Meet David R. Chan: The Man Who Has Eaten at Over 6,000 Chinese Restaurants

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David R. Chan with a bowl of Guilin rice noodles

David R. Chan can't use chopsticks. "I can't hold them properly," Chan says. "It hasn't really been a problem, though. Chinese restaurants usually have forks available." He's checked in 6,090 Chinese restaurants, to be exact -- a number that just keeps on growing.

An accountant and attorney by trade, Chan has been keeping a spreadsheet of his culinary conquests since the early 1990s when he bought his first home computer. "When I entered the workforce in the 1970s, that coincided with the rise of what we think of as authentic Chinese food in North America," Chan says. "As such, my goal was to try every authentic Chinese restaurant in the Los Angeles area at least once."

It's a goal that he has consistently kept up with. He keeps a stack of several thousand business cards, menus and credit card receipts. His spreadsheets are organized by name, street and year visited. He has personally witnessed the introduction and spread of Chinese restaurants in Los Angeles from the beginning. The earliest restaurant visit recorded on his spreadsheet? 1951.

Squid Ink caught up with Chan over a bowl of Guilin noodles during lunch hour. He doesn't speak Chinese -- but can tell you the history and background of almost every Chinese restaurant in Los Angeles. Chan has been to so many Chinese restaurants in Los Angeles, he can list right off the bat the restaurants he hasn't been to. "The only places I know I've missed are Little Sheep San Gabriel and Factory Tea Bar," he says. "I haven't gone to [them] due to low interest."

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Clarissa Wei
Guilin rice noodles

"You need to tell me the street," he'll say whenever a obscure Chinese restaurant name is brought up. And you can almost see the wheels turning in his head as he mentally plots out the streets and figures out where the restaurant is. When he can't, he'll refer you to his spreadsheets. The restaurant is always on his spreadsheet.

His list isn't limited to Los Angeles, either. He's made considerable inroads in New York, San Francisco and Canada. Currently on his radar -- Springfield, Mo. "I want to try the Springfield, Mo., cashew chicken," he says. "It's a dish there that has crossed over from Chinese restaurants to American restaurants. It's breaded chicken mixed with cashews." In fact, he's been to most of the major cities in the United States except for Charlotte, Pittsburgh and Kansas City. "I keep a four- to five-page list on restaurants I want to visit when I get to a city," he says. And when he does make it to a city, he'll squeeze in five to 10 restaurants in each visit. "I went to six dim sum places one morning in Toronto," he says.

In addition to documenting his restaurant visits, Chan is adamant about keeping track of restaurant openings and closings. "In the old days, there weren't that many Chinese restaurants. When one opened, everyone heard about it and rushed out to try it," he says. "Consequently, it's just a matter of keeping up with what opens up on a current basis, which I've been able to do so far."

How he does it: Chowhound, the Chinese Yellow Pages and constantly driving around the area. According to his observations, there are currently around 600 Chinese restaurants in the San Gabriel Valley. He estimates that 200 of them are on Valley Boulevard.

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Chowhound
Screenshot of Chowhound back in 2000

Yet for someone with such a vast and comprehensive knowledge of Chinese-American cuisine, Chan is remarkably humble. "There's plenty of people like me running around. They just don't post on Chowhound," he says. Chowhound has been a way for Chan to keep up with the community and to exchange restaurant tidbits with fellow SGV food fans. He has been operating under the handle "Chandavkl" since at least 2000 and prolifically posts news of Chinese restaurant openings. "Sometimes I try to lighten up my posts and write about a restaurant that has gone undetected for months," he says.

There are many ironies. He doesn't use chopsticks and doesn't speak Chinese. He has been to Asia just five times. He's a third-generation American (his paternal Toishanese grandfather immigrated to the United States in 1900). He's been on a low-carb and low-sugar diet. And he's never once lived in the San Gabriel Valley.

Yet Chan's memory and passion for Chinese food and culture in America is unmatched. He visits the San Gabriel Valley roughly twice a week and avoids eating at the same restaurants over again. It's a hobby he's been at for more than four decades. "My last quarter at UCLA (in 1969), they offered the first Asian-American ethnic studies class ever. To show you how long ago that was, the course was called 'Orientals in America' and it triggered a consciousness in me which continues to this date," he says. He's an amateur historian who was at the forefront of the Asian-American movement in the United States. Chan doesn't just eat at restaurants. He internalizes their history and significance.

"The opening of ABC Seafood Restaurant in 1984 was the launching of an era of Chinese food in the area," he says. ABC was the first authentic Chinese restaurant in Los Angeles.


