Wednesday, February 22, 2012

A Thumbs-Up

Husband-and-wife duo's Ding How keeps Asian food in Liberty Lake.

Kyler Hood

Eight years ago, the young city of Liberty Lake lacked an authentic Asian restaurant, so Ding How, which, translated from Chinese, means “thumbs up,” opened its doors and owners Yi Liu and Bin Sun started serving lunch and dinner.

A Tsingtao beer sign leads the way to a large room with a sushi bar in the back. Incandescent lights resembling dripping lotus flowers hang above tables. The place buzzes with lunchtime chatter when I arrive.

The wisps in the egg flower soup tease my taste buds and the flavor pops in the miso soup. My Thai Mussaman Curry chicken, served with hearty helpings of rice and a side salad with ginger dressing for an affordable $7, highlights the sort of spicy peanut sweetness I love. I wash it down with a cold bottle of Tsingtao, a smooth Chinese take on a Heineken.

I make the meal a family affair by bringing along my parents and sister. Mom goes for a pan of garlic and beef tenderloin with mushrooms in a black pepper garlic sauce, a sweet dish that tastes surprisingly chocolaty. Dad’s cashew chicken, served with sautéed celery, mushrooms, baby corn, zucchini, green peppers, onions and glazed cashews, was tasty, but  largely just standard Chinese fare. It was my sister’s sashimi combo, however, that offered the fresh salmon and tuna (delivered daily) that I’d been craving.

When asked about the competition from the fast food joints surrounding Liberty Lake’s grocery complex, Yi Liu, the 39-year-old co-owner, is all business.

“We’re the only Asian food in Liberty Lake,” she says.

While that lack of competition has brought them success in Liberty Lake, they’ve also expanded, with their Ugly Fish restaurant in Coeur d’Alene and Ginger on the South Hill. Check them out.

Ding How • 1332 N. Liberty Lake Rd. • Open for lunch Tue-Fri 11 am -2:30 pm; dinner Tue-Thurs 4 pm- 9pm, Fri 4 pm-10 pm, Sat-Sun 12 pm-9 pm • (921-1901)

Also in Food Feature

School of Sprinkles

We ate doughnuts every morning for a week and here’s what we learned

Inlander Staff |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Sushi Time

Kinja brings Japanese and Korean seafood inland

Jo Miller |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

UPDATE | The Blue Spark

The downtown bar opens its doors to the lunch crowd

Lisa Waananen |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Literary Confections

Books2Eat serves up literature in cake form

Lisa Waananen |
Wednesday, May 15,2013

Earth, Water, Food

Riverfront Park gets a summer eating spot with the Fountain Cafe

Jo Miller |
Wednesday, May 15,2013

Also By Kyler Hood

In the Bag

Lawmakers in Olympia take aim at the plastic bag.

Kyler Hood |
Wednesday, January 25,2012

For Your Consideration

An app for on-course golf service, Wilco's latest album and a book of artist and writers' playlists

Kyler Hood |
Wednesday, January 4,2012


 
 
Close
Close
Close