Thai Taste

Thai TasteChange usually usurps the comforts of complacency.  In the last few years, my usual go-to Southeast Asian market and my favorite Thai restaurant were casualties of the recent recession, both located within walking distance from each other in Wheaton, MD.  Since then I had been on the search for worthy replacements for both categories.  After many months, I found a grocery store carrying many difficult-to-find ingredients, located a stone throw away from the defunct businesses.  As I left the location, I noticed a newly opened eatery at the end of the parking lot.  Walking in, I asked for a copy of their menu, and after perusing its extensive offerings, I was inspired to pay this eatery quite a number of visits before writing this review.

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Spicy Seafood Pho TaekThai Taste Crispy Spring Rolls

The menu at Thai Taste is a bit of a maze, much like the streets in Bangkok, partly due to the extensive offerings and most dishes listed in the Thai language, in addition to the rather creative and zany English descriptions.  After familiarizing myself with the menu while munching on some peppery and savory complementary Fish/Shrimp Crackers (nice touch) reminding me of Grandma’s, I decided to go with a couple of familiar appetizers.  I started with the Spicy Seafood Pho Taek.   The bowl arrived with pieces of shrimp and squid, bits of bay scallop and a mussel, covered by a clear broth that is akin to Tom Yum with its spicy bite, sour notes from lime juice, fish sauce saltiness, and pungency from root aromatics evidenced by the bits of lemongrass, kafir lime leaves, galangal root, and fragrant basil leaves.  What was lacking in the less-than-inspiring bits of seafood was made up by the full-bodied clear soup that woke up all the taste buds.  An order of the Thai Taste Crispy Spring Roll was out of the ordinary.  Crispy rolls made with an outer shell of rice skin, not the usual wheat flour skin, encased a savory mix of ground chicken, carrot, glass noodles, celery, and a surprising ingredient, taro root, that exuded a smooth sweet note to the whole mix. The light dipping sauce, unlike the usual sweet chili sauce, consisting of fish sauce, lime juice, chili, and garlic provided the complementary notes to these tasty bites. Already, one notices a different direction from the usual coming from this Thai kitchen.

Look Chin Ping - Grilled Meat BallsLucky Bags

Gai Yang - Grilled Marinated ChickenThe menu in this establishment offers many street food dishes, those not usually found in most Thai restaurants. Look Chin Ping is skewered meatballs or fishballs that are grilled or fried, served with a tamarind chili sauce. One bite into it brought me back to the food stalls in front of Cathay movie theater in my homeland during the 70’s.  What made the dish work for me was the pepperyness along with the umami-ness that each bit possessed, balanced by the fruity and spicy tamarind dipping sauce.  Another opener was Lucky Bags.  Pouches of ground chicken mixed with sweet potato were seasoned with curry powder and wrapped in spring roll dough.  I found the fried bags a bit greasy, given that sweet potato easily absorbs some of the oil, and the mix rather interesting but perhaps missing one more element to make this appetizer successful for me.  Another order of Gai Yang peaked my interest.  Pieces of skewered chicken thigh meat came well-marinated and grilled with some burnt marks.  The seasoning permeated each morsel with slight sweet notes (server wouldn’t divulge the seasoning secret), a bit dry but at least not like breast meat, and complemented by a fiery sour sauce made with lime juice and smoky toasted chili flakes.  The meat balls and skewered chicken are definitely street food offerings usually not found in most Thai establishments and they are worth the order here.

