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Four Seasons Hotpot and Dumplings

July 1st, 2008 · 2 Comments

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (3 votes, average: 3.67 out of 5)
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236 N. University Ave.
Provo, UT 84601
801-375-6888
www.fourseasonshotpot.com


While dining at a delicious, but unnamed here, Chinese restaurant, Jason approached the waitress to find out if there was anywhere in the county to get Dim Sum. She said no. There is not. A minute later, she returned and motioned us closer so she could tell us of Four Seasons Hotpot and Dumplings in a hushed tone so that the manager would not hear her recommending a different restaurant to us. It is not Dim Sum, it’s Hot Pot and it’s awesome.

Hotpot you say? Not Dim Sum you say? Awesome you say? She was right, on all 3 accounts. Especially the awesome account. If you have never tried Chinese HotPot, for shame. It is a glorious and singular food that shouldn’t be missed.

After you have been there a few times (or after sitting there for an hour cooking and socializing) you will learn where the different food sits in the broth. If you are waiting for your mussel to cook, know that it will be dead center on the bottom, so you are not nipping around blindly with your chopsticks. They also supply you with “Shao Shao” hunters, which are large slotted spoons for those of us who are chopstick impaired. You also will learn the general cooking times for each food.

Everyone chooses their own raw ingredients to place in the boiling soup but it is a seeming free-for-all when retrieving the cooked morsels. If Jason has left a shrimp cooking whilst he is up getting a refill on his drink, you just snatch that bastard up and eat it. Trust me, he won’t mind. It is a great share and share alike meal, and of course Jason just ate all the bean curd skins I was cooking.

Chinese Hotpot and traditional ingredients, such as beef, shrimp, chicken, beef and squid balls, vegetables, etc...

What is a cuttlefish ball? Who knows but they are tasty, especially lightly coated with awesome sauce.

Getting there:

If you aren’t in Provo, take the center street exit and turn left on University Ave. It will sneak up on you on the right (East) side of University. Look for a maroon awning just after you pass 200 south. There is usually plenty of parking in front as it is nestled between a D&D store and what looks like it used to be a vacuum store. I don’t think any of those Magik playing suckers ever eat at Four Seasons, so don’t worry. If you are in Provo and have never been there, you might as well kill yourself.

–Joe

Where do I start with Four Seasons? This place is one of my very favorite restaurants in all of Utah. Run by one of the cutest couples I have ever met, this is a family business in every sense of the word. The restaurant, for the most part, serves two things: hotpots and dumplings (did you expect something else?). The hotpots are cooked in the traditional way, at the table by the customer, and the dumplings are made fresh to order by the owners. I love watching the couple that run the place make their dumplings. They so obviously enjoy each other, it is a joy to watch them work together.

They serve several different kinds of dumplings: boiled and steamed Jiaozi, tasty Xiao Long Bao, and my favorite, fist-sized Baozi; all served with their special dipping sauce. You can choose from a variety of ingredients for the dumpling fillings. You can choose vegetarian dumplings, or you can choose from pork, chicken or beef. Once you’ve chosen a base, you can choose several from any number of vegetables to add to the fillings. The dumplings will then be prepared for you by the proprietors as you wait. These are seriously delicious dumplings. The Jiaozi are not unlike what are commonly called “potstickers”, however they are steamed or boiled, rather than being steamed and fried. These are very light and tasty. The Xiao Long Bao are like small purses (about the size of a walnut). These are then steamed to perfection. These are also very light and fairly healthy. The Baozi are much larger, about the size of a fist, and are a different animal entirely. Made from a raised dough, and filled with a larger quantity of fillings, these are not as light as the other dumplings that you can find here. They are, however, very good, and I highly recommend ordering one per person to eat with your hotpot.

