Not just steaks at T-Bone

Published: Thursday, April 6 2006 12:00 a.m. MDT

T-Bone Restaurant in Springville serves an appealing mix of American and Chinese specialties.

Jason Olson, Deseret Morning News

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SPRINGVILLE — T-Bone Restaurant, housed in an old building way south in Springville, is likely a place you would drive right by except for two reasons: substantial word of mouth from long-time customers and the fact that on a Thursday night, you notice it is surrounded by so many vehicles, it's tough to find a parking spot.

The name suggests a steak house. The menu suggests otherwise.

Like a diner, T-Bone is loaded with options, including burgers, hot sandwiches, shrimp and, yes, sirloin, rib eye and T-bone dinners, but its specialty is Chinese cuisine, and it boasts dozens of choices.

The decor is distinctive. Plank walls stained with a reddish brown glaze identify the American portion of the restaurant. A montage of black and white Look magazine covers decorates one wall. A poster of iconic entertainers — Marilyn Monroe and Elvis, for example — graces another corner.

And if you you've ever wanted to know what to do with your old cardboard album covers from yesteryear, you might offer them to the owners. They have tacked an eclectic set of albums on the wall, including movie musicals such as "West Side Story" and singers such as Tennessee Ernie Ford. The adjacent room is splashed in bright red with gold accents, clearly the Chinese section.

My companion ordered the rib eye. Moist and marbled with fat, it was also marbled with flavor. It reminded me of the steaks I had as a child before restaurants served leaner, more bland, tougher and probably, healthier cuts of meat. A couple of weeks of grains, veggies and wild hickory nuts should counteract any clogging of the arteries. It's served with generous portions of mashed potatoes and sweet carrots.

The Chinese meal opened with the requisite egg drop soup, but this one was a bit of a surprise. It boasted an exceptionally tasty broth loaded with vegetables and noodles. Nice. The appetizers were fried and pretty standard, and the fried rice was dry. It was near closing time, and it looked like it had been warming until the rice lost any moistness.

The entree, however, was delicious. I selected a meal that offered a choice of entree. I tried to order the lemon chicken, but the server said, "No, no. If you're getting that dinner try the house special. It's usually a lot more expensive than the chicken, and it will cost you the same. It's a better deal."