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Okay, a show of hands, please: who remembers the Cypress Street Bridge construction? Whoa! A LOT of you. Wasn’t that fun? Trying to figure out where the stop lights were, which lane was which, and God help you if you had to cross the bridge during the noon hour. It’s been completed for a few years now, though when Femme de Joie crosses it she can’t help but wonder when they’re going to replace those concrete pouring tubes with some actual street lights.

What you might not remember is that the construction and accompanying traffic jams were enough to contribute to the demise of at least two restaurants – Pellegrini’s Brazilian Steakhouse and Taj Mahal. It would seem that Pellegrini’s, that bastion of all things meat, is gone for good. However, Taj Mahal has risen from the ashes and reopened in the strip mall by PetCo just off Hilltop Drive.

The space is much smaller than the old restaurant, but that isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Anchored with a sleek bar in the center, the dining room features tomato red walls and simple polished wood tables. Five televisions near the ceiling are always on but not obnoxiously loud, tuned to either CNN or a Bollywood movie.

Taj Mahal serves a buffet lunch for a bargain price of $9.99. It’s a good way to find out if you like Indian food.

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Clockwise from top: aloo gobi, samosa, pakora, saag paneer, navratan korma, (in center) gheera rice.

Aloo gobi (potatoes and cauliflower) wasn’t M. de Joie’s favorite item – though the spicing was pleasing, the textures seemed to be identical and it was hard to say if one had a bite of aloo or gobi. The samosa and pakora were better; there was a nice crunchy coating on the potato-filled samosa pastry and the herby pakoras (fritters) would make a nice snack with a cold beer.

Saag paneer (spinach with homemade cheese), was like an Indian creamed spinach with mild heat level, a mineral-grassy spinach taste smoothed out with cheese. It contrasted on the plate with the tomato cream sauce of navratan korma, making a wonderful vegetarian pairing. Centering the plate was gheera rice – basmati rice cooked with cumin seeds, which makes a great variation from plain steamed rice.

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Mango lassi, $2.99

If you don’t want beer to go with Indian food, a sweet, creamy mango lassi (made with yogurt, mangoes and water) is a great alternative. Not sticky-sweet like a milkshake, the fruity-tart drink is refreshing and cooling if the heat level seems to be too much.

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Naan – a fluffy, tender bread – comes with the buffet as well as most menu items. Tear it apart to eat, or use it to scoop up chutneys.

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Clockwise from top: chicken curry, beef curry, tandoori chicken.

Femme de Joie preferred the spicier beef curry over the somewhat blander chicken curry; the chicken itself seemed spongy and unappealing. However, the tandoori chicken was a winner. It’s one of those dishes that looks good and smells good but is nearly always dried out and tough. Here it was juicy with good smoky flavor and aromas.

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Lamb biriyani, $13.99

This was just amazingly, wildly delicious. Spiced, tender lamb chunks were scattered throughout perfectly cooked basmati rice, skillfully seasoned and garnished with cilantro and coconut. M. de Joie ordered medium heat, but thinks she could have taken it up a notch, as the heat was not overwhelming or burning – just a pleasant level of warmth.

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Bhindi masala, $10.99

You don’t see okra on many North State menus and more’s the pity, as it is delicious and adaptable to a variety of cuisines. Here it was browned first, then combined with onions and peppers and a generous amount of ginger. A sour tang came through now and then – M. de Joie thinks that was aamchur (dry mango powder). Not at all slimy as many people think, this had a much firmer texture than stewed okra and made an unusual vegetarian meal.

While Femme de Joie enjoyed the food and the surroundings at Taj Mahal, she does have one complaint. There is a difference between attentive service and annoying service. Waitstaff went rapidly from friendly and helpful to creepily invasive and ridiculously servile. In one 50-minute lunch, M. de Joie was asked no fewer than fourteen times if everything was all right or if she needed anything else. At one point she looked up to see the waitress staring at her – presumably to detect any signs of distress. M. de Joie started to wonder if perhaps she had something in her teeth or if one of her eyebrows had suddenly and without warning rearranged itself onto her forehead. Of course this overeagerness to serve comes from management’s orders, so Femme de Joie will take it upon herself right now to instruct Taj Mahal’s management: leave the diners alone and let them eat.

Other than that, the food at Taj Mahal is delicious and worth trying.

P.S. You can put your hands down now.

Taj Mahal, 1619 Hilltop Drive, Suite C, Redding, CA 96002. 530-722-9551, fax 530-722-9553. Open daily, 11:00 AM – 10:00 PM, Friday and Saturdays open until 11:00 PM. Lunch buffet, $9.99. Full bar. Parking lot. Vegetarian and vegan options. Cash and cards. Website at tajmahalredding.com
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Despite what some people may think, it does not give Femme de Joie pleasure to write negative things about restaurants. Well, perhaps that should come with a qualification: it does not bother her to write negative things about restaurants she feels are overrated and overpriced, and which have a dedicated fan base who will inexplicably continue their patronage. Femme de Joie's insignificant little opinion is not going to affect those places one way or another. It does bother her to knock a struggling restaurant, or one that is not part of a chain, or one which has been hit badly by the recession.

