Showing posts with label coconut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coconut. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Charlie's Restaurant & Bar - Desserts


Restaurant: Charlie’s Bar & Restaurant

Cuisine: Pizza/Mediterranean/Italian
Last visited: March 9, 2010
Area: Vancouver, BC (Yaletown/Downtown)
1265 Hamilton Street
Price Range
:
$20-30

1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!

Food: 4
Service: n/a
(Media dinner)
Ambiance: 5
Overall: 3.5
(Food is generally good, but just not worth it)
Additional comments:

  • Chef Brian Ritchot
  • Chef from Montreal, one from Spain
  • DJ’s/live music on weekends
  • Contemporary, sleek, posh atmosphere
  • Great for drinks, appies
  • Specializes in gourmet pizzas
  • Mediterranean/Italian options
  • Longue like atmosphere
  • One large projection screen TV
  • Open late
  • Pizzas available for take out
  • Dinner service only

**Recommendation: Short Rib Pizza, prosciutto di Parma 18 Month, Duck Pizza, Banoffee Pie


I was invited to a media dinner at Charlie’s Bar & Restaurant so the food served this evening was complimentary. However there were no expectations from Charlie’s Bar & Restaurant and the review represents my true and honest opinions.


This review focuses on the dessert for the evening. All the desserts are made in house from scratch which I really appreciate it…and quite frankly expect from a restaurant like this. However I don’t think any dessert here should exceed $8-9 because I’d be paying the same for desserts at slightly more expensive restaurants like Lupo Restaurant + Vinoteca down the street.

I get confused between Charlie’s Restaurant and Bar being a gourmet pizza place and being a finer Mediterranean restaurant. The desserts got me more confused…some are traditional British and some seem more French...but it's a Mediterranean/Italian/Pizza place...right?...regardless I’ll tell you what’s good…


The dinner & drink portion of the review.


On the table:

Chocolate Ganache 2/6

  • Pistachio, chocolate wafer and mint sorbet $11
  • A bit unusual to see at a restaurant/bar serving gourmet pizzas. It was a bit refined for the style and I couldn’t figure out how it fit in.
  • The dessert was quite good and basically a twist on mint chocolate ice cream. It was a deconstructed version with gourmet execution.
  • It was very rich dark chocolate ganache slices sprinkled with cocoa powder and topped with thin dark chocolate wafers.
  • There was some pistachio and skor graham cracker crumbles around the plate that aided in the presentation rather than the flavour.
  • The mint sorbet was refreshing but bitter. The after taste was significantly bitter.
  • I wouldn’t want the whole thing to myself, but I’m not a big fan of chocolate mint ice cream. 1-2 of the small squares is enough.
  • $11 for this portion I would feel ripped off…but apparently they usually serve it with another piece. (The size of the biggest one in the photo)

Banoffee Pie 4.5/6

  • Banana, dry caramel and coconut ice cream $10
  • I really liked this! You don’t see this traditional British dessert served at many places so I enjoyed it here.
  • I loved how they served it with coconut ice cream. A gourmet twist on traditional pub food…wait is Charlie’s a pub now?
  • I don’t think the tart shell was made in house, but I’m not sure. It was a crumbly shortbread like cookie crust, but it didn’t taste homemade. It was filled with bananas, dry caramel and topped with cream.
  • The “dry caramel” tastes like dulche de leche – it was like caramelized condensed milk and very thick.
  • It was creamy and very sweet with lots of caramel so I'm glad there was ice cream to break it up.
  • It was served with 3 warm caramelized bananas.
  • I'd pay $10 for it, but I still think it's reaching a bit. Especially since most people would be use to seeing it at pubs for half the price. I did like it more than the chocolate ganache.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Bo Laksa King





Restaurant: Bo Laksa King

Cuisine: Malaysian/Burmese/Singapore/Thai

Last visited: February 16, 2010
Area: Vancouver, BC (Joyce-Collingwood)

4910 Joyce St

Range: $10 or less


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!


Food: 4.5

Service: 4.5

Ambiance: 1.5

Overall: 4.5

Additional comments:

  • Major hole-in the wall
  • Located inside Malaysian grocery store
  • Specializes in Malaysian/Burmese food
  • Famous for laksa and wraps
  • Husband and wife operation
  • Good for quick lunches – Malaysian wraps
  • Fresh, homemade, made upon order
  • Half menu made on site, half from main off site kitchen
  • Popular to neighborhood/locals in area
  • Seats 2-4
  • Cheap eatery – not dirt cheap, but reasonable
  • Lunch and dinner service
  • Full dinner menu only available online from 6pm - pick-up/delivery only
  • Dinner - Pick-up before 8pm
  • Delivery charges apply
  • Open late
  • Catering available

**Recommendation: Roti Canai, Laksa, Malaysian style wraps (but I haven’t tried)…also haven’t tried but the Lahpet Thoke (Fermented tea leaf salad) is authentic Burmese food not available anywhere else.


