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Staff Picks

Staff Picks Find out about the favorite New York restaurants of the staff at the Asia Society and Museum, a nonprofit educational organization dedicated to fostering understanding of Asia and the Pacific. Check back every month for a new staff pick, and let their food discoveries in New York inspire you to try a new restaurant! Look out for the purple symbol in the restaurant listings indicating it's an Asia Society Staff Pick!

Staff:
Karen Karp
Vice President, Marketing and Communications

Recommendation:
Grand Sichuan Eastern
1049 Second Avenue
between 55th and 56th Streets
(212) 420-6517

Type of Food: Chinese with a specialization in the “new” Sichuan cuisine

Favorite Menu Items:
Chengdu Spicy Dumplings, Chong Qing Spicy and Aromatic Soft Shell Crabs,Chengdu Happy Peasant Family Whole Fish, Bean Curd Flower Family Style, Gui Zhou Spicy Chicken, Pea Shoot Soup Dumpling,Sauteed Diced Lotus Roots with Spicy Black Bean Sauce,Sour String Beans with Minced Pork, Spicy Pepper with HunanBlack Beans.

What kind of occasion would you recommend this restaurant for?
This restaurant is very casual and small. It is popular at lunch with neighborhood residents and business people. At dinner, it attracts serious Chinese foodies. Despite its low-key atmosphere, I often see people in large groups, some getting together for a special occasion.

How would you describe the atmosphere of this restaurant?
Casual. All about the food and the fun of eating with others. Service is generally pretty friendly and helpful, particularly if you show a keen interest in the variety of the foods available.

In general what else do you like about this restaurant?
This Grand Sichuan has attracted, from all across the city, devotees of authentic Chinese food. It is one of the few Chinese restaurants in the city that lures a Pan-Asian crowd, basically anyone interested in the wonderful tingling of Sichuan peppercorns and perfume of red and green chilies.

How did you come across this restaurant?
I must admit that I read about it first in Eric Asimov’s $25 and Under column in The New York Times in May 2003. I had previously patronized the Grand Sichuan in Chelsea.

You don’t have to like “hot and spicy” food to enjoy the talents of the Grand Sichuan chefs. They offer an encyclopedic array of Chinese food, from Hunan (“Mao’s Home Cooking”) to American Chinese cuisine to Cantonese, though clearly authentic Sichuan cooking is their point of difference. Many of their Sichuan specialties are unlike what most Americans have ever eaten. I know of no other place in Manhattan that serves Bean Curd Flower. Don’t ask, just try! I’m always thinking of the next time I can visit Grand Sichuan.

Past Staff Picks:

Shalini Mimani, Grant Writer and India Fund Manager
The Kati Roll Company (Indian Wraps)

Sue Lin Contributor, Asiafood.org
Olieng Thai Cuisine (Thai)

Cindy Yoon Director, Asia Society Online
Mie Japanese Restaurant (Japanese)

Niki Haas Merchandise Coordinator, AsiaStore
Nha Trang Centre (Vietnamese)