Larb Gai - Chicken SaladYum Pla Duk Foo - Fluffy Catfish Salad

On a couple of occasions, I tried the salad dishes.  Larb Gai is a standard found in most Thai establishments.  My order arrived with a heaping mound of ground chicken sitting on lettuce leaves, along with some slices of red onion and some cilantro.  The dish was still warm pointing towards its freshly made nature.  After a few bites and despite my appreciation of it coming straight from the wok, the dish proved a bit of a ho-hum due to the lack of punch in the seasoning which usually consists of lime juice, fish sauce, toasted rice powder, and smoked chili flakes; perhaps, the chef forgot to taste this batch, which could have easily been rectified.  Another day’s order was Yum Pla Duk Foo or Catfish Salad.  When the dish arrived, a mound of brown fried lace was sitting on the green elements waiting to be stirred with the side sauce.  After mixing it, I was wondering where was the fish element.  My server pointed out that the lacy topping was made from finely shaved catfish, which amazed and perplexed me.  I thoroughly enjoyed this popular dish here with the different textures and flavors, aided by some nutty peanuts. some sweet julienned green apple, and a well-balanced chili-laced sour and salty sauce that provided the much-needed flavorings and moisture to the whole mix.

Shrimp Pad ThaiPad Kee Mao - Drunken Noodles

Bangkok NoodlesThai street food denotes dishes that are quick to prepare and fairly complete in its make up, which noodles make a good medium.  The menu lists the ubiquitous Pad Thai “cooked with a tamarind sauce”.  Usually one to avoid this dish which I have found to be pedestrian in most places, the rendition here did not belie its description, being made with the faintly clove-scented fruity tamarind, sweetened with slight molasses-like palm sugar, and the saltiness from fish sauce.  I could not believe that I was inspired by this dish that I pretty much wrote off some time ago due to poorly made versions made with vinegar and sugar; never mind the smaller lunch portion since it was satisfyingly compensated by the wonderfully seasoned and bouncy noodles. Another lunch order was a favorite of mine: Pad Kee Mao or Drunken Noodle.  My dish arrived with some very fresh noodles judging by its slightly firm “bounce” moistened by a slightly sweeter than usual sauce, and studded with bits of different seafood and fishballs cooked with some cherry tomatoes and sweet peppers.  I truly enjoyed this plateful which was hitting the right spots including the chili heat and fragrant basil leaves.  A lunch order on another visit was Bangkok Noodles.   A plate arrived with a melange of egg noodles, cooked vegetables, and a shrimp and crabmeat omelette a la Egg Foo Yong.  It was a bit sloppy but street food is not meant to be overly refined.  What I appreciated in this dish was the well-sauced egg noodles and the omelette despite me not being able to discern the crabmeat in the egg mixture.  But I could imagine someone ordering this noodle dish from a street vendor as part of his daily meal after a hard day’s work.

Chiang Mai NoodlesNam Tok Moo - Floating Market Noodle Soup

Ka Nom Chine - Fish Curry NoodlesFrom the section on noodles with gravy/soup, my server highly recommended Chiang Mai Noodles.  The slanted bowl arrived with disparate elements ready to be mixed together: boiled egg noodles, crispy fried noodles, beansprouts, fried shallots, cilantro, a slice of lime, and chicken drumsticks, all sitting on a pool of chicken curry.  After giving everything a good stir and a squeeze of lime, I took my first bite.  Wow!  The flavor in the curry sauce was the perfect agent to amalgamate the different textures and flavor elements, exuding its spiciness, rich coconut cream base, and a tinge of sweetness, reminding me of Southern Thai Massaman curry.  The pieces of chicken had the curry flavors permeating through the flesh, along with the fall-of-the-bone quality that made them irresistible – I think I just found a new noodle favorite with this discovery.  An order on another occasion was Nam Tok Moo or Floating Market Noodle Soup.  A bowl of wide rice noodle filled with a dark soup was accompanied by fresh herbs, beansprouts, and pork crackling.  The saying is that the broth in a noodle soup makes the dish, and this bowl was no exception with its aromatic and rich soup supported by lean pork, bouncy noodles, fragrant basil leaves, green onions, and the irresistible crackling that took each spoonful to gastronomic stratosphere.  A final order of Ka Nom Chine was unchartered territory for me.  My server brought the deconstructed elements in a separate plate accompanied by a bowl of fish and fishball curry.  After assembling my plate with the wheat/cornstarch noodles, green beans, carrot strands, beansprouts, pickled mustard green, and a boiled egg, I slathered the combination with the curry.  I have to admit that my mind and tongue had a bit of a hard time wrapping themselves around this new dish with the cold noodles and raw elements trying to find marriage with the hot spicy curry.  But I quickly fell for the curry with the fish flesh finely shredded in the fiery gravy exuding strong notes of kafir lime leaf and Thai rhizome.