Which brings us to Grand Buffet. Mlle. de Joie has always been dubious about the wisdom of putting Asian food on a buffet. It's not meant to sit around under heat lamps or over a steam table, getting congealed and overcooked. With American dishes like mac and cheese or meatloaf, it doesn't matter a lot; it'll still taste pretty much the same after an hour. Not so with California roll, stir-fried bok choy, or orange chicken. They do not improve with age. After "enjoying" lunch some years ago at another Asian buffet in Redding which shall go nameless, Mlle. de Joie resolved to never set foot in another one again.

But Grand Buffet opened and good reports were heard in the land, and Mlle. de Joie paid a lunchtime visit. She was delighted to find it was actually quite good, with the best egg fu yung she'd ever eaten, a variety of dim sum, and some of the less popular dishes like salt and pepper squid available. All this, plus the price was very attractive.

You enter and are seated by a hostess, who takes your drink order and directs you to take a plate and serve yourself at the buffet. Take a new plate each time you go back. When the waitress sees you're winding up. you will be brought your bill with the requisite fortune cookies.
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(Pictures posted on Yelp by Brooke B.)

So for a year or so, Mlle. de Joie and Amico del Signore enjoyed an occasional dinner at Grand Buffet. The price was right, there was a great selection of Asian dishes, the food was well-prepared, and the restaurant was well-managed.

Recently our friends Matteo and Christiano said that not only did they think the quality of the food was not what it had been, but they also reported feeling definite ill effects afterwards and, in one instance, even before they had finished their meal. We trust them and their taste, but we did not want to believe that a favorite spot was sliding. Trouble in paradise.

On our last visit we saw a sign reading "UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT." This always worries Mlle. de Joie: did the old manager get a better offer elsewhere and move on to better things? Or did the accountant tell the owners, "Fire whatsisname and bring in someone who can save you money"? Time will tell, and so this week Mlle. de Joie opened her copy of Time. The news was not good.

The salad bar had been moved from near the entrance to a location further back, which seemed odd: don't you want the flow of diners to move smoothly from starter to dessert? Maybe not. Also, one side of the table was salad bar; the other side was desserts. The rest of the salads made been moved to another table, where one side had salads and the other side had desserts. Maybe we're missing something here, but this didn't make sense to us.

We've noticed an increased preponderance of non-Asian dishes and "filler" dishes - items that are cheap to prepare, hold fairly well on a steam table and, we suppose, appeal to people who don't like Asian food but nevertheless find themselves there. Marshmallow salad (a dish Mlle. de Joie has always found loathesome), "salt and pepper potatoes" (renaming them does not make them into an ancient dish favored by Hunanese royalty: they're still home fries), and assorted deep fried this'n'that are taking up room previously occupied by Kung Pao chicken and pot stickers. A formerly impressive selection of dim sum had all but disappeared, replaced by seafood newburg, roast beef, stuffed mushrooms, and blackberry cobbler.

We also noticed a decrease in the quality of the food. On our previous visit, Mlle. de Joie ate a baked oyster. It did not taste bad but she was aware all night she had eaten it. On this visit, A. del Signore ate an oyster and experienced similar deja vu. The greens on the salad bar were not particularly crisp - they had a decided softly wilted mouthfeel. The sauce on the orange chicken was devoid of any orange taste or any heat from chilis. And the Mongolian pork was oddly soft and had an un-pork-like texture.

Now then, there is no way to write this next part and not sound elitist, but here it is: we were bothered by the sheer hoards of unsupervised children who were dashing about shrieking, playing keep-away with each other, and generally ensuring the noise & chaos level stayed at an orange alert level. What really appalled us, though, was seeing one boy of about eight years stick his head considerably under the sneeze guard, idly play with the spoons in the condiments and dressings, lift the spoon full of chili garlic to his mouth and eat it, then stick the spoon back into the container. While Mlle. de Joie had a certain perverse admiration for someone who can suck up a whole spoonful of chili garlic and not dissolve into a sweaty weeping coughing fit, she and Amico del Signore yelled at the kid and chewed him out loudly, then spent some time trying to explain to a non-English-speaking employee what had happened so that they'd replace the container of sauce and the spoon.

This is not to say everything is bad at Grand Buffet. The fresh fruit selection is very good and kept attractive. The seaweed salad located in the sushi bar is unusual and delicious - in fact, the sushi & sashimi is fresh, if not especially innovative. Amico del Signore is very fond of the ribs, while Mlle. de Joie likes the anise-spiced roast duck.

Overall, Grand Buffet is not what it used to be. Clearly some cost-cutting measures have been taken that are affecting the overall "dining experience" (a tiresome phrase but occasionally useful nevertheless). It is hoped this is a temporary setback and that it will be back on its feet, but we can't see ourselves returning until we hear good reports again.

Grand Buffet, 2650 Hilltop Drive, Redding. 530-221-1111. Open daily for lunch and dinner. Vegetarian and vegan options. Credit and debit cards accepted. No checks. No alcohol. On-site parking. Coupons for discounts available in the back of the AT&T telephone book.

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