Kirbie's Cravings

Szechuan Chef

Szechuan Chef recently opened on Convoy. I’m always excited for the opening of new Chinese restaurants and went to check it out this weekend.

Prior to visiting, I had already browsed through Dennis’ photos of the menu and was particularly excited by the offering of handmade noodles as well as some cheap noodle soup prices. My excitement for the new restaurant did fade after Kirk posted his review though.


The inside interior looked quite nice. In front are the typical cold dishes that you’ll often find for Sichuan restaurants. The menu is massive, full of full sized glossy photos. There is also a wide variety of dishes offered. I found it amusing that for the vegetable dishes, instead of photos of the cooked entrees, they just had pictures of raw vegetables.

Given the negative reviews on some of my Sichuan favorites in Kirk’s review, I opted to stay away from those dishes.

Beef Pancake Roll

This is one of Mr. K’s favorite dishes. I was a little wary at how Szechuan Chef’s version would be as it’s not really a Sichuan dish and most of the versions I’ve had in San Diego are quite bad. This was actually decent. The pancake wasn’t too dry and it was filled with a good amount of thin slices of beef and tendon. I still think Liang’s Kitchen has the best version in San Diego, but this was a pretty good rendition and cheaper.

Noodle Soup with Beef and Handmade Noodles

This was a huge serving, enough for two people to share. At $5.99 this was also quite cheap. It’s hard to find any type of noodle soup for that price anymore. Unfortunately, that is where the positive notes end.

The soup was very bland as you can see by the light colored broth in the photo below.  The handmade noodles were very wide and short chunks, not very noodle-like. They also lacked the chew and bounce of good handmade noodles. The wide shape made them hard to eat and they just tasted like large pieces of dough. They were also pretty flavorless since the soup was so bland.

Beef Stomach in Hot Sauce

Normally, we love getting the cold appetizers at front, but Mr. K saw the photo for this and wondered if it would be like the Husband and Wife dish he used to love from the old Spicy City before it changed management and chefs. Since this was a cold dish and a full sized portion, we opted to just get this instead of the cold appetizer plate. This is similar to the spicy cold beef and tendon appetizer that is offered at the front except there was no beef, just the tripe. I enjoyed it but Mr. K was frustrated that it was not like the Husband and Wife dish he used to love.

The staff was very friendly. I only wish the food was as good. Given Kirk’s negative reviews of the traditional Sichuan dishes and our lackluster experience of their other dishes, I don’t think we’ll be coming back anytime soon.

It looks like there may be some other new places opening soon in this plaza as quite a few places have left the complex, including Yoshinoya.

Here are the menu photos:

Szechuan Chef
4344 Convoy St
San Diego, CA 92111

 

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5 comments on “Szechuan Chef”

  1. Hi! I know I’m very, very late- I’m currently on a mission to read through your blog! But I really like the Dan Dan Noodles from here, and the Pepper Stir-Fried Country Style Pork (?????) just in case if you ever decide to come back, but there are probably better restaurant options around.

  2. Go to Chef Ma in Cupertino for good Sichuan food. Just as good as the food I ate in Sichuan 🙂

  3. Hi Kirbie – I’m still wondering if the chef is actually from Sichuan?

    • I wouldn’t be surprised if he isn’t. I’ve noticed a lot of restaurants I go to with my family in the Bay Area now are marketing a particular region of food, but once you sit down, the menu is all over the place and then you find out the chef and staff are not from that region at all.