in Rosemead all closed within the last year.

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While the exact reasons are not simple to codify, restaurant owners and diners cited a number of factors in explaining the rash of closures: labor issues, financial challenges and changing consumer tastes among them.

How Chinese food in America came to be synonymous with fried noodles and sticky-sweet meat nuggets is complicated.

Empress Harbor, just down the block from Ocean Star, served its final meal in April. It opened in 1988 on the top floor of the Atlantic Place Shopping Center, a mini-mall of brown concrete and reflective glass on the corner of Atlantic Boulevard and Garvey Avenue. The 10,000-square-foot restaurant hosted parties of up to 500 people, and saw numerous banquets, weddings and events over the years.

Takashi Cheng, a representative of the restaurant’s parent company, cited increasing costs and maintenance issues in explaining the decision to close. The restaurant’s website says it is looking for a new location.

Outside Little Sheep Mongolian Hot Pot in Pasadena. While some traditional Chinese restaurants struggle, hot pot restaurants in the San Gabriel Valley are thriving.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

On the message board Food Talk Central, speculation is rife as to the exact reason for the epidemic. One is that the restaurants, many of which were opened by immigrants decades ago, are built on a back-breaking labor model that second- and third-generation residents are unable or simply unwilling to maintain.

The kitchens “rely on employees agreeing to work on ‘salary,’ but it usually means they do six days a week and usually double shifts every day except maybe one half day a week,” one commenter wrote. “Nobody wants to work like that anymore, especially younger cooks.”

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It may also be that tastes are changing. Cantonese cuisine has, until relatively recently, been the most popular style of Chinese cooking in the U.S.

In the 19th century, Chinese immigrants to the U.S. arrived primarily from Guangdong province in southern China (where Cantonese is spoken), particularly the rural Taishan region. Decades later, dim sum halls and the smell of butane had become fixtures of urban Chinatowns. Luxurious Cantonese banquet food — abalone, sea cucumber, jellyfish — was a staple of weddings and special occasions.

Today, with a wider representation of immigrants from other parts of China, different regional cuisines are shining in the U.S. — at the expense of Cantonese-style cooking.

David Chan, an L.A.-based Chinese restaurant obsessive (he estimates he’s eaten at more than 7,000 different Chinese restaurants), keeps an unofficial tally of the different types that are opening in the San Gabriel Valley. Cantonese cuisine, he said, has fallen out of favor.

“Over the last two years, do you know how many [new restaurant openings] are Cantonese?” he asked. “Ten percent.” He estimates that a majority of new restaurants are either Sichuan or hot pot restaurants, or both.

There are also generational changes at play — many younger Chinese Americans don’t want to have traditional Chinese wedding banquets. “That used to be the format for all the weddings in the SGV,” Wan said. “Nowadays it’s different.”

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Chan said he experienced the shift firsthand with his own children.

“We basically forced my son to have one because we owed so many people from so many decades,” he said. Chan’s son had a 45-table traditional banquet at the San Gabriel Hilton. His daughter, less eager to go the traditional route, decided to pay for her own wedding — in Malibu.

Cheng of Empress Harbor bemoans the loss of tradition.

“If you look at all the closures, it’s saddening. You’re not going to have a venue that can have upwards of 40 tables for a Chinese-style wedding banquet in the future,” he said. “We don’t do enough to preserve the traditional aspect of Chinese culture.”

But Chan remains largely optimistic, noting the sometimes shocking speed with which another restaurant moves into a vacated space. “It amazes me to see a sudden closure, like Noodle Boy, and the next day you see a sign that announces ‘Noodle Palace.’ The place is taken.”

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