Kim Sơn (restaurant)
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Kim Sơn (chữ Hán: {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Sino-Vietnamese for "Gold Mountain"; Template:Audio) is a family-owned chain of restaurants in Houston, Texas, that serves both Vietnamese cuisine and Chinese cuisine. As of 2009 Tri La is the owner of the restaurant group.<ref>Barr, Greg. "The Mint becomes first Houston community bank to open in 2009." Houston Business Journal. Friday January 9, 2009. Retrieved on October 7, 2009.</ref> The restaurant group headquarters is in its East Downtown restaurant.<ref>"Contact Us." Kim Sơn. Retrieved on September 1, 2012. "2001 Jefferson Houston Texas 77003 USA"</ref>
The restaurant Kim Sơn was originally founded in Vinh Long, Vietnam, by the Kim Su Tran La. Following the Fall of Saigon, when North Vietnam conquered South Vietnam, Kim and her family fled Vietnam in 1979 to Malaysia.Template:Citation needed In 1980, the family joined relatives already in the United States.Template:Citation needed On August 16, 1980, the family arrived in the United States by boat; pirates had attacked their group in the South Pacific during their voyage.<ref>Qaddumi, Thora. "Fortune smiles on four local firms." Houston Business Journal. Friday August 27, 1999. 3-4. Retrieved on October 7, 2009.</ref> The family re-established the restaurant in Houston's Downtown Chinatown in 1982. Kim and her husband Son oversaw all the restaurants with their seven children.Template:Citation needed Kim received vocational training at Houston Community College after arriving as a refugee.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
History
The restaurant has an extensive menu of Chinese and Vietnamese dishes and serves weekend dim sum. In 1993, the La family opened a new $2 million, Template:Convert restaurant and banquet facility diagonally across from the original location. At the time it was the largest Chinese restaurant in the state of Texas. A location existed at 7531 Westheimer at Hillcroft, but it has closed.Template:Citation needed
The success of the restaurant has led to the opening of two additional full-service restaurants; one located in Stafford, Texas, and the new Template:Convert restaurant and ballroom at Bellaire and Wilcrest Boulevards in Houston. Both new locations are in southwest suburbs that have thriving Asian communities. The company has also opened as several smaller outlets in Houston with limited menus called "Little Kim Sơn."Template:Citation needed. The chain has become one of the best known restaurants in the state of Texas and has received accolades from magazines such as Bon Appetit, Esquire, and Food & Wine.<ref>"About Us Template:Webarchive." Kim Sơn. Retrieved on October 7, 2009.</ref> The September 1995 issue of Bon Appetit featured Kim Sơn in an article about ethnic restaurants in the United States.<ref>Criswell, Ann. "Two hums up for Mideast chickpea dip." Archived copy Houston Chronicle. Wednesday August 30, 1995. Food 1. Retrieved on October 7, 2009.</ref> The October 1998 issue of Gourmet's reader's choice restaurant awards ranked Kim Sơn as having the "Best Value" in the Houston and New Orleans areas.<ref>Briggs, Margaret L. "Dish" (Archive). Houston Press. October 1, 1998. Retrieved on October 7, 2009. "Now there's an eyebrow-lifter: The best restaurant value in the Big Easy [New Orleans] is a Houston-based Asian chain?"</ref> (The New Orleans-area restaurant, established in Gretna on the West Bank of the Mississippi River in 1988 by Tina Dieu, closed in 2018.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>) In 2003 Kim Sơn was ranked as the "best other ethnic restaurant" in the Houston Business Journal.<ref>"Best Other Ethnic Restaurant." Houston Business Journal. Friday April 4, 2003. Retrieved on October 7, 2009.</ref> In 2002 the same restaurant took second place in the Houston Business Journal's rankings of the best Chinese restaurants.<ref>"Best Chinese restaurant: P.F. Chang's China Bistro." Houston Business Journal. Friday April 5, 2002. Retrieved on October 7, 2009.</ref>
In 2005, the La family opened Asia in conjunction with the new L’Auberge du Lac Hotel & Casino in Lake Charles, Louisiana. In 2008, the family opened another Asia in conjunction with Boomtown New Orleans in Harvey, Louisiana.Template:Citation needed
In 1995 Allison Cook of the Houston Press described Kim Sơn as the most prominent "success story as the Great Houston Restaurant Parable."<ref>Cook, Allison. "Evolution of a Watering Hole." Houston Press. February 16, 1995. 1. Retrieved on October 7, 2009.</ref>
On September 24, 2023, the restaurant in Stafford closed.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Sometime in 2025,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the location in East Downtown is scheduled to close as the facility will need to be cleared for more lanes for Interstate 45.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
See also
- Cuisine of Houston
- History of the Vietnamese-Americans in Houston
- Ninfa's (Houston-based Mexican-American restaurant chain)
- Frenchy's Chicken (Houston-based Louisiana Creole restaurant chain)
- List of Chinese restaurants
- List of Vietnamese restaurants
References
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- Asian-American culture in Houston
- Regional restaurant chains in the United States
- Chinese restaurants in the United States
- Asian restaurants in Texas
- Asian restaurants in Houston
- Vietnamese restaurants in the United States
- Vietnamese-American culture in Texas
- Restaurants established in 1982
- 1982 establishments in Texas