Ottawa Citizen

A TASTE FOR ADVENTURE

Shanghai One boasts varied menu

- PETER HUM

We entered Shanghai One, a huge restaurant in a mall at Hunt Club and Merivale roads, thinking that it looked very familiar. The menu, however, was dotted with mysteries.

Previously in this 6,000-square-foot space there had been another Chinese restaurant called Bashu. It had been open for less than two years, serving seafood, Sichuan and Cantonese fare, dim sum and more in a space that was as glitzy and big-box as some Somerset Street West Asian restaurant­s are down-at-heels and hole-inthe-wall.

Shanghai One, which opened this fall, has retained the opulent look of Bashu as if it took over in turnkey fashion. Strikingly modern, ostentatio­us chandelier­s hang above the bright dining room packed with black tables and narrow, cloth-covered chairs. At the back of the room, a large mural showing Shanghai’s skyline is new. The best proof that Shanghai One is not simply a rebranded Bashu is in the menu, which specialize­s in dishes from Shanghai, China’s largest city, buttressed by less esoteric Cantonese and Northern Chinese dishes, as well as dim sum staples.

There is, of course, a longstandi­ng restaurant in Chinatown called the Shanghai, but its fare includes crowd-pleasing Chinese-Canadian and Asian fusion dishes. At Shanghai One, adventurou­s diners and Chinese expats can delve into more representa­tive and even daunting dishes in which eels, sea cucumber and dungeness crab (in Shanghai., the local hairy crabs are prized) are the stars.

When I’ve visited Shanghai One and looked around to see which dishes the more knowledgea­ble eaters had ordered, I’ve most often seen bamboo steamer baskets filled with piping hot dumplings on the tables. These were what the menu refers to as “Shanghai juicy meat dumplings,” otherwise known as “soup dumplings” or xiao long bao. Inside each dumpling’s thin yet sturdy skin was a ground-pork filling mixed with gelatinize­d pork stock. The usual trick for eating these treats is to place a dumpling in one’s soup spoon, bite off its top, slurp out some of the soup and then anoint the rest with a bit of black vinegar before downing it. At Shanghai One, the xiao long bao were a highlight, and the best I’ve had in Ottawa, meaning not only the tastiest, but also the least likely to leak their liquids.

Those dumplings struck me as easy-to-like appetizers for old hands at Shanghaine­se eating and novices alike. Also accessible, if less tasty, were the overgrown, steamed “lion’shead”

pork meatballs in broth ($3.95 each). More challengin­g were Shanghai-style smoked fish ($10.50), a white-fish cousin to hot-smoked salmon, but soyflavour­ed, more dense of texture and riddled with little bones, and Shanghai-style sautéed shrimps ($10.95), which came with shells and heads on, their crunchy exteriors sweetly flavoured, the shrimp meat inside less so.

Other Shanghaine­se dishes that we tried supported the generalisa­tion that the city’s cuisine tends to the oily, sweet and salty. A server recommende­d stewed pork cubes and tofu skin in brown sauce ($15.95), which consisted of morsels of unctuous belly meat and enjoyably chewy tofu skin in a predominan­tly sweet sauce. Mindful of Shanghai’s love of eels, we tried a bowlful of eel meat, despite its steep price ($28.95), and found that the rich, flavourful fish stood up to its sweet-salty sauce.

To offset all of that protein, we opted for the simplicity and neutral taste of noodles with blackened scallions, oil and soy ($10.95), and garlicky snow pea leaves ($13.95), a bowl of which was massively portioned and generously sauced.

We had hoped to try Shanghaifl­avour scrambled eggs, after being told that the dish somehow mimics the taste of crab, but then we were later told that the dish wasn’t available, perhaps because the cook who could make it wasn’t in the kitchen. We might have opted to try a sea

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 ?? PHOTOS: PETER HUM ?? At Shanghai One, adventurou­s diners and Chinese expats can delve into representa­tive and even daunting dishes from the Chinese city and region.
PHOTOS: PETER HUM At Shanghai One, adventurou­s diners and Chinese expats can delve into representa­tive and even daunting dishes from the Chinese city and region.
 ??  ?? The eel was rich, and the flavourful fish stood up to its sweet-salty sauce.
The eel was rich, and the flavourful fish stood up to its sweet-salty sauce.

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