Reinterpreted Chinese and Asian fusion fare for the diner with a middle-of-the-road palate and budget-conscious wallet.
Openings: Lunch & Dinner daily
Features
- Parking lot
- Dress code: Casual
- Full bar
- Heart-healthy dishes
- Kid-friendly
- Outdoor dining
- Reservations suggested
P.F. Chang's China Bistro Restaurant Review:
Serving neither authentically Chinese nor traditional Chinese-American fare, this family-owned national chain seems geared toward the tastes of MOR yuppies who like their Chinese food without taking chances. That's evidently a lot of diners, because Chang's everywhere are perennially packed. Décor is comfortably upscale, and dishes are largely the by-now comfortingly familiar items that have graced most modern American Chinese restaurant menus since the late 1970s---Mongolian beef, kung pao this-and-that, spring rolls---with a few favorite Chinese-American oldies, like egg rolls. Chang's most crowd-pleasing items include colossal Asian fusion entrée salads (especially duck); lettuce wraps filled with either signature chicken or surprisingly savory mock-meat made of tofu and mushrooms; and the place's special sauce, customized tableside (for spiciness, saltiness, and tartness) that Chang's fans apply liberally to everything. Best deal: a $40 four-course dinner for two (two soups, a shared starter, two entrées, two American mini-desserts). Service is particularly good at this long-established location.
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