Just before 11 on a Friday night, the Dream's parking lot is half-empty. Yet a few moments later, as if triggered by some hidden signal, baby Mercedeses and Lexuses, BMWs and tricked-out Hondas stream in, disgorging men with spiky hair and women in jeans, mid-calf boots and revealing tops. In a matter of 15 minutes, the lot is nearly full.
Inside, a bartender in a black jacket embroidered with dragons pours a drink into a funnel-shaped glass and lights it on fire. As his friends clap and chant in a mixture of English and Mandarin — "Suck! Suck! Kuai! Kuai! [Fast! Fast!]" — a man with a shaved head downs the flaming concoction through a straw and backs away triumphantly.
Some of the waitresses wear brightly colored cheongsams that barely cover their rear ends. Knots of twentysomethings gather around low-lying tables, where bottles of Grey Goose ($160 each) and Johnnie Walker ($150 for Black Label) are standard orders. "Are you ready to dance?" the DJ cries out in English.
Until a year and a half or so ago, this area along the 60 Freeway — Rowland Heights, Hacienda Heights, Industry — was known primarily as a bedroom community for immigrants from Taiwan and Hong Kong, and as a second Chinese food capital behind much-celebrated Monterey Park and San Gabriel. The residents spent their off-hours helping the kids with homework, not imbibing at watering holes. But all that is beginning to change.
For the first time, the Los Angeles area has a concentration of stylish clubs and pubs where Mandarin is the principal language. Though it's just in its infancy, it is drawing a good local crowd as well as out-of-town celebrities — namely, Taiwanese actors and pop singers. But that doesn't mean the scene is completely closed to non-Asian barhoppers: They're more likely than not to find new friends here.
[Taiwan]
funny how they mention the Jurassic Restaurant guy in that article. I hope the service at the San Gabriel Valley location isn't as awful as it is in Taipei.
ReplyDeletethe service in actually pretty good, but I've always wondered how that restaurant has been avoiding trademark infringement law suit from whichever movie studio that owns the Jurassic Park movies because their logos are so similar. Maybe being prominently featured in a LA times article will change that.
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