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Tastes of the East and West; Be healthy or decadent.
Diners
at Favori in Santa Ana can sample flavors from either side
of its French Vietnamese cuisine.
by KAREN NEWELL YOUNG. Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, Calif.:
Feb 13, 2000. pg. B.8, [ORANGE COUNTY CALENDAR; Sunday
Brunch ]
(Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 2000
all Rights reserved)
"Fusion cuisine" is a phrase tossed around a lot these
days. Cultures have been happily coupling in the kitchen for
decades, and the result has been an endless mix of new
tastes and flavors.
One of the original unions was the Vietnamese French
connection that took place after France colonized Vietnam in
the 1850s.
Thanks to the largest assembly of Vietnamese outside of
Southeast Asia, French Vietnamese restaurants are plentiful
in Orange County. And a Vietnamese brunch is a sneaky way to
stick to a healthy diet while squeezing in a little French
decadence.
Sunday mornings at the Favori Restaurant in Santa Ana are
family affairs. For some reason, the very dark dining room,
bathed in dim pink light against mirrored walls, is
extremely quiet. Either because of the calming peach decor
or the reserved diners, customers whisper their orders and
are greeted with speedy, efficient servers.
The first decision is whether to go French or Vietnamese for
appetizers. After checking out the creamed mushrooms on
toast, the escargot and the assorted creamed soups, we
headed east toward khai vi: Vietnamese starters.
Minced pork and vegetables rolled in rice noodles are a
traditional beginning to most meals in Vietnam, but I
suggest skipping the Favori version because they are too dry
and even the wonderfully sweet and pungent peanut sauce
can't revive them.
Instead, order the fried spring rolls, another typical
choice for starters. These crispy delights are made of
shredded pork, bean sprouts and cellophane noodles, fried
like an eggroll. They are eaten wrapped in a leaf of iceberg
lettuce and dipped in fish sauce, or nam pla.
We wanted more but pressed on with our mission to try
several other starters and main dishes. Seafood crepes,
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more pictures

which are the Vietnamese version of omelets, were a little
greasy but bulging with bean sprouts and shrimp. They are
similar to egg rolls, but instead of fried dough, eggs are
crisped over fillings like a thin blintz.
My favorite first course is the shrimp and beef salad (go
tom bo tai chanh, No. 53 on the appetizer list). This stack
of crispy fresh carrots, mint and cilantro slivers, onions,
lotus roots, celery, beef, shrimp and chopped peanuts--all
bathed in a sweet-and-sour lime sauce--is my idea of a
perfect salad.
On another visit we tried escargot in butter and wine sauce.
Yes, these are snails--delicious, nutty, braised curlicues
plucked from their garlicky shells.
Feeling carnivorous? Favori dedicates half its French menu
to beef. Filet mignons--in either green peppercorn,
Bearnaise, wine or onion sauces--are tender and tasty. They
are grilled to order and covered in a light and tangy cream
sauce that can be dangerously addictive. Add warm garlic
bread and a fried potato and you're talking guilty
pleasures.
If the French are fatter than Asians, this is the reason.
Much of the appeal of Vietnamese dishes is that
fresh-from-the-garden smell of fragrant mint, cilantro,
parsley and other fresh herbs tossed on nearly everything
you order. Crispy-fried, barbecued pork, for example, is
infused with basil, mint, cilantro and mounded on top of
vermicelli. Other braised meats and curries are dusted with
assorted greenery.

No Vietnamese menu would be complete without pho, or meat
broth with rice noodles. In Vietnam, snack carts on city
streets sell this soup from morning to night. Although pho
is often eaten for breakfast, my Vietnamese friend says that
in her homeland, cold weather brings on heavier French food.
It is often cafe au lait and bread in the morning, meat in
cream sauce at night and Vietnamese dishes loaded with
vegetables or light noodle soups in the middle of the day
when the temperature rises.
The most popular choices for ending a meal in Vietnam are
flans and sweetened bean cakes. After so many forbidden
fruits, we opted for a sensible pot of tea.
*
Favori Restaurant, 3502 W. 1st Street, Santa Ana, (714)
531-6838. Open 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily. Prices range from
$1.50 to $27, but most dishes are in the $8-to-$10 range.
[Illustration]
Caption: PHOTO: (2 photos) Waiter Phu Doan, above, shows off
some of the menu items from Favori Restaurant, one of many
in the county serving French and Vietnamese cuisine. Banana
flambe, below, is one of its specialties.; PHOTOGRAPHER:
KAREN TAPIA / Los Angeles Times
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