
Shanghai Red’s, Marina Del Rey, Los Angeles
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Shanghai Red’s, Marina Del Rey, Los Angeles
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I’ll say this for Shanghai Red’s: you get a great view of the Marina while you’re dining. I’ll also say this: if you want really good food, eat somewhere else.
My family used to go exclusively for the weekend brunch. I was always game—as long as someone else was paying, because I wasn’t about to pay over $70 for my wife and me, not when she gets full on two ounces of food and less than 10 percent of the offerings appeal to me. Shanghai Red’s brunch is a fair sight better than those seafood buffets charging only $15 a head that are popping up all over Southern California, but when you’re just a small step above Red Lobster, as Shanghai Red’s is, 36 bucks a pop is a little steep if you ask me. Now, if the food was actually good….
This is not to say that Shanghai Red’s food is bad, or even mediocre. I am not averse to eating at Red Lobster; Shanghai Red’s is better than Red Lobster (marginally); therefore I have no problem eating the food, though I can’t think of a single item that would qualify as “great” (except some of the deserts, but who has room for desert after gorging themselves on an all-you-can-eat buffet?). Sure, the eggs Benedict is okay, as long as you don’t mind that they’ve been sitting under a heat lamp for half an hour, the English muffins are soggy and the egg yolks are as dry as the Mojave, but keep in mind that there’s always a Denny’s nearby. For the price, you wouldn’t expect Dom Perignon champagne, but the sparkling wine they serve can hardly be called “champagne.”
As for a sit down dinner or lunch, the quality of the food just doesn’t match the prices. Of course, you’re paying for the view, but you’d be better off eating a good homemade meal in front of a TV showing an episode of Bay Watch.
When it comes to fish and chips, I’d rather drive for four hours to Morro Bay—which also has a bay view—and have them made properly than spend twice as much on the trendy facsimile served at Red’s. The steaks taste like they were plopped under a broiler for a few minutes and are hardly what I’d call tender—unless it’s the filet mignon, which is naturally tender, so even Red’s would have a hard time making it tough.
The oysters are, well, oysters. How can you screw up an oyster, unless you let it sit over a heater vent for an hour before serving it? But they are small and, for the price, left me wanting another three servings that I couldn’t afford.
All in all, I have to say that for a meal that costs nearly $100 for two people—including drinks, appetizers and tip, if any (but no desert)—you can save a lot of money and have a more satisfying meal if you drive down Washington Boulevard to Sepulveda and have a pastrami sandwich at Johnnie’s.
http://www.shanghairedsrestaurant.com/shanghai_reds/
Shanghai Red’s
13813 Fiji Way
Marina del Rey, CA 90292