Yummy Box - Hainanese Chicken in Mesa
Posted: Sun Dec 03, 2023 10:32 am
We stopped at a small place down in Mesa Saturday night called Yummy Box, famous for its $9 quarter-sections of Hainanese Chicken.
My wife and I both grew up as kids on an ethnically Chinese island in Southeast Asia, so Hainanese Chicken (HC) is an important dish to both of us. We are constantly on the lookout for a place that can serve HC that is both hot and cool, spicy and garlicky, etc. etc. Really, we want a replacement for the long-departed and much-lamented Bungah Raya restaurant.
So upon watching the Saturday Faturday video linked above, we decided to make this a destination, and upon arriving, we ordered the following items. Each of these dishes was about $9 to $11, and each comes in a clever dish-within-a-dish combination container.
Hainanese Chicken: We make this at home with packaged spices from Lee Lee, and our result is a "heavy" dish, while this is a lighter, clearer dish, with the rice highlighting the serving. The poached chicken is fine, and you need to remember to stir the ginger and garlic sauce to get the chopped bits up into the solution, but the rice is really excellent. The slight taste of pandan, broth, ginger and garlic in the rice was all just right. The ginger/chili/kalamansi sauce that we expected was absent, so for us, we felt its absence, although some people don't eat HC with the chili condiments. Beef Noodles: This is a comfort food of stewed beef over thin wheat noodles with Chinese five-spice. On a cold night, this is very pleasant, and on the total opposite end of the palate wheel from the HC. Dropping the noodles from their container into the stewed beef is particularly satisfying. Garlic Chicken over Fried Rice: This was the big winner, as far as I was concerned. Hot, spicy, delightful well-cut chicken in a garlic spice that was too thin to be a breading, but too substantial to be a sauce. The fried rice was a terrific base, and I suspect that this rice had also been originally cooked in a stock or broth prior to being chilled and fried. I regret that we didn't get the Wonton Noodle soup, as the cook clearly has full control of spicing and frying. Nothing seems to be pre-made, as it took about 15 minutes between our order and receiving out meal, and as other guests came in, you could hear the cook getting to work for each individual order. It is surprising to me that the store was empty when we arrived, but there were a steady stream of take-out orders. The fellow running the counter was very personable, and we enjoyed our meal. The menu does include what we think of as American Chinese food, but the items we ordered were good.
Does the HC meet our highest expectations or replicate that of Bungah Raya? No, but it was also $9, and I will note that my wife did not hesitate to box me out for the final bites.
We will travel back down there to try out the Wonton Soup, Rib Pho and Char Fan, and also perhaps visit the Pasty Shop two doors down.
1430 West Warner Road
Gilbert, AZ 85233
My wife and I both grew up as kids on an ethnically Chinese island in Southeast Asia, so Hainanese Chicken (HC) is an important dish to both of us. We are constantly on the lookout for a place that can serve HC that is both hot and cool, spicy and garlicky, etc. etc. Really, we want a replacement for the long-departed and much-lamented Bungah Raya restaurant.
So upon watching the Saturday Faturday video linked above, we decided to make this a destination, and upon arriving, we ordered the following items. Each of these dishes was about $9 to $11, and each comes in a clever dish-within-a-dish combination container.
Hainanese Chicken: We make this at home with packaged spices from Lee Lee, and our result is a "heavy" dish, while this is a lighter, clearer dish, with the rice highlighting the serving. The poached chicken is fine, and you need to remember to stir the ginger and garlic sauce to get the chopped bits up into the solution, but the rice is really excellent. The slight taste of pandan, broth, ginger and garlic in the rice was all just right. The ginger/chili/kalamansi sauce that we expected was absent, so for us, we felt its absence, although some people don't eat HC with the chili condiments. Beef Noodles: This is a comfort food of stewed beef over thin wheat noodles with Chinese five-spice. On a cold night, this is very pleasant, and on the total opposite end of the palate wheel from the HC. Dropping the noodles from their container into the stewed beef is particularly satisfying. Garlic Chicken over Fried Rice: This was the big winner, as far as I was concerned. Hot, spicy, delightful well-cut chicken in a garlic spice that was too thin to be a breading, but too substantial to be a sauce. The fried rice was a terrific base, and I suspect that this rice had also been originally cooked in a stock or broth prior to being chilled and fried. I regret that we didn't get the Wonton Noodle soup, as the cook clearly has full control of spicing and frying. Nothing seems to be pre-made, as it took about 15 minutes between our order and receiving out meal, and as other guests came in, you could hear the cook getting to work for each individual order. It is surprising to me that the store was empty when we arrived, but there were a steady stream of take-out orders. The fellow running the counter was very personable, and we enjoyed our meal. The menu does include what we think of as American Chinese food, but the items we ordered were good.
Does the HC meet our highest expectations or replicate that of Bungah Raya? No, but it was also $9, and I will note that my wife did not hesitate to box me out for the final bites.
We will travel back down there to try out the Wonton Soup, Rib Pho and Char Fan, and also perhaps visit the Pasty Shop two doors down.
1430 West Warner Road
Gilbert, AZ 85233