DINING REVIEW -- Kathy Mader
Because many of the people around me haven’t been feeling well lately,
and I have been sick for the last three, going on four, weeks with what I
now fondly label the “Devil’s Curse” -- otherwise known as “one wicked
cold” -- I have been in search of soup, soup and more soup.
I guess I could always make some, but that would really defeat so many
purposes that I can’t even name them, as well as undermine my desperate
need to “relax and get better.” So, where to go for good soup?
Avila’s on East Coast Highway in Corona del Mar gets a huge prize with
its Avila’s Soup ($6.41), a savory chicken tomato broth teeming with rice
and large chunks of chicken. Don’t even think about ordering this without
the condiments of fresh cilantro, chopped onions, grated jack cheese and
fresh avocado.
All of this is served with corn or flour tortillas and makes for one
happy Kathy. This soup is a complete meal and always delicious.
Guaranteed to warm up even a wicked cold.
A cold is not the time to indulge in a cream-based soup. However, the
New England clam chowder ($3.95) at The Yankee Tavern, on the corner of
Bayside Drive and East Coast Highway, always beckons me. And it is always
great in the cold, if not with a cold.
It is a sweet, cream-base chowder chock full of corn, clams and
potatoes. And they serve it with the most perfect sourdough loaf -- soft
and warm on the inside, crispy and chewy on the outside. I recommend this
more for the bronchial group than the stuffy-nose group.
Two perfect “get well soon” soups can be found at Ho Sum Bistro and
Asia Cafe respectively. Ho Sum, on the Balboa Peninsula next to the City
Hall, serves what they call a Pho-Phun Noodle soup ($5.95) and it has a
light and tasty chicken broth base, with all kinds of fresh vegetables
including carrots, celery, cilantro and snow peas, with shrimp and
chicken, and lots and lots of noodles. You can always count on noodles to
get your mind off of your head.
Asia Cafe, on the corner of Wilson and Newport Boulevard, serves up a
version of the Vietnamese Mien Ga soup ($5.95), with an incredibly rich
chicken-based broth. It has thin slices of white chicken meat,
cellophane-like rice noodles and is topped with green onions and fried
leeks. This soup has flavor that can penetrate even the densest of head
colds. I will be eating this as prevention for the next flu season as
well!
On East Coast Highway in Corona del Mar, Oyster’s spicy seafood gumbo
($6) -- with its fresh swordfish, ahi tuna, shrimp, clams, tomatoes and
okra -- is another meal in a soup that works its way through your head in
its own peppery way. And the bread there is also terrific. Actually, all
the food there is terrific, but the soup and bread is a great “got to get
back into bed soon” dinner.
Another tasty, delicious, and not chicken-based soup can be found at
El Torito Grill in Fashion Island. This pureed tomato-based soup ($3.95)
has hints of mesquite in it, and the grilled corn kernels make it almost
chewy. This is some great flavor and with four baskets of handmade
tortillas, your exploding stomach will take your mind right off your
inability to enjoy that God-given right to breathe through your nose.
Side Street Cafe on Newport Boulevard makes a mean tomato bisque
($2.50) with bits and pieces of bacon to add to the experience. This is
not a tomato liker’s soup, but if you love them, this is seriously
flavor-packed with whole stewed tomatoes making a showing.
PF Changs’ Pin Rice Noodle soup ($7.95) is to die for, sick or well.
It is a sassy and piquant broth with those same clear rice noodles,
grilled shrimp and pork “meatballs,” for lack of a better word. The broth
is chicken-based, yet has a tang to it that I could never re-create. And
why try? Especially when you don’t feel well.
My mom would kill me if I didn’t mention her chicken noodle soup with
its shaved carrots and thinly sliced green onions; however, I feel
awkward mentioning it in that I haven’t had any delivered during this
excruciating stretch of stuffiness. Maybe if I ask real nice.
Clearly we live in an area rife with that best known of traditional
cold remedies, soup. I have only mentioned those that made it on my “sick
circuit,” but there are many more to try.
To all of you out there not feeling well this holiday season, go get
yourself some soup, put on your reindeer pajamas and matching slippers,
press play on “It’s a Wonderful Life” and get well soon. Happy Holidays!
* KATHY MADER’s dining reviews appear every other Thursday.
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