Dining Review
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Young Chang
COSTA MESA
For $21.93, you can outeat the table.
For $21.93, you can do it in less than an hour.
And for the grand total of $21.93, you can experiment with dishes you
don’t really understand and take risks with $1.75 for a Banh-Mi
Vietnamese Sandwich just to see what a Vietnamese sandwich on French
bread will look like.
From the beginning, we laughed. The waitress at Vietnam’s Pearl
Restaurant looked at us funny, recommending we split the fourth dish we
had chosen instead of ordering a fifth. She resigned to the fact that we
were dead-set on a fifth and then suggested we move.
To a different table -- the big round one near the window because our
square two-seater just wasn’t going to do.
We all laughed, my friend and I moved, and immediately it became
irrelevant that Vietnam’s Pearl was a restaurant we hadn’t been to
before.
The small Costa Mesa box is easy -- no lines, no fuss, barely a wait
for food and servers who aren’t afraid to be blunt and funny as if you’ve
dined there before.
Some of the food left us wondering -- searching for shreds of pork and
shrimp, for example, because the menu promised there would be pork -- but
considering that five dishes cost $21.93, my friend and I left happy.
The Goi Cuon ($2.95), spring rolls with shrimp, seasoned pork, mint
leaves and cold vermicelli noodles, were healthy and fresh. We wondered
where the shrimp and pork were, and commented on how minty the roll
tasted (we both prefer non-minty foods), but we trusted that the pork was
shredded really invisibly fine and dipped away in a peanut sauce that
deserves kudos of its own.
The Banh Xeo ($4.95), a Vietnamese-style crepe with shrimp, pork and
bean sprouts, resembled an enormous, brown chalupa exploding with
sprouts. We found the shrimp this time -- three actually -- and dipped
again in a spicy fish sauce.
My friend didn’t dip -- she said the crepe tasted bland -- so remember
to dip.
The Banh Mi Ga ($1.75), a seasoned chicken Vietnamese sandwich on
French bread, was also healthy -- I’d guess no more than 200 calories for
a half. But with only a thin filling of chicken and a whole lot of
vegetables (barely any grease or sauce), the sandwich tasted more like
something you’d make yourself at home during a diet.
The Pho Ga ($4.50), a steaming chicken noodle soup you’re supposed to
top with herbs and bean sprouts and plum sauce, was my favorite. It’s
familiar even to the most un-Vietnamese diner, a perfect panacea for
winter months when colds run rampant.
And the Com Ga Xa ($5.95), a lemon grass chicken dish with rice and
plenty of ginger, also will clear your sinuses. But for the
spicy-food-wary, beware. We tried a Level 3 -- 5 is the spiciest -- and
sat there tongues-a-burning.
Still, for $21.93, I’d take a burnt-tongue any day.
FYI
*What: Vietnam’s Pearl Restaurant
*Where: 1215 Baker St., Costa Mesa
*Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday and 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. Saturday
*How much: Cheap ($1.75 to $6.50)
*Call: (714) 540-2212
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