I would have never heard of Bo Laksa king and would have never discovered it on my own. Thanks to Kim (I’m Only Here for the Food) I was able to try this major hole in the wall located in a Malaysian/Asian grocery store. I’m also never in that area so I wouldn’t have had the opportunity to wander around. It’s a total word-of-mouth place and their business depends on this type of advertising.


It’s a husband and wife operation and they’re really nice people. She’s Chinese and he’s Burmese. The recipes are actually very authentic but they also offer a mixture of South East Asian cuisine from Malaysian, Singaporean, Thai and the rare…Burmese! They even have a couple Chinese dishes in there. It’s popular for quick lunches and their full dinner menu is only available online for delivery or pick-up before 8pm. They operate out of the small kitchen in the back of the grocery store and also a main kitchen that is a few blocks away on Victoria. Keep this in mind because the menu is limited if you’re going for dinner and eating in.


Okay so being a major hole in the wall, I have to lower my expectations a bit, however not by much because the food was really good. It’s a hole in the wall with fresh, authentic, homemade, made upon order meals for a good price…what more can you ask for? Overall I was pleasantly surprised. I would go back because I think there’s better then what I had, and I want to try a wrap.

On the table:

Burmese Tea 4/6

  • $1.50
  • It’s similar to Thai tea but not as strong or sweet. It’s frothy, milky, creamy and a smooth tea.
  • It’s still quite sweet though because it’s mixed and shaken with condensed milk.
  • The tea is authentic Burmese tea that is steeped and it’s stronger than Chinese tea, but milder than Thai tea.
  • It’s made upon order and a pretty large cup for only $1.50

**Roti Canai 5.5/6

  • The small is served with beef curry $3.99 Large is served with chicken curry $5.99
  • The roti is very hot, fresh and made upon order on a griddle. It’s super fluffy, flakey, soft, stretchy and chewy…but it was a tad oily. We devoured it in seconds though so it didn’t matter. You can watch her toss it and cook it on the spot – it’s almost like watching a pizza dough show.
  • The curry is their beef curry sauce. It’s very flavourful and slightly spicy. There are little bits of beef brisket throughout and the sauce has a very strong beef broth flavour. They use lots of spices and herbs in there so it’s very flavourful.
  • It’s quite oily too though so you really have to scoop up the sauce or you’re just dipping into oil. It’s good though!

Satay Skewers 3.5/6

  • Choice from marinated chicken, beef, or lamb served with sticky rice, cucumber & spicy peanut sauce. (3 skewers) $3.50
  • The satay skewers are made on a griddle rather than a grill…which I’ll let go because they’re working with limited resources being in a grocery store.
  • You wouldn't miss out by not ordering it, but it’s a pretty decent sized appetizer for a $3.50 bargain!
  • This chicken is marinated in a curry spice, but I couldn’t really taste it. It was tender and the pieces are big, it wasn’t necessarily anything to rave about.
  • The sticky rice is almost like a dessert. The rice is a bit sweet and almost like a giant mochi ball sprinkled with dried coconut flakes.
  • The peanut sauce is that authentic creamy Thai peanut butter sauce rather than the chunky Malaysian sauce. I prefer the Malaysian version. Bo Laksa King’s is okay but the fish sauce mixed into the peanut sauce was a bit too tangy for me and I didn’t really like the brand they were using – a bit too rancid in taste.

**Laksa 6/6

  • Prawn, chicken, fish ball, tofu puff, egg, sweet bell peppers and bean sprouts. Choose from vermicelli or yellow wheat noodle $7.50
  • The authentic way is to have it with vermicelli – so that’s what we ordered it with.
  • We got it to go, so the fancy bowl is not how it’s served.
  • It’s loaded with tons on topping and that surprised me.
  • There are lots of fresh herbs and spices in the broth and it’s really obvious. It had that slow cooked, on the stove all day homecooked flavour. It tasted very authentic with exotic herbs and spices that I’ve never really experienced in laksa before.
  • It wasn’t very spicy for me, but just very aromatic! It’s very rich and creamy with the sweetened taste of coconut milk.
  • The noodles are al dente! They’re harder then expected, which I like! They were blanched in the soup and packaged in a separate container to ensure they’re not overcooked.

Pad Thai 3/6

  • Thai rice noodle, eggs, shrimps, extra firm tofu, Chinese chives, dried chili peppers, banana flower, bean sprouts, preserved turnip, stir fry in house made traditional tamarind sauce $8.75
  • This is a traditional version of Pad Thai and not the Western version where they make it with Ketchup. This one is made with Tamarind – just like the one at Tangthai Cuisine of Thailand Restaurant.
  • It’s one of their popular items, but I wasn’t crazy about it.
  • Overall it was still good with lots of shrimp (6 of them); however I really didn’t like the whole peanuts. I usually love peanuts too, but I want them ground up when I’m having it with Pad Thai.
  • It was served with a house made fish sauce…which I didn’t like. By home made I mean adding chilies, jalapeños and some additional spices to a bought fish sauce. It was too tangy and rancid…which is expected…but it was almost overly rancid and off. I love fish sauce too! Maybe it was just the fish sauce brand they’re using?
  • It was a tangy and spicy Pad Thai with jalapeño peppers. I thought it need more flavour though…I was relying on the lime and the fish sauce (which wasn’t that good)…and also the peanuts (which weren’t ground up)….so everything was there…but also not there for me…
  • I prefer the ground peanuts and fish sauce at Thai Basil.