Thai Taste Duck and Crispy BasilPad Ped Pla Dook - Spicy Catfish

Kao Ka Moo - 5-Spice Powder Pork Leg StewA couple of spicy main dishes made up dinner on a visit.  The first was Thai Taste Duck and Crispy Basil.  The dish arrived looking a bit sloppy with sliced battered duck pieces topped with a copious amount of deep-fried basil, along with some boiled vegetables under a blanket of sweet and spicy sauce.  Never mind the lack of finesse in this dish; what made it up was the duck that impressed me with the five-spice powder aroma permeating the fairly moist dark meat, coated by a well-seasoned light and nearly grease-less crispy batter that tempted me to eat every morsel of its crunchy goodness (I can’t – on a mini diet here).  The other dish was Pad Ped Pla Duk or Spicy Fried Catfish.  My dining companion decided to order it ped or spicy, and one bite into his dish, he broke out into a sweat.  Beyond the spicy heat, I could discern the sauce that was replete with root aromatics, further made flavorful with green peppercorns and Thai rhizome that lent its je-ne-sais-quoi appealing element.  The pieces of catfish were crispy on the outside but still moist and clean-flavored inside.  Sorry buddy, Ped in the title means no compromise in its spice level, at least not in this kitchen.  Another order of Kao Ka Moo comprised of pork leg stewed in a dark aromatic sauce.  Yes, there was quite a bit of fat with each piece of meat, but that comes with the territory with this cut of meat.  The pieces were extremely tender after being cooked in the mouth sticky broth tasting of five-spice powder with pieces of pickled mustard green.  Again, this dish pointed towards its origin either from the home kitchen or street vendor.  The side chili sauce was the perfect spicy acid relief with its fresh chili notes mixed with some garlic, vinegar, and ginger – I could have eaten the whole amount if weren’t for the chili heat.

Pad Khing - Chicken Ginger in Bean Sauce

Pad Ma Kuea - Eggplant with Crispy PorkNot all Thai offerings are on the singe-the-tongue level. A few mild ones on the menu were quite memorable.  Pad Khing is a stir fry that consists of onions, mushroom, carrot, green onions, Chinese fungus, green chilies, red bell pepper, along the choice of meat or seafood. The version here was a savory one with a full-bodied sauce spiked with some young ginger that added quite a bit of bite to each mouthful.  Another dish worth considering is Pad Ma Kuea.  Pieces of Chinese eggplant were perfectly cooked, without being mushy, along with onion, green chili, red bell pepper and basil leaves, moistened by a savory bean sauce.  This mixture was very appealing due to the skillful cooking and wonderful sauce, made even more luscious by the pieces of crispy belly pork that was the choice protein of my dining companion.  This dish hit all the notes for my friend especially the crispy pork for which he has a strong penchant.

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Mango Sticky Rice

Taro Egg CustardEnough of the savories – time for the sweets.   A must-order, and a litmus test for a Thai eatery, is Mango Sticky Rice.  The glutinous rice was fragrant and rich from the use of coconut cream in the steaming process, nearly as good as my favorite rendition from another Thai establishment.  However, since it was not peak season for mango, as the fruit was not soft and it lacked the necessary sweetness to match the rich grains.  The sprinkling of toasted coconut on top added more of the nutty notes, although I felt the dish could have done without this extra element.  The other sweet offering was Taro Custard.  The small cake was creamy rich and slightly nutty from the use of coconut cream, with a soft mash potato-like texture that spoke of the taro root used in the mix.  I love this stuff and the version here was not short in any of the categories – a wonderful (slightly) sweet ending indeed.

