Chinese Laundry

Exotic and erotic
By BILL RODRIGUEZ  |  May 22, 2008

Chinese Laundry | 401.272.TORO | 121 North Main St, Providence | Chineselaundryri.com | Tues-Thurs, 5-10 pm; Fri-Sat, 5-11 pm | Major credit cards | Full bar | Sidewalk-level accessible

When you lift a fork to your mouth in a restaurant, so much more surrounds the experience than the aroma. When it comes to Chinese Laundry, the town’s latest upscale restaurant, atmosphere means more than the scent of mangoes.

This is a snug little place, Sam Sing’s actual Chinese laundry until a few years ago. You sidle past the bar, unless you want to eat there or at the high counter across from it. We were taken into a small room jammed with five two-tops, neighbors elbow-to-elbow. Looking through the glass floor, we saw diners at the long communal table of the private dining room downstairs. The total effect is very Hong Kong street stall, kind of Blade Runner without the rain. The lounge upstairs is much roomier.

A bamboo motif is expressed softly on the walls in black on rust-red and in bamboo circles embedded in tables edged with black lacquer. The menus are elegant little hardcover books, and the pan-Asian offerings invite assembling a small-dish tasting menu, which we did. We eased in with a couple of their specialty drinks ($12), listed as “Chinese Remedies.” The giraffe-stemmed martini glasses present the drinks in your face at lip level, which took getting used to.

We started off for real with duck consommé ($5.99). Seasoned with tamari, it hung on the edge of over-salty, but then remained there in perfect balance with the duck flavor. The scallions, bok choy, and strips of shiitake were colorful flotsam in the tea-brown pool that held two juicy bundles of duck-filled wontons.

Our waiter explained that items would be brought out one-by-one when ready, rather than saved and assembled. That sounded fine if we could get them in sensible order, which we were assured we could.

We requested our oysters first, but the Sichuan pepper calamari ($10.50) came instead. That was OK, because the dipping sauce was mostly rice vinegar, and the red pepper flakes merely accented the delicacy of the remarkably tender and greaseless squid rings. Our taste buds were piqued, rather than dulled for the oysters we expected next, but instead came a heavy dish, our char sieu spareribs ($11.99). They were meaty and fell off the bone, but the meat could have used more of the promised plum sauce.

Then the crisp wasabi Kumamoto oysters ($10.99) arrived, three plump fried shellfish topped with a drop of lemongrass aioli, in small shells on a tall mound of salt. They were tasty, but minimal.

We didn’t come for food as simple as sushi, but from that list we chose something very un-Japanese, under “Forbidden Nigiri” choices: seared foie gras ($7.99). My companion Jerry’s last memorable foie gras experience was in a French farmhouse where he sampled a half-dozen different kinds. He pronounced this one first-rate, the teaspoon of goose liver and fat fine-grained and creamy, accented with a smear of fig and balsamic reduction, softened by the altar of sticky rice upon which it came proffered.

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