"The Restaurants
Of Manchester team took a well-earned break for lunch on
Tuesday afternoon and headed down to China Town (as Phil
Lynott would say). We popped into Pan Asia and was instantly
greeted by the friendly manageress who passed us on to a
waitress, who in turn walked us to a table and, before we
even sat down, took our drinks order before disappearing
(not into thin air, obviously).
The restaurant
itself is welcoming and bright, TV's on the wall broadcast
news and music channels whilst the open kitchen allows you
to watch the chefs creating their dishes from China, Japan,
Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia.
However it
was our tummy's we'd come to feed, not our eyes, and after
waiting for around 5 minutes for the drinks, without an
a la carte menu to read nor a waitress in sight to ask what
the plan of attack was, we actually contemplated getting
up and leaving at that point. Fortunately a family who'd
come in around the same time, and were eyeing us up to see
what our first move would be, eventually decided to just
go for the buffet trays without instruction. Yep, it would
appear there's only buffet and no a la carte menu during
the day. By default, we decided to also head to the buffet
trays too.
With hindsight,
we're glad we hadn't left earlier as the choice of dishes
was excellent, from Japanese Sushi and Hot & Sour Soup
to Beef in Black Bean Sauce or Aromatic Crispy Duck. With
the exception of the cold chips, each dish was well stocked
and fresh. Without casting too much aspersions on most buffet
restaurants, you could understand why the vast majority
of diners at Pan Asia were wearing business suits rather
than shell suits.
On returning
to our table, our drinks were finally there to greet us
- not bad value either (£2.85 for Chinese Beer), we
sat down and tucked into the food, which, it has to be said,
was rather tasty and a good sampler of what you can expect
on the a la carte menu (served after 3pm). Apart from the
poor service and lack of instruction, our only gripe was
the size of the plates - not much bigger than a saucer -
which results in having to burn off all the extra calories
with repeated trips to the buffet trays. We were also surprised
at the lack of a price list - as it turned out, the buffet
was £6.95 (£7.95 at weekends), which is great
value for money and even less than the cheapest dish on
the a la carte menu (ranging from £7.50 for many standard
Chinese dishes to £11.50 for Sizzling Japanese Style
Salmon Fillet).
Without wanting
to sound snobby, as far as buffet restaurants go, you can't
do much better in China Town and we'll certainly be returning
for the a la carte menu soon."
- restaurants of manchester 5/3/08 (visited on a tuesday
afternoon) |