Location Info

Venue

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Little Sheep Hot Pot

140 W. Valley Blvd., San Gabriel, CA

Category: Restaurant

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ABC Seafood Restaurant

708 New High St., Los Angeles, CA

Category: Restaurant

NBC Seafood Restaurant

404 S. Atlantic Blvd., Monterey Park, CA

Category: Restaurant

Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant

3939 Rosemead Blvd., Rosemead, CA

Category: Restaurant

Seafood Village Restaurant

684 W. Garvey Ave., Monterey Park, CA

Category: Restaurant

Qing Dao Bread Food

301 N. Garfield Ave., Monterey Park, CA

Category: Restaurant

Xi Guan Noodle House

8150 Garvey Ave., Rosemead, CA

Category: Restaurant

My Voice Nation Help
21 comments
artzlinda
artzlinda

What an amazing and interesting journey about Chinese restaurant dining. You tell it so well. It reminded me of an exhibit I saw in NYC, "Have You Eaten Yet?". Thank you for your wonderful story.

Luk Mike
Luk Mike

May be a decade ago there were still dim sum places in downtown toronto that opened at 7ish. Not sure about now.

Lina
Lina

Holy crabs. I almost feel the need to do that here in Hong Kong, but with foreign or mainland Chinese food.

Eddie Lin
Eddie Lin

Darn, I've only eaten at only 5999 Chinese restaurants!  ONE DAY, Mr. Chan, I will surpass you.  I will reign supreme!!!  Watch your back...or your belly. 

Guest213
Guest213

Wow, thank you, David Chan!  How awesome that you are a historian of the myriads of Chinese restaurants.  Would love to see your spreadsheet and other information published.

Jeff Chop
Jeff Chop

This skinny dude has eating in over 6,000 restaurants? Please.Guy is a nitwit. I came in LA in 1978, you could definitely eat roast duck, crispy pig, chow fun, chasui and TBCM. How does he define authentic Chinese food? To say not until 1984, ABC was the first authentic Chinese restaurant opened in Los Angeles is really an ignorant statement. So they had fish tanks, bfd. If he ate in 6000 restaurants, since the first pc's 1980s, that's over 190 restaurants a year. Ate dim sum in 6 dim sum restaurants in a Toronto morning? Most dim sum places don't open until at least 9:00am and actually eat in 6 restaurants? Impossible. And he has nothing to say about Chinese food in San Francisco? If he went to UCLA in the late sixties, he was maybe 3-4 years old in 1951, when he recorded his first restaurant! Let's see the notes!

Spelunquer
Spelunquer

you're a nitwit:  he dates a proliferation, not an origin.  dumb-friggin-corn-holer.

John Jung
John Jung

So many Chinese restaurants, so little time! But somebody has to do it, so I admire David's devotion.  Just curious, do you take a day off once in a while from Chinese food and try other cuisines?

SpicyCashewChicken
SpicyCashewChicken

A lot of my family has lived in Springfield, MO since the 70s. I remember eating Cashew Chicken as a small kid.  Now, whenever I visit, the first thing we usually do is head out for Cashew Chicken.  I've never had anything that comes close to it here in L.A.  If you ever make it out that way, I recommend Yen Ching.

Ronnasuzanne
Ronnasuzanne

Hello Mr. Chan, I love your hobby and admire your diligence. Do you remember the Royal House on 8th and Irolo that later moved to Valley Blvd. around 1982? It had the best northern-style guo tieh and xian bing I've ever had. Also served delicious "bean sauce noodles" (zha zhiang mian). I used to eat there every weekend between 1978 and 1984 until I moved from LA. Dad was the chef--a Popeye lookalike from Shandong who was supported by his younger wife and two twenty-something sons. The restaurant closed and might have moved to Las Vegas? Do you have any knowledge of it? Thanks! Loved the story!

Ethai
Ethai

Would love to see the spreadsheet - we could code it by cuisine type and other characteristics and then plot it on a temporal map. Maybe overlay reviews... Could be a fun little app.

Steve
Steve

I love chinese food! Cant say i have been too 600 different ones let alone 6000! suppose if its something you set out to do it is posibble but I always like to stick what i know best... if I have a nice meal somewhere why would I want to change.

Santorini Hotel
Santorini Hotel

I love Chinese food but 6000 different places is far too many :)

Robin-chao
Robin-chao

Here's a man who has figured out his purpose in life.

Chandavkl
Chandavkl

Yes, we know there was Hong Kong style food in LA in the 1970s (Kin Kwok on Garvey in 1976).  This article is not a definitive history of the growth of Hong Kong food in L.A.

Weaver Jannie
Weaver Jannie

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Weaver Jannie
Weaver Jannie

as Frances said I am dazzled that anyone able to get paid doller5846 in four weeks on the internet. have you read this page lazycash42.c()m

Michael
Michael

Stupid article. . Phoenix Inn on Valley and in Chinatown (before the makeover) long predate ABC and are classic examples of Hong Kong style Chinese food.

It's like you're saying Chinese food didn't exist before 84?

Chandavkl
Chandavkl

Yes, we know there was Hong Kong style food in LA in the 1970s (KinKwok on Garvey in 1976).  This article is not a definitive history ofthe growth of Hong Kong food in L.A.

Bigmouth
Bigmouth

Great profile! When I saw the name, I wondered if Chan was the incredibly knowledgeable and helpful Chandavkl.

One suggestion: I wish he would write a blog devoted exclusively to food.

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