Restaurant of the Week: Red Chilli House

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Red Chilli House, 9795 Base Line Road (at Archibald), Rancho Cucamonga

The Inland Valley has a lot of Chinese restaurants but only a handful that serve what might be called modern, authentic Chinese cuisine, a la the San Gabriel Valley. The short list is made up of Peking Deli and Good Time Cafe, both in Chino Hills, Foothill Bistro in Rancho Cucamonga and a recent addition, Red Chilli House, also in Rancho Cucamonga.

Red Chilli opened in June 2011 near the 99 Ranch Market. Other than kung pao shrimp and chicken in spicy garlic sauce, everything on the menu was unfamiliar. There’s no chow mein or orange chicken or cream cheese wontons. They don’t bring a basket of chow mein noodles to your table with a plate of ketchup and spicy mustard. Instead they have dishes like boiled pork intestines in chili sauce and stir-fried kidney with pickled chili. Yum!

Just kidding. Well, for all I know, those are delish. But don’t be put off: They also have many non-frightening dishes. (The menu has 112 items.)

A friend well-versed in Chinese cuisine ordered for us: a plate of cold appetizers (seaweed, cucumber, beef with Szechuan peppercorns; price forgotten; pictured above right), something called crispy rice crust dishes with pork ($10, middle right) and Dan Dan noodles ($6, below right).

The noodles came in a bowl with a peanut-sesame sauce. The pork dish had vegetables and crispy rice. I liked both, as well as the appetizer, although the edge goes to the noodles.

Service was low-key but helpful; they refilled our water glasses regularly and answered questions. The dining room was pleasant if utilitarian. There’s a boba shop a few doors down and an Asian market in the same center.

I meant to write this visit up weeks ago but delayed; I was considering writing a tie-in column about the place, or the whole shopping center, but that fell by the wayside. So, at last, here’s the Restaurant of the Week version. For what it’s worth, people on Yelp like the place.

If you want sweet and sour something, don’t go here. As my friend said mockingly: “Chinese food is supposed to be slivers of white meat deep-fried in a sugary glaze!” If you want something that’s not that, try Red Chilli House.

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Robert Lyn Nelson

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The painter and Chaffey High alum was honored at Tuesday’s Ontario City Council meeting. Here are links to Friday’s column and to his website. I shot this photo in the City Hall lobby.

In a self-referential bonus, below is a photo of me taking photos. Put the two angles on this scene together and the result could be almost Cubist.

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Photo: Otto Kroutil

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Comment space for columns?

A suggestion was made here the other day in a comment by Shirley Wofford:

“David, how about setting up a permanent, little space on your blog devoted to comments on your newspaper columns? Those of us who have resisted social networking would then be able to give you some feedback.”

I can see two ways this could be accomplished: I could post links here to my columns, either as they are published or to all three in one weekly post; or I could write an all-purpose “responses sought” post each week for general feedback.

(Either way could save, say, the Restaurant of the Week post from receiving comments on random subjects, archived permanently.) If someone has other ideas, I’m open to them.

The main question is, does anyone other than Shirley think this is worthwhile? Do you want to be able to discuss my columns here?

This came up once before and people preferred my column and blog be kept semi-separate; then again, this was before we moved to Facebook commenting on dailybulletin.com and the responses here were from only a half-dozen people. (I should note, too, that there are now other ways to sign in to comment on dailybulletin.com that don’t involve Facebook.)

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M-M-M-My Pomona, and other blogs

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Wednesday’s column is about the departure of the couple behind the M-M-M-My Pomona blog for the Bay Area. Meg Worley, the blog’s primary writer, is pictured at right; photo by Deb Mashek.

Along the right hand side of this page, the “Other sites of interest” section has links to a few blogs and local newspaper sites. I’ve updated it to include all the blogs mentioned in Wednesday’s column and a few more besides.

Like a newspaper, a blog can pull together content from other sources, provide a forum for readers to sound off and tip readers off to information or views you wouldn’t have come across otherwise. That’s serendipity: You find yourself reading stories because they look interesting, not because you sought them out.

M-M-M-My Pomona offered a window into the Lincoln Park neighborhood and the wider world of Pomona, especially in the blog’s earlier days. Many of the community of blogs in Pomona have gone dormant; the form seems to have peaked in 2009 or 2010.

