RETURNING TO CITI FIELD  
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 COURIER LIFE, NOVEMBER 15-21, 2019 39  
 THIS WINTER 
 theworldsfare.nyc 
 Savor Superb Sichuan at Spy C in Forest Hills  
 Th  e leafy streets of Forest Hills are worlds  
 away from the madding crowd of downtown  
 Flushing’s Chinatown where more than a half  
 dozen restaurants traffi  c in the fi ery fare of Sichuan. 
  Nevertheless they’re home to one of the  
 best Sichuan restaurants in Queens, Spy C. 
 Before I ate there I was skeptical of Spy C  
 for two reasons: the name and the location.  
 “What a goofy name, and how good can a  
 restaurant in a neighborhood with so few  
 Chinese people be?” I groused to myself.  
 Then I tasted the ma po tofu from Chef Zhen  
 “Tom” Lei. The creamy curds of soybean  
 bathed in a red chili sauce and shot through  
 with ground pork sang with ma la, a combination  
 of chili heat and Sichuan peppercorn  
 tingle that’s a hallmark of the cuisine. I also  
 thoroughly enjoyed the fu qi fei pian—listed  
 on the menu as beef tripe with chili oil—a  
 cool tangle of tendon, innards, and meat  
 slicked with chili oil—better known among  
 Chinese food cognoscenti as husband wife  
 offal slices. Chef Lei turns that old warhorse  
 spicy cucumber salad into a thoroughbred  
 thanks to homemade chili oil and a perfect  
 balance of sour, sweet, and spicy flavors. 
 Th  e cool sweet and spicy cucumbers are a great  
 counterpoint to some of the more incendiary fare  
 like dry pepper chicken, golden brown chunks of  
 fried chicken riddled with dried red peppers and  
 fl avored with Sichuan peppercorn oil. A chicken  
 wing version of the dish is even better. 
 Other standouts include Hunan style  
 braised fish with pickled mustard greens—a  
 study in sour and spice flavored with pink  
 peppercorns and of all things sliced lime— 
 and crispy shredded beef. The latter, crunchy  
 tendrils of fried beef, is great with beer. 
 While the focus is squarely on the fiery  
 bold flavors of Sichuan, not every dish relies  
 on chili heat. One of the best things is the  
 house special braised pork belly, wobbly mahogany  
 colored chunks of meat resounding  
 the flavor of five spice and soy. The deeply  
 comforting dish, which Chef Lei says draws  
 on the flavors of Shanghai, is one I will return  
 to again and again this winter. The same goes  
 for the deceptively simple sounding braised  
 beef with tomato noodle soup. 
 All of the dishes at Spy C are remarkably  
 balanced and often as as good or even better  
 than their Flushing counterparts. That’s because  
 the 34-year-old Chef Lei, who learned  
 to cook at a top culinary school in Beijing,  
 developed the menu for several of that neighborhood’s  
 restaurants, including Szechuan  
 Mountain House. 
 Even though we do not speak the same language  
 I’ve gotten to know Chef Lei over the  
 course of several visits. We share a more important  
 common language, a passion for Chinese  
 cuisine. When a mutual friend told me  
 Chef Lei was pretty critical of most restaurants  
 in Flushing, I struggled with whether  
 to tell him about my favorite Sichuan spot  
 Chengdu Tian Fu, which closed over the summer. 
  Like a nervous schoolgirl I showed him  
 a photo of their infamous cold noodles on my  
 cellphone. “Oh, yeah that place was great,” he  
 said through a translator. Even though I still  
 really miss my favorite Flushing haunt, I’m  
 glad to have a new favorite Sichuan spot in  
 Forest Hills. 
 	
 
 Address: 72-06 Austin St., Forest Hills 
 Phone: 718-263-0357 
 Website: www.spycny.com 
 BY JOE DISTEFANO 
 As the Culinary King of Queens, I’m so  
 very fortunate to live in the most diverse  
 and delicious destination in all of New York  
 City. Really I’m not royalty though, I’m  
 an ambassador, and a hungry one at that.  
 Today, we take a trip to Sichuan, China, via  
 a most unlikely location, Forest Hills. 
 	
 
 	
	
 
 
		
 
 
		
	 
 
 	
	
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/www.spycny.com
		/www.spycny.com