• letter
  • print
  • map this
  • follow
Sticky rice buns are prepared by Jian Lin, left, an assistant dim sum chef, Yiu Leung, center, a dim sum first chef, and Ru Chen, right, a pan-fried chef, in the dim sum corner of the kitchen at the Tea Palace. - Matt Brashears/Renton Reporter
Sticky rice buns are prepared by Jian Lin, left, an assistant dim sum chef, Yiu Leung, center, a dim sum first chef, and Ru Chen, right, a pan-fried chef, in the dim sum corner of the kitchen at the Tea Palace.

Everything is big at Renton's Tea Palace


Nov 28 2008

Duc Tran has lived in the United States only 30 years, but he’s already built an Asian empire. Chairman and CEO of the Viet-Wah Group, Tran, 55, runs three Asian food markets, each called Viet-Wah. Two are in Seattle and one in the Renton Highlands. He operates a wholesale business that ships Asian food across the country. And he has started a couple restaurants, including the newly opened Tea Palace, behind Renton’s Viet-Wah in the Greater Hilands Shopping Center on Northeast Sunset Boulevard.

The Chinese Tran has come far since fleeing to the United States from a Thailand refugee camp from his war-torn Vietnam. But Tran doesn’t brag about his accomplishments. The way he tells it, he’s simply satisfied the needs of the local Asian community.

Shortly after arriving in Seattle, Tran helped newly arrived Vietnamese refugees find food and housing. These transplants received meal coupons from the airlines. But many restaurants refused to serve the refugees, who often came to the United States shoeless. Tran started a catering business to feed these hungry newcomers.

But he needed a business identification number to bill the company’s food. So he started a restaurant — the first Vietnamese eatery in Chinatown. That was in 1981.

Then he needed food for the restaurant. So he started an import and export wholesale business in 1985. He wanted somewhere to sell all that incoming Asian food, so he opened the first Viet-Wah in 1988, on Jackson Street. The 700-square-foot store is still operating, as is the second Viet-Wah on Martin Luther King Jr. Way, which opened in 2000. The 15,000-square-foot Renton Viet-Wah opened in 2006.

Tea Palace Asian Restaurant and Banquet is another venue for Tran to sell Asian food. The restaurant is also a venue for large celebrations, which Tran says are popular in the Asian community.

“People complain about Chinatown not being big enough,” Tran says.

At 20,000 square feet and with an 800-person capacity, no one can complain about Tea Palace being too small. Tran says his restaurant, which opened in late August, is the largest in King County. Tran’s son recently held his 500-guest wedding at Tea Palace.

With dragons perched on its red-cobble roof, the former warehouse’s exterior has the look of a contemporary tea house. Painted in cream tones, the restaurant’s interior looks more westernized than the exterior.

“Normal Chinese restaurants’ lights are so bright and painted red. This doesn’t feel that Chinese,” Tran says. “We created an atmosphere that is romantic and westernized, serving Chinese food.”

That atmosphere includes four sections: A, B, C and D. A and B are dining rooms. A self-playing baby grand piano sits on the stage of section A. C is a ballroom, with a dance floor and a stage for the live bands that play every Thursday and Friday night. Thursday is a Chinese band and Friday Vietnamese. Wrapped in white cloth and dangling with cords of small white lights, the ballroom’s posts masquerade as trees.

Section D is for business meetings. The room has a projector and screen. Tea Palace also has a VIP room, two bridal rooms for wedding preparations and a small kitchen for future cooking lessons.

That kitchen is small when compared to the colossal regular kitchen. Metal tables stretch for what seems like miles. Huge silver pots bubble on burners leaping with flames. Three tanks of live lobster, oysters, crab, and fish line a wall. And everywhere are chefs in white hats and coats. The chefs chop duck and fish and form dim sum treats to place in round bamboo baskets and roll out to customers on silver carts.

Dim sum are appetizers traditionally served with tea for lunch at Chinese restaurants. Tea Palace has a long dim sum menu including dumplings, soup, steamed chicken feet, spareribs, beef stomach, turnip cake, shark fin dumpling in supreme soup steamed sponge cake and egg custard tarts.

Tran’s restaurant also has a full lunch and dinner menu, including familiar dishes like Mongolian Beef, General Tao’s chicken and sweet and sour pork, plus a variety of soups, salads, meat and vegetarian dishes. Tea Palace’s specialty is Peking duck, which arrives on a gold cart and is served on small buns, like miniature duck sandwiches. And as its name suggests, Tea Palace also serves tea. Varieties include oolong, jasmine, chrysanthemum, saumee and teekungum.