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Thai TasteWhew, that was quite an extensive menu and I had to pay many trips to Thai Taste to get a good feel of its kitchen.  It is a small place with only 11 tables available with only a small window for natural light.  The place does get quite loud with Thai pop music pumping through the sound system, but the ambience is only befitting of the street food dishes on its menu.  What the restaurant impressed me most besides the breadth of the menu, were the consistently well-executed and well-seasoned dishes, in addition to the uncompromising qualities evidenced by the chili heat levels and the authentic use of ingredients (tamarind, pickled mustard green) which some shy away from.  What also makes this establishment stand out from its peers (one located just next door and the other across the road) besides the above, is the unique offerings that would whisk anyone away to that Southeast Asian environment renown for its alluring cuisine.  No surprise that I could hear the Thai language coming out from most customers’ mouth, this being a reassuring note for this reviewer and gourmand.  Yes, with a number of Thai restaurants around the area and a few already on my blog site, this place was well worth writing about, and it sits very high on my list as of today.

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Pho & Grill 198

Pho & Grill 198Vietnamese Restaurants pose quite a challenge for any blogger, especially for this reviewer.  In the past, I have griped about the lack of good establishments outside of traditional Vietnamese communities, like Eden Center, Fairfax, VA, with offerings beyond the expected bowl of Pho noodles.  I have also lamented about the demise of a few restaurants of this cuisine, of which one served outstanding modern and traditional dishes whose flavors were indelible in my mind.  In addition, some places that I have visited have not maintained their standards after a few months of opening, and they have fallen off my must-visit list. So, when a new Vietnamese joint opened just down the road from me in Burtonsville, MD, I had mixed emotions, not knowing which course this culinary adventure would take me.

Pho & Grill 198 occupies what once used to be a Chinese restaurant in the middle of a strip mall that would escape one’s attention in a blink of the eye. I so happened to stumble upon this new establishment when I took my parents to try Ethiopian food a couple of doors down (a rare visit from Australia), and after picking up its take-out menu, I noticed some interesting dishes that went beyond my expectation.  Walking in there for the first time, the well-lacquered furniture and wooden floors, perhaps leftover from its previous life, exuded a warm welcoming ambiance with lots of light streaming through the storefront windows. Well, after a few visits to this spot, here is my report.

Fresh Lemon JuiceDurian Smoothie

Drinks maybe not the highlight in one’s meal, but I do enjoy some from this cuisine.  I had to try the Lemonade, listed as Fresh Lemon Juice.  After hearing the sound of a stirring spoon in a glass coming from the bar, I know that it was made a la minute.  Fresh it was, indeed, filled with bits of tart bits of lemon, sweet enough without sending you into a diabetic shock – the perfect end-of-summer thirst quencher.  Another drink that I honed in on the menu came from the smoothies section, and I had to go for my favorite flavor – Durian.  My glass came filled with a thick icy creamy concoction that tasted rich and milky, with the pungent Durian sulphuric notes (some describe it as “rotting garbage”) cutting through and overshadowing the diary’s innocent mild flavors.  I love the funkiness of this Southeast Asian fruit that I grew up on, and I was savoring every drop like a prized treasure – not for the uninitiated but totally up my alley.  The drinks category are worth looking at, beyond the usual glass of water I usually settle for.

Crispy Spring RollsSummer Rolls

Pleiku style Rice Paper RollsWell, moving on to the appetizers. This place offers a number of types of rolls, some familiar and some not. The Crispy Spring Roll was ordered on one occasion.  What set them slightly apart from most that I have savored was the flavors of crab meat and shrimp that were more pronounced even though they were ground up together into the pork mixture.  They were tasty, fairly light and greaseless, but I did miss the use of taro root in the traditional recipe that adds the certain soft texture to a dense filling (a rare practice these days).  However, they were pretty good light bites.   Since it was summer, I also had to try their Summer Roll. The  rice paper wrapping was still fairly soft and moist without the chalkiness from refrigeration.  The stuffing was a combination of slices of sweet shrimp (a bit overcooked and tough for me) and savory pork, mixed with lettuce, mint and Perilla leaves.  The addition of the herbs in the bundle added a note of interest to this savory light combination, not commonly found in other versions, which I found refreshing with these bites.  The last type of roll savored was something completely new for me – Pleiku Style Rice Paper Rolls.  This Rice Paper bundle comes stuffed with grilled beef, grilled pork stick (like spam), crispy roll, fried egg, cucumber and mixed pickles. Wow, what a roll it was!  I was enjoying the myriad of flavors, all tasting well-prepared and well-seasoned, and textures from the various partners who happen to get along well with each other in the cramped roll.   These bites encompassed all the good things I like about this cuisine, brought together in this super roll. This has become my favorite roll which hails from the owner’s Central Vietnam hometown.

