Chon Saan Palace is celebrating fifty years of service to Belize. The restaurant was founded in 1974 by Armando Chang, the patriarch of the Chang family who migrated to Belize from China in 1961. He worked at Canton Restaurant for a few years before venturing into building the restaurant and brand that is known across the country. So, how has Chon Saan Palace been able to survive this long? Its current owner, Lee Mark Chang says the Belizean culture has shaped the restaurant over the years into what it is today. News Five’s Paul Lopez joined Lee Mark Chang for lunch inside the restaurant. Here is what he found out in today’s installment of Kolcha Tuesday.
Paul Lopez, Reporting
1974 may seem like a long time ago in Belize’s history. It is the first year that the country held general elections after being renamed from British Honduras the year before. It is also the year that one Chinese family opened the doors to a restaurant that is now known across the country. On July fourteenth, Chon Saan Palace celebrated its fiftieth anniversary.
Lee Mark Chang, Owner, Chon Saan Palace
“Hard work and determination. Make sure your kitchen serves only the freshest of food, cook to order and make sure your customers are satisfied.”
“I don’t think my parents ever envision us lasting sixty years. It is a milestone, and they are very happy that I have been able to continue their work. Starting has always been hard. It is always hard for a business and as my father explained previously, getting beers, meat, vegetables, was very hard because of scarcity back in the days.”
“I believe it is the Belizean culture that has shaped Chon Saan, because we have adapted their pallet and taste the veggies, what is available in Belize. I would say, ninety-five, maybe ninety-seven percent of our meats and vegetables are locally produced. A good example is the chow mein, you don’t find chow mein anywhere in this world like the Belizean chow mein. For example, the cabbage, carrots and onion in it, it is not common, as far as I know. In the states, the chow mein is made up of bak choy and whatever meats you order. As far I can recall there is no noodles involved in chow mein in the states, as far as I know. Maybe some do have it. We also generate our own style of cooking, like for example the salt and pepper whole fish where we would fillet the entire fish, debone it and fry the entire fish and present it also.”
The spread, specially curated for the media, provided a culinary experience that took the pallet through five decades of cooking perfection.
“I think we have the salt and pepper fish, we have the Singapore shrimp. I made a pan-fried tenderloin steak, sweet and sour chicken Chinese style, sweet and sour, jumbo shrimp, mixed vegetables with garlic. I think there is an eight-course meal prepared for you guys today.”
“We use a lot of habaneros, a lot. We marinade a lot of our fried chicken in habanero. So we have to blend up a lot. So when habanero was three to five dollars a pound and then it went up to five, ten fifteen, and even twenty-five dollars a pound, that is hard. So we have had to raise our price by fifty cents recently so to at least be able to continue with the usage of the same ingredients, same amount, for the fried chicken.”
“We have people who come in for birthdays, anniversary, whatever celebration they are doing. A part from that we have people come in on a daily basis. That is what we work on, we work on the entire package. We don’t only target one individual customer or group of customer. It is an everyday restaurant. You can get the cheapest of food or the most expensive food. It all depends on what you want to eat or what is your budget for the day.”
“Are there certain values your family holds that also emanates through the way you do business?”
Lee Mark Chang
“Work nuh kill, hard work and determination. That has been beat into my head from a very young age, work nuh kill.”
Reporting for News Five, I am Paul Lopez.