Tea Palace has yet to hold a grand opening, but the Highlands restaurant already attracts a crowd. Many customers are regulars who come for dim sum and then stop at Viet-Wah for groceries.

Tea Palace also draws new customers, like Amey Amere and Amsale Yinma, friends who recently visited Tea Palace for the first time. They live nearby, and saw the restaurant’s sign. Both said only good things about Tran’s restaurant.

“It’s very nice,” Yinma said. “Friendly people and good food.”

“You can tell by looking at our plates how we love the food,” Amere added. She and Yinma both had fish filets.

Tran is happy about the early success of Tea Palace and the continuing success of his Viet-Wah stores and wholesale business. But he’s not done building his Asian empire. He wants to finish creating an “Asian center” in the Greater Hilands Shopping Center, including a bakery which he plans to open in 2009.

Tran says that the Tea Palace and every other part of his Asian empire has always been “part of the plan.”

“America is the land of opportunity,” he says, “as long as you’re willing to work hard to (become) what you want to be.”

The Tea Palace

Tea Palace Asian Restaurant and Banquet is at 2828 Sunset Lane N.E. For more information, visit www.teapalacerestaurant.com or call 425-228-9393.


View Larger Map

  • letter
  • print
  • map this
  • follow
COMMENTING RULES: We encourage an open exchange of ideas in the PNWLocalNews.com community, but we ask you to follow our guidelines for respecting community standards. In a nutshell, don't say anything you wouldn't want your mother to read. So keep your comments:
  • Civil
  • Smart
  • On-topic
  • Free of profanity

We ask that all participants own their words by registering for an account. It's a simple process that will take seconds and helps keep our comments free of trolls, cranks, and drive-by commenters.

As a community site, we ask that the community help by using the "Flag" button on each comment if they feel the comment has violated the rules. You can also use the up and down arrows on each comment to voice your opinion about that particular comment.

Want to tell us something but you don't want it to be public? Talk to us privately.

Most Read Stories

Renton Reporter

  • Investigation finds roofers started fire that gutted Harrington Square building
    RENTON REPORTER
    Jul 03 2009, 9:08 AM · UPDATED
  • Gosh, they look familiar. Burglary suspects, detective meet at pawn shop
    RENTON REPORTER
    Today, 10:43 AM · UPDATED
  • The next Jackson Five?: Renton's EriAm Sisters featured on NBC's 'America's Got Talent'
    RENTON REPORTER
    Jun 22 2009
  • IT'S OPEN! A year in the making, the new Duvall Avenue is welcomed by neighbors, businesses
    RENTON REPORTER
    Jul 03 2009, 3:53 PM · UPDATED
  • Renton may call in federal arson investigators in probe of Harrington Square fire
    RENTON REPORTER
    Jul 02 2009, 12:37 PM · UPDATED
  • Hearing set on noise variance
    RENTON REPORTER
    Jul 02 2009, 10:33 AM · UPDATED

South King County

  • Investigation finds roofers started fire that gutted Harrington Square building
    RENTON REPORTER
    Jul 03 2009, 9:08 AM · UPDATED
  • Four Covington houses damaged by fireworks
    COVINGTON REPORTER
    Jul 04 2009, 10:38 PM · UPDATED
  • Gosh, they look familiar. Burglary suspects, detective meet at pawn shop
    RENTON REPORTER
    Today, 10:43 AM · UPDATED
  • Judges plead their case for keeping court
    FEDERAL WAY MIRROR
    Jul 04 2009, 2:14 PM · UPDATED
  • David Cooke, husband of Kent mayor, found dead of suicide
    KENT REPORTER
    Jun 18 2009
  • The next Jackson Five?: Renton's EriAm Sisters featured on NBC's 'America's Got Talent'
    RENTON REPORTER
    Jun 22 2009

Washington

  • Man's legs crushed when he's hit from behind at Bellevue car wash
    BELLEVUE REPORTER
    Jun 30 2009, 5:36 PM · UPDATED
  • 'The World': It's luxurious. It's big. And it's coming to Friday Harbor
    JOURNAL OF THE SAN JUANS
    Jul 05 2009, 8:28 AM · UPDATED
  • Kids removed as boat left high and dry at Oak Harbor Marina
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 06 2009, 4:14 PM · UPDATED
  • Victim of freak car wash accident in serious condition | Police considering award for witness who came to his aid
    BELLEVUE REPORTER
    Jul 06 2009, 6:01 PM · UPDATED
  • White supremacist graffiti scrawled across Snoqualmie
    SNOQUALMIE VALLEY RECORD
    Jul 02 2009, 4:03 PM · UPDATED
  • Small quake hits Whidbey Island
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 02 2009, 12:47 PM · UPDATED