From the Los Angeles Public Library Menu Collection: Man Jen Low, One of Chinatown's Oldest Restaurants

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lapl.org
Exploring the LAPL menu collection is an ongoing project in which we'll take a close look at the menus owned by the Los Angeles Public Library. Read about the project here.

It's amazing how often menus discovered in the LAPL menu collection narrate the history of Los Angeles. Today we look at a menu that details what Chinese food was like in the restaurants of the 1950's. If you look a little closer though, it also tells some of the story of Cantonese immigrants to Los Angeles over the last century.

The menu, which the library dates as being from 1950, is for Man Jen Low, a restaurant that later changed its name to General Lee's and was sometimes known as General Lee's Man Jen Low. A Los Angeles Times story about the history of Chinese food in L.A. says that Man Jen Low is the earliest Chinese restaurant known by name in the city. In an earlier L.A. Times article about the restaurant's closure in 1985, the writer refers to it as "a Chinatown institution dating from 1878," though the story never makes clear exactly what those 1878 origins were. It does indicate that during its heyday the restaurant enjoyed a star-studded clientele.

By the 1940s, General Lee's had become a well-known watering spot that often drew entertainers and prominent diners. David Lee was the Cantonese master chef while elder brother Walter was maitre d'.

"We used to have Gary Cooper ... Helen Hayes, Robert Goulet. Frank Sinatra, he's been here a couple times. Judy Garland used to come here all the time, and she brought her daughter, Liza Minnelli, when she was a kid. We used to cater to Spencer Tracy," David Lee recalled.

The Lee family story is documented on the website Los Angeles Chinatown Remembered. It claims that the restaurant's original location was in old Chinatown, but moved to its final location, in new Chinatown, in 1937.

So what did you eat at a celebrity-favorite Cantonese restaurant circa 1950? Perhaps something from the section of the menu titled "Our Specialties for an Adventurous Mood into the Realm of the Chinese Epicureans." Such as hop toa gai, or chicken with walnuts, for $1.50, or Lobster Cantonese for $1.75, "a very popular dish among foreigners as well as Orientals." There's also chop suey, chow mein, chow funn, and many other dishes that are part of the classic Cantonese and Chinese American culinary pantheon.

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lapl.org

See also: From the Los Angeles Public Library Menu Collection: The Luau, a 1950s Tiki Bar in Beverly Hills
See also: From the Los Angeles Public Library Menu Collection: Nat Goodwin Cafe, a Glittering 1913 Restaurant on a Private Santa Monica Pier


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5 comments
rhgindc
rhgindc

Here's a menu (circa 1970's) from Joe Woo's Chinese Kitchen, a popular Cantonese restaurant in the SFV:

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=299153556822450&set=pb.299135050157634.-2207520000.1351189861&type=3&theater

brodell
brodell

 @rhgindc There's a Joe Woo menu at the Library as well, although it's for a North Hollywood restaurant I think... http://dbase1.lapl.org/dbtw-wpd/exec/dbtwpub.dll?AC=GET_RECORD&XC=http://dbase1.lapl.org/dbtw-wpd/exec/dbtwpub.dll&BU=http%3A%2F%2Fdbase1.lapl.org&TN=menus&SN=AUTO13738&SE=1307&RN=0&MR=20&RF=web+tab+report+maya&DF=Pin&RL=0&DL=0&NP=3&ID=&MF=&MQ=&TI=0

rhgindc
rhgindc

 @brodell Joe Woo's was in North Hollywood. I tried accessing the link you posted but unable to pull it up. Thanks for doing a great piece on Chinatown restaurants....it brings back fond memories. As a child my parents would take me there several times a month and they'd visit friends and relatives, many who owned shops or restaurants.

rhgindc
rhgindc

 @brodell Thanks again. That menu is from the "New Joe Woo's". My family (aunt & cousins...Joe Sr. had since died many years before) sold Joe Woo's to new owners who kept the name and changed some things around. The menu you linked was from circa 1990's.

brodell
brodell

 @rhgindc Yeah for some reason the entire link isn't live...but if you copy and paste the whole thing rather than click you should be able to see the menu. It seems as though a ton of people have really fond memories of these restaurants and that era. I was blown away when I started researching how many different aspects of LA history and culture are tied to the story of this one restaurant.

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