It’s a little strange to think of something as new as blogging as having already fallen out of favor, but that’s the way the changing media landscape bounces. The form still seems to have a lot of untapped potential locally.

The Goddess of Garey Avenue wrote a post (read it here) with an explanation of blogs, descriptions of several local blogs and a how-to guide for starting your own.

If you have a local-interest blog that you actually maintain, feel free to post a comment with your link.

Meg says M-M-M-My Pomona will continue under other writers; I hope that’s the case. In the meantime, for her fans, she has a personal blog, often on literary and cultural topics, which can be found here.

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Reading log: October 2011

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Books acquired: “Last Night at the Lobster,” Stuart O’Nan; “The Green Ripper,” John D. MacDonald; “Harlan Ellison: The Edge of Forever,” Ellen Weil and Gary K. Wolfe; “Two Years Before the Mast,” Richard Henry Dana; “Tarzan the Terrible” and “Swords of Mars,” Edgar Rice Burroughs; “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” Zora Neale Hurston.

Books read: “Short Stories,” Mark Twain; “Supreme Courtship,” Christopher Buckley; “Stan’s Soapbox: The Collection,” Stan Lee; “Dave Barry in Cyberspace,” Dave Barry.

October was a sibilant month, with each title I read having two or more S’s or S sounds. Seems silly? Well, anything for a theme, and after deciding to finally finish the Twain and read the Stan Lee, I found two matching titles to round out the month.

“Short Stories,” more commonly found as “The Signet Classic Book of Mark Twain Short Stories,” is 700 pages was read off and on for 14 months. As the short story wasn’t Twain’s metier, these sketches, fables, tall tales and sentimental fiction won’t make anyone forget Poe and Hawthorne. Yet Twain was a born storyteller. “The Invalid’s Story,” about a man in a train’s baggage car who mistakes a shipment of Limburger cheese for a rotting corpse, is a jaw-dropper. So is the scathing “The Man Who Corrupted Hadleyburg,” which takes aim at human folly and scores a bull’s-eye.

“Supreme Courtship,” published in 2008, is about a president whose choices for a Supreme Court vacancy are rejected by the Senate for petty reasons. He then nominates a wildly popular Judge Judy-type TV figure whom the Senate wouldn’t dare vote down. Hijinx ensue. As a rule, I’m wary of fiction intended to be funny, but Christopher Buckley won me over within a few pages. From the president who loves to bowl to the Washington eminence with four Ns in his surname, the characters are well wrought and the constitutional crisis plausible, in a comic way. I like the way Buckley slips in a quote from his dad, too.

“Stan’s Soapbox” is a slim compilation of every Stan Lee column from 1967 to 1980 from the pages of Marvel Comics, plus a timeline and contextual essays. I’ve read all the columns before but it’s nice to have them in one place, plus it was produced as a benefit for aging comics creators. It’s not without problems, though. If this is meant as a loving tribute, why did no one bother to proofread the Soapboxes after retyping them? There must be one or two mistyped words per page. Sheesh. (The worst is when an upcoming comic, “Odyssey,” is called, in succession, “Oddyssey” and “Ossyssey.”) Other than that, a nice little book for comics nostalgists, although Stan’s tendency in later years to push product makes his monthly columns tougher to take when read one after another.

“Dave Barry in Cyberspace” is a book by the humor columnist, who turned out to be a computer geek, and was published in 1996, before computers and the Internet were ubiquitous. In 2011, a book like this is dated in ways Barry’s other books aren’t, which he sort of anticipates when he writes that its information “would be of immense practical value if not for the fact that it all became obsolete minutes after I wrote it.” So this is something of a time capsule and not among his best. Still, it’s often funny, many of his observations hold true (even in 1996, it seems, having an AOL email address wasn’t cool anymore) and his surprise short story (!) about two ordinary people who meet online in a chat room is a successful stretch.

For those who like to know where and when I got the books, the Twain was purchased at Cameron’s Books in Portland in 2010, the Buckley was a birthday gift in 2010 (hi Caroline!), I bought the Stan Lee book online earlier this year and the Dave Barry book was bought used a few years back, details forgotten.

This brings me to 54 books read for 2011, with hopes of getting to 60.

What have you been reading? And have you read any of the above? Post away, bibliophiles.

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