DINING OUT -- Mary Furr
Yoshida, the two-month-old Japanese restaurant on the southeast corner of
Brookhurst and Adams Streets in Huntington Beach, might be called your
neighborhood teppan and sushi bar.
Many diners walk from nearby homes to the storefront teppan cafe. It has
a long sushi bar at the back facing four U-shaped counters where
customers are served from the large gas teppan cooktops. There is no
dining room -- it’s like being in the kitchen watching dad cook.
Hostess and server Donna Vargas greets you as you choose a seat. The menu
offers appetizers ($3.75-$8.25) and combinations (lunch $9.95, dinner
$13.95), which include soup, salad, hibachi vegetables, noodles, rice,
green tea and ice cream -- the works, done with the intrinsic simplicity
that is Japanese.
From the appetizers gyoza (eight for $4.50), the Japanese version of “pot
stickers,” are small crescent-shaped dumplings filled with minced
vegetables with crisp edges and the fattest stuffing -- superior. Other
popular appetizers by sushi chef John are California rolls with crab meat
and avocado, and crunchy roll with shrimp tempura.
A small iceberg salad with tomato and carrot threads doused with an
orange, Thousand Island-like dressing is followed with hot miso soup that
precedes the entree.
Now enters the star of the show, the teppan chef. One time it was
red-scarfed Johnson Liu, who wields knives and metal salt shakers, tosses
eggs in the air, slicing them as they fall. He deftly adds eggs, crunchy
bits of garlic and onion to the snowy mound of rice already simmering on
the hot plate. Slicing onions, he builds a small volcano in which he
pours oil to ignite with a fire wand -- and dramatic flames leap up.
A hot plate wizard children will love, chef Liu scrolls a “happy face” in
oil on the stove top to cook shrimp, chicken, rice, noodles and zucchini.
His seasonings of soy, salt and pepper could have been more generous as
the food, though pristine fresh, was quite bland.
On another visit, chef Raul Ortiz didn’t quite split the egg he tossed
but he was an instinctive chef who knew his seasonings. They were
perfect.
He places thick slices of steak, salmon, scallops, shrimp, onion and
zucchini on the grill, cutting and turning each. Dropping a piece of
steak or fish in one of the sauces brought to the table, he asks the
diner whether it is cooked as desired.
Teppan is the perfect preparation, enhancing the delicate flavors of the
fresh vegetables, meats and shellfish. It’s served “hot off the griddle,”
as they say. The service couldn’t be more efficient.
There are other teppanyaki restaurants scattered around Orange County,
but Yoshida has a homey atmosphere, affordable prices, and even a high
chair that makes it attractive to families.
According to server Vargas, a new menu with even lower prices is being
planned.
Yoshida provides an evening’s entertainment as well as wonderful fresh
food. It’s like a place you might find in Japan -- not showy but oh, so
good!
Yoshida Japanese Seafood and Steakhouse
Where: 10076 Adams Ave., Huntington Beach.
Hours: 11:3O a.m. - 2:3O p.m., Monday-Friday; dinner 5-lO p.m.
Monday-Sunday.
Phone: 962-6028
Fax: 962-7575.
Mary Furr is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments or
suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
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