Banh XeoRoasted Quail

Stir-fried Baby ClamsPerusing the menu for the first time, I noticed a couple of dishes in the same section that are not usually found in other Pho places. The first is Banh Xeo or Stuffed Vietnamese Crepes.  A couple of yellowish crepes arrive stuffed with shrimp, beef, onion, and beansprouts.  The shrimps were large and sweet, the beef well-seasoned and tasty, onions sweet, and the beansprouts added the necessary slight crunch to the mixture. But what made the dish stand out were the crepes themselves.  The skins were smoky from being cooked on a smoking cast-iron to produce this crisp and slightly charred crepe (“Xeo” in the name denotes the sizzling of the mixture hitting the hot pan).  The version served here may not be rich with coconut milk (a South Vietnamese trait), but the whole mixture was appealing enough for a friend considering hijacking my dish.  The briny fish sauce was the obligatory and necessary accompaniment to bring saltiness to the unseasoned crepe, which is the case in the traditional approach.   Another appetizer that immediately caught my attention was Roasted Quail.  My order arrived with the miniature bird shiny from a good lacquering and dark from the roasting.  The meat was quite firm yet moist, pulling off the bone rather easily, and exuding exotic notes from the judicious use of five-spice powder that made each bite delectable and the bones somewhat edible too.  Good things come in all sizes, and this small bite is no exception.  Another order that night was Stir-Fried Baby Clams.  The plate arrived with a mixture of the bits of seafood mixed with herbs, topped with crispy fried shallots, along with a plate of rice crackers.  One bite into the dish pointed towards mild and subtle flavors.  I enjoyed this mixture with the sweet tasting baby clams, the crunchy and aromatic fried shallots, the fragrance from mint leaves and pungent Vietnamese Rau Ram herb, and hints of lemongrass and chili wafting through each mouthful.  The rice crackers made the perfect vehicle for the soft seafood with their crunchy texture and for the added savoriness that they lent to each bite. The above appetizers are worth a try, and making the Banh Xeo and Baby Clams into a main course is possible due to the portion size, like my friends and I have done so on our visits.

Shrimp Bun Noodle Salad

Grilled PorkFor the main course, there are selections of dry and soup dishes.  From the non-soup entrees, I ordered Shrimp Bun Noodle Salad on one occasion.  The bowl arrived with a mound of rice noodles surrounded by the usual suspects of mint leaves, cucumber, lettuce, and pickled root vegetables, all topped with a heap of cooked butterflied shrimp, fried spring rolls, and a sprinkling of nutty peanuts.  After pouring the obligatory fish sauce mixed with some Sriracha sauce, the dish tasted very much like how most Bun salads do.  However, what sets this version apart was the shrimp that tasted a bit sweet and charred from some hot grill action, albeit a bit too long judging but its slight toughness.   But, I was enjoying the mini fried spring roll bits that provided the textural contrast to the soft elements in the bowl.  A friend’s order of Grilled Pork Rice dish arrived with an impressive amount of the grilled meat.  One bite into his dish made a wonderful impression: well-marinated meat tasting slightly sweet and salty, and slightly smoky from its stay on the hot grill.  The bits of fried green onions added the slight onion-like fragrance to these meaty bites.  Another friend’s order made with Grilled Beef was equally impressive with a hit of lemongrass that exuded it citrus root fragrance to these clean tasting yet well-marinated pieces.  Another friend’s order of Combination Fried Rice was skilfully made with lightly oiled yellow rice studded with pieces of meat and shrimp, onions and pieces of vegetables, all delicately seasoned – I couldn’t resist but take more than a couple of scoops from my friend’s plate.

