It's hard to convey to a contemporary audience what a huge breakthrough Mandarette was at the time. Philip Chiang, who'd been running his mother's Beverly Hills Mandarin Restaurant, decided to open a casual little place of his own serving the food the staff made for themselves back in the kitchen. But there was a twist: Philip was brought up in Japan, and the food had a spare, clean quality that was completely new to inexpensive Chinese fare.
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It's hard to convey to a contemporary audience what a huge breakthrough Mandarette was at the time. Philip Chiang, who'd been running his mother's Beverly Hills Mandarin Restaurant, decided to open a casual little place of his own serving the food the staff made for themselves back in the kitchen. But there was a twist: Philip was brought up in Japan, and the food had a spare, clean quality that was completely new to inexpensive Chinese fare.