Thursday, October 1, 2009

Asian Court: Dim Sum in Ellicott City


Dim sum just got closer for the HowChows now that we have tried -- and really enjoyed -- Asian Court on Rte 40 in Ellicott City.

Asian Court looks like a hundred other Chinese restaurants, but it stands out because it serves dim sum for lunch -- from menu on weekdays and from rolling carts on weekends. On a Sunday, Asian Court offers the bustling fun of Hong Kong brunch. Waitresses pushing carts and offering little dishes in metal containers. "Do you want shumai?" "Steamed pork buns?" "Sticky rice?"

At first, we were actually overwhelmed. I have been to many dim sums where we waited and waited for a cart to roll past. Asian Court floods the room, and there are other waiters carrying platters with just a couple plates of specials like "salt-and-pepper shrimp" or "clams in black bean sauce." Grab one of the yellow dim sum menus as you enter the dining room. You can see your options and then wait -- or even ask for -- the items that catch your fancy.

Our yardstick was the steamed barbeque pork buns. That's Mrs. HowChow's standard back from the days when she ate dim sum with a Chinese friend in Monterey Park. Asian Court's were as good as Los Angeles and Silver Spring. A fluffy outside with the savory pork inside. We also loved with sticky rice wrapped in lotus leaves. You unpeel the leaves to find inside a

mix of sticky rice and pieces of meat -- a few pieces of pork, maybe chicken, definitely a cube of pork belly and a piece of sweet sausage. I also liked the "salt-and-pepper shrimp," although it was hard to peel the shrimp and still one step beyond for me to eat their heads.

On first visit, Asian Court holds its own with Silver Spring's Oriental East, which often wins "Best of Washington" awards. If anything, Asian Court was better because it serves the best desserts that I have ever had in a Chinese restaurant. First, a coconut jelly -- white squares a little more firm than jello and tasting of coconut and a touch of sugar. Then, sesame balls -- rounds of rice dough fried perfect so that they're light and crispy and stuffed with gooey, sweet red bean inside.

(Update: Based on David's comment below, I revised the post to be clear that Asian Court serves dim sum at lunch, not dinner. David reports that the standard dinner menu did not stand out.)

If you want more suggestions about Asian Court, check out Warthog's 2008 post on Chowhound, where he specifically recommends bitter melon rounds stuffed with shrimp past, the meat-filled tofu-skin rolls, and the tripe. Maybe he'll put his current top picks in the comments below.

This year, Asian Court won a "Best of Baltimore" from the City Paper. Click here for my post about Chinese restaurants in Howard County. If you want to explore Asian Court's neighborhood, check out my post about all the restaurants along Rte 40.

Asian Court
9180 Baltimore National Pike
Ellicott City, MD 21042
410-461-8388

NEAR: This is on Rte 40 west of Rte 29. From Rte 29, you turn RIGHT into the Chatham Station Shopping Center and then right again into the shopping area with Asian Court, Goodyear Tire and Davis Cigars.

Asian Court on Urbanspoon

7 comments:

Work in progress said...

Ack! A whole plate of shrimp heads gone to waste...

Anonymous said...

Kevin, I'm with you. The heads are the best part! I'm only sorry that now there will likely be a longer wait to get a table with this post.

RunEatRepeat said...

You had me at Monterey Park

Anonymous said...

But they don't serve dim sum at all hours. Went there last month for dinner and it was not available. The regular Chinese menu was good, but nothing exceptional.

I think their weekday Dim Sum is mostly for the lunch crowd.

-- David

Anonymous said...

Don't peel the shrimp! That's the secret to salt and pepper shrimp, the shells are the best part! When I'm done, my plate is usually clean. No shells, no heads.

Anonymous said...

Dim sum typically is not served at dinner time.

Anonymous said...

A visit Saturday 1/16/10 at 1:30, which is past peak at most dim sum joints, and while they still had a line, resulted in way-above-average items compared directly to DC places. Management remarked they have cooked to order, not reheated, dim sum weekdays too, just not on pushcarts. It's sparse weekday nights, when they have the really ineresting non-standard menu, and well worth a visit for their noodle-lovers menu corner.