China House Menu

  • Menu

Healthy Meal suggestions for China House

  • Menu

Visit below restaurant in Cleveland for healthy meals suggestion.

  • Charity H.

    I am truly sad. This has been my go-to place for Chinese since joining my place of employment almost 15 years ago. 1. Because they delivered to work 2. The food was tasty. 3. The price was excellent. 4. They were able to handle group orders with ease. But, today that may have changed. (Will give them one more chance and see what happens) The older decor of the actual business never bothered me. I think that kinda comes with the territory for most Chinese take out joints - fake marbled counters, crappy murals of strange things - like the giant cruise ship located God-knows-where?, a token fish tank (though the new fish is huge and intimidating and his tank is scattered with slightly decaying goldfish bodies among the glass marbles at the bottom), an awkward "Asian Lady in creepy poses" calendar freebie from some food or restaurant supply distributor, a cooler of pop cans (and random family food), a few misplaced children's toys, and a poorly light, slightly outdated light up wall of stock photo food with prices. Today the entire place seemed dusty and slightly messy compared to normal. The owners and workers have always been polite and cheerful until today when they were short and seemed annoyed I had stopped to place my order instead of calling. Hoping it was just an off day, I ordered the Lunch Special Shrimp Egg Foo Young ($5.25) with pork fried rice and an egg roll (+$0.60) as carryout. When i got the bag to work there was no plastic silverware or chopsticks and no napkins or duck sauce - things I have never had to ask for before. The gravy is lumpy, oddly yellow colored and bland. (glad I asked for a few mustard packets and had salt and pepper at my desk), the egg pancakes themselves have a nice amount of shrimp but barely any veggies, and are very greasy. The fried rice has an ok flavor but has almost no veggies or pork in it. The egg roll was basic and tasty - the shining star of an otherwise disappointing take out experience. Did they switch owners? Was it a bad day? Who knows? I will certainly give it another go, out of loyalty, but if it was anything like today, I'll have to say goodbye to a formerly solid place.

    (2)
  • A. I.

    Not great. Fast food quality, generic Americanized Chinese food. I've eaten several of their dishes as shared late night dinners with friends and it's okay for that purpose, primarily due to lack of other options and because they deliver. Recently had lunch here and it was 1 star. The sesame chicken pieces were odd mixtures of dark and white meat, most of the pieces were overly fried for how small they were, and some of the pieces were just chunks of breading. I can't imagine it was cooked to order (even though I did see them heat a pan for it) since it took them about 90 seconds to reheat it on the stovetop. THE WORST PART: by the time I got home, the brown paper bag the lunch was served in was completely soaked. I assumed the sesame chicken container had come open, but in fact the egg roll was so incredibly greasy that it soaked through its own separate wrapper and the bag! When I opened the egg roll wrapper, there were literally tablespoons of grease sloshing around the egg roll. The egg roll itself was totally burned to black on one end. I definitely would not have accepted it had I checked my order before leaving the store. Beyond the food, the service, prices, and wait times have all been acceptable.

    (2)
  • Victor T.

    Poor service. Very rude on the phone. Delivery took almost an hour and a half. Never ordering from her again.

    (1)
  • Ken B.

    Absolutely vile. Some of the worst Chinese food I have ever tasted. The boneless "spare ribs" were dry and has very little sauce on them. The fried rice was crunchy. The crab rangoon was greasy and had very little cream cheese in it. The egg rolls tasted like frozen store bought ones that had freezer burn. Never again. Plus, they were more expensive than some of the better Chinese food in the area.

    (1)
  • Antonio C.

    Poor Poor Poor!! Asked for a Garlic Chicken with no Water Chestnuts, because a co-worker had an allergy to them, guess what? Still in there!! I would eat here again. The food was pretty bad. Im starting to think all the Chinese food in this area is conveyor belt. Absolutely terrible! I'll make sure to tell my friends!!

    (1)
  • Carlos G.

    Good Chinese in a hurry? Never had a problem.

    (3)

Sorry, we don't have Q&A for this restaurant.

Sorry, No Coupons available for this restaurant.

Map

Opening Hours

    Sorry, Store hours have not been updated. If you are the owner of this restaurants. Please update the store hours.

Specialities

  • Takes Reservations : No
    Delivery : Yes
    Take-out : Yes
    Accepts Credit Cards : Yes
    Bike Parking : Yes
    Good for Kids : Yes
    Good for Groups : Yes
    Attire : Casual
    Noise Level : Average
    Alcohol : No
    Outdoor Seating : No
    Wi-Fi : No
    Has TV : No
    Waiter Service : No
    Caters : No

Categories

Chinese Cuisine

The popularity of Chinese food in America can be adjudicated by the appearance of China Town in many major cities in the United State of America. The popular trend of ordering or opting for Chinese take away food isn't unknown in America. Chinese take away food comes to rescue when you're too tired from work or too exhausted to cook. No one can resist the temptation of eating spicy noodles, shrimp, chicken, beef or pork cooked in the sweet and spicy sauce. The cooking method of authentic Chinese food is a lot different compared to what is served in America.

Generally, Chinese use dark meat small bones and organs to cook dishes but this changes when you are eating American-Chinese fusion food prepared using white boneless meat cooked with broccoli, carrots and onions. Back in China, the food is less spicy and oily as they favor steaming and braising method for cooking the most popular dishes. So, if you have a taste for authentic Chinese food, then try finding a real Chinese restaurant in the city. You can also try the most popular fusion Chinese food like Pecking Duck, Chicken Feet, Hot Pot, Shrimp Dumpling Soup, Mapo Tofu, Wontons, Chop Suey, Egg Rolls and not to forget Fortune Cookies.

There are not many restaurants in America serving authentic Chinese food. A little research on Restaurant Listings directory can help you locate the best Chinese restaurants in the city. Chinese cuisine is continuously evolving, and you can find a variety of dishes categorized as the food for lactose intolerant, gluten intolerant, vegan, vegetarian, and diabetic friendly. So, if you have a group of friends with different taste patterns, save the hassle and visit the nearest Chinese restaurant in your city.

China House

Share with your social network

Looky Weed - Buy Marijuana Online

Looky Weed is here to help you navigate the maze of legalized marijuana. We provide you with a complete dispensary directory.

© 2024 Restaurant Listings. All rights reserved.