Bun Bo Hue

Bun Bo Hue GarnishSince it was a Pho establishment, I knew I had to try their noodle soups.  Ever since I was introduced to Bun Bo Hue in a now-defunct establishment, this dish had to be ordered on one of my visits here.  The bowl was brimming with some steaming reddish soup, covering some round rice noodles and bits of off-cuts like beef shank and pork knuckles, along with Vietnamese ham and some vegetables.  But the star of the dish, and deservedly so, is the broth that had hints of herbal lemongrass, spicy chili kick, and a seafood pungency from the use of shrimp paste, much like anchovy paste.  The side plate of sliced cabbage, banana blossom, mint, Vietnamese mint (Rau Ram), Perilla leaves (cousin of Shiso), added the additional textural interest and herbal qualities to this savory spicy dish.  As if the soup was not shrimpy enough, a container of fermented shrimp paste added more sea brininess to the mix.  I have to admit that this is the best version I have eaten in quite some time, and I’m glad I can just head down the road for this spicy bowl.

Pho Tai

Pho TaiA bowl of the proverbial Pho noodles was calling my name on another visit, and I chose the simple Pho Tai.  The bowl of hot steaming bowl came with a mound of eye-round steak sitting on rice noodles surrounded by a clear soup. After separating the paper-thin beef slices and cooking them in the broth, I could taste the mild beef flavors that were indicative of fresh quality meat. But what grabbed my attention was the broth that was perfectly seasoned without a trace of MSG, with faint hints of the spices used in its cooking, without any single spice standing out – a completely round flavor.  Usually one for stronger flavors in my Pho broth (more star-anise, more cassia bark), I marveled at this “roundness” of flavor, and I don’t think anyone would find fault with this bowl.

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Flan CakeDesserts do not feature extensively in Asians cuisine, Vietnamese included.  However, I couldn’t help but order Flan Cake at the end of dinner one night, this dish obviously being a vestige of French rule.  A small bowl arrived with the cooked custard surrounded by coffee, with shaved ice perching on the cake as well as pieces swimming in the caffeinated liquid.  This was an interesting combination with the slightly sweet and creamy flan mixed with the slightly bitter and under sweetened coffee.  I quite enjoyed this interesting pairing, but it would have been more successful if the coffee was sweeter since it was robbing some of the flan’s sugars, which made the cake a bit flat.  A friend’s night-cap of Vietnamese Coffee arrived on the table in its traditional style: a filtering contraption sitting on top of a shot glass filled with thick sweet condensed milk.  A sip from his glass confirmed what I like about Vietnamese coffee – sweet, strong and bitter without the acrid notes (usually found in American coffee), exuding aromatic chicory notes from its roasting.

Vietnamese CoffeePho & Grill 198 is not your typical Pho noodle place. What this place offers is far beyond what one usually expects from this type of establishment, with offerings of the wonderful “super” Pleiku roll, the aromatic Roasted Quail, the subtle but tasty Baby Clams, the smoky and crispy Crepes, the rounded flavors in the Pho noodles, and the wow factor that I savored in the Bun Bo Hue spicy noodle soup.  An establishment of this kind in the suburbs is a rare find, even more so in a not-so-diverse suburban town in Montgomery county.  But judging by the stream of clients entering its doors, the word is out that something good is going on here.  Fortunately for me, it is just a stone throw away from my house, and I will be walking through its doors with some frequency for the wide variety of its scrumptious Vietnamese offerings.

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Banh Mi>Addendum:
Pho & Grill 198 has just started serving the quintessential Vietnamese sandwich, Banh Mi, and I had a taste of it today. Fresh crusty baguette, crispy vegetables, sweet and sour pickles, Jalapeño bite, fragrant cilantro, and marinated lemongrass grilled meat – a winning combination!! Finally this sandwich has made it to this side of the DMV.

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