Now, for the hotpots! If you are having a hotpot for your meal, you first choose a broth. You can choose from a chicken broth, a Chinese miso broth (great with seafood), or my favorite, the hot and spicy broth. If you can’t make up your mind, they have a special pot with a divider down the middle that will allow you to have two broths in the same pot. Once you choose a broth, they make it in the kitchen and then bring it, boiling, to your table. The pot of broth is then put onto either an electric or gas burner at your table to keep it boiling. Once you have your broth, you can go to the ingredients buffet and choose from a wide assortment of ingredients to put into your hotpot. Included in the array are the standard pork, chicken, and beef (all raw), as well as some other, more exotic ingredients. You can choose Chinese meat or fish balls, tofu skins, shrimp, eggs, a wide assortment of vegetables, noodles, and much more. Dinnertime has an even wider assortment of seafood, including mussels, fish, whole jumbo prawns, and squid.

Once you have your plate full of raw ingredients, you bring it back to the table and begin to cook them in the broth. Everybody puts a few ingredients from their raw plate into the broth, and as they cook, you remove them. You will have a second plate on which to place the cooked food. There you can dip it into the house special dipping sauce, or as Joe calls it: Awesome Sauce, and then eat it. It’s a really fun meal, and as you cook as you go, it’s great for socializing with those at your table.

Once you have eaten what you like from the ingredients bar, your broth will have become fantastically seasoned. Now for the best part: take some noodles and put them into a bowl. If you like, add some vegetables or other ingredients (choose ones that cook fast), and ladle in some of your broth. Now, eat one of the best soups you’ve ever had!

After your meal, the host or hostess will invite you to help yourself to the ‘dessert freezer’. Inside the freezer is an assortment of ice cream sandwiches, popsicles, and other frozen treats. It makes for a pretty good bargain as meals go, especially since a drink is also included.

I just can’t say enough good things about The Four Seasons. The proprietors are so warm and inviting and the food is just excellent. Also, while not the most kid-friendly of meals, the restaurant itself is very kid friendly. Joe and I brought our families once, and our kids were treated to plastic cups and plates which had fun Asian cartoon characters on them. The kids loved them, and it was obvious by their kind words and doting attitudes that the couple that run the place were very happy to see them.

I’ve gone back here many times, and will continue to do so. I feel it is important to support small businesses like these, especially when they are so fantastic. Please give this restaurant a try, I’m sure it will become one of your favorites as well!

–Jason

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2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Shoots | Asian | Utasty // Aug 17, 2008 at 11:02 pm

    [...] to say that this is one of the two best Chinese restaurants in all of Utah County (the other being Four Seasons Hotpot and Dumplings). The food is fantastic, the restaurant is always clean, and the staff are very welcoming. In fact [...]

  • 2 Jun // Nov 3, 2008 at 11:54 am

    The home-made traditional dishes, such as boiled /steamed Jiaozi and signature salad, are delicious. In addition, it is probably the cleanest and most organized Chinese restaurant I’ve ever seen in Utah. My family and I also like their decoration. Quite classic Chinese! The couple worked there were friendly. We especially liked the husband’s working attitude. He seems to enjoy his job a lot. We even tipped highly the first time when we had hot pot, which we served ourselves most of time.

    We didn’t enjoy the hot pot so much. Probably because we have tasted a variety of hot pots before, and the Four Seasons Hotpot doesn’t have many choices of dishes to cook in the hotpot.

    Besides, one might calculate the bill carefully when he/she is going to pay. We were overcharged almost 50% of our bill in the beginning. Then we asked to recalculate. It seems to get the correct amount at the second time of calculation. We also had some orders to take out, but we didn’t get seperate bill of take-out and stay-in. So we didn’t tip based on the total amount. However, we were asked to pay based on the after-tax total amount and tipped 15%. We argued about that, and was given an amount for stay-in bill. We didn’t want to recalculate what we really had again, so we tipped 15% based on the amount the owner told us. After we came home, we recalculated the price for our stay-in meal based on the price listed on their online web page, we found that we were asked to tip 15% for $80, but we actually only ordered about $60. I won’t say it’s a pleasant experience.

    We’ve visited there twice in a month, and probably won’t go back again. It’s not about being asked to tip on a wrong amount. It’s about the degree of enjoying a meal in a restaurant.

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