Bo Laksa King's on Urbanspoon

Monday, March 8, 2010

8 Juice




Restaurant: 8 Juice

Cuisine: Drinks/Desserts

Last visited: March 6, 2010
Area: Richmond, BC

4151 Hazelbridge Way – In Aberdeen Mall
Range
: $10 or less


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!


Food: 2.5 (Based on their #1 drink only)

Service: 4.5

Ambiance: n/a – in a food court

Overall: 2.5

Additional comments:

  • Healthy desserts/drinks
  • Fresh fruit
  • Made upon order
  • Specializes in drinks only
  • Fresh fruit juices
  • Milkshake/yogurt drinks
  • Cash only
  • Asian Jugo Juice

**Recommendation: n/a – but if you’re going to go get the #1 house special – Mango + coconut milk + tapioca + pomelo drink


This is basically the Chinese version of Jugo Juice. 8 Juice is located in the Aberdeen food court. They specialize in fresh fruit drinks and everything is blended, shaken, stirred upon order…like a bubble tea place….but they have no bubble tea.

This is pretty much one of the only places in Richmond serving mango, coconut, tapioca and pomelo drink that is so famous in Hong Kong. You can’t even find this drink at many bubble tea places because the “tapioca” is not pearls – the tapioca is “sago” which is smaller and white in colour.

In Hong Kong the most famous place to have this dessert/drink is Hui Lau Shan. I love it! If you’ve had that then this place is really not good. I was so disappointed. To be fair it’s the only thing I’ve tried on the menu…but if it’s their “No.1 House Specialty” then I don’t have much hope.

After Twittering about the mango, coconut and sago drink the last couple days I had a major craving and decided to check this place out. The guy was really nice, but unfortunately my craving is not satisfied and I don’t think it can be because I don’t know anywhere else that serves it.


On the table:


Mango, Coconut Milk, Tapioca and Pomelo Drink 2.5/6

  • It’s the “No 1 House Specialty”
  • Compared to Hui Lau Shan in Hong Kong it is not good
  • It was really watered down, frothey, but almost bland. I couldn’t taste much mango or coconut milk and it was a major 'save money' move.
  • The mango juice has a very light mango flavour and they blend it with 2% milk and a touch of coconut milk which I couldn’t taste at all.

  • There were small bits of mango in the drink, not a lot though. Some of the mango was hairy though….pieces that were too close to the seed.
  • There was even less pomelo. The pomelo is very shredded into each sliver or ‘pocket’ so you have individual “strands” of it. Pomelo is basically an Asian grapefruit. It’s sweeter and not bitter though. It’s quite neutral in flavour.
  • It’s a drink that you need to chew with all the fruit and tapioca. However the tapioca is so small you just end up swallowing them unlike the bigger black tapioca pearls.

8 Juice (Aberdeen Centre) on Urbanspoon

Monday, February 15, 2010

Bakery Nouveau – Review 2

Restaurant: Bakery Nouveau – Review 2

Cuisine: Bakery/Desserts
Last visited: January 31, 2010
Area: Seattle, WA (West Seattle)
4737 California Ave SW
Price Range: $10-20


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!

Food: 6
Service: n/a (I wasn’t actually there)

Ambiance: n/a

Overall: n/a

Additional comments:

  • Pastry chef William Leaman
  • Pastries baked several times daily
  • Famous bakery in Seattle
  • Gourmet bakery
  • Traditional desserts with a gourmet/West Coast twist
  • Breads/Desserts/Pastries/Chocolates/Jam/Lunch
  • Award winning desserts
  • Natural ingredients
  • Seasonal ingredients
  • Gift baskets available
  • Daily/Weekly/Holiday specials
  • Dine in/Take-out
  • Mon-Thurs 6am-7pm
  • Fri 6am-9pm
  • Sat 7am-9pm
  • Sun 7am-7pm

**Recommendation: Blueberry Pistachio Cake, Double Baked Almond Croissant


I am so lucky to have friends that love me! To get desserts from Bakery Nouveau twice in one month is seriously something to brag about! My friends went down to Seattle and recalled my post about Bakery Nouveau and with my “must go there” push they decided to stop there for lunch. They were happy, I was happy and I still am happy.


My 1st review for Bakery Nouveau.


On the table:


Pumpkin Bread 4.5/6

  • Super moist like a moist banana bread would be. It’s more like a cake than it is bread.
  • Very buttery and a bit oily so you can see it on your hands. But it’s good!
  • Very strong cinnamon taste, lots of canned pumpkin. I think there is lots of clove in there and maybe a little nutmeg too. It almost seems like all canned pumpkin in taste and texture because it’s so moist.
  • It marbled with a brown sugar walnut crumb streusel. It’s almost paste like.
  • It’s quite sweet, and even a bit salty. They definitely added that pinch of salt to bring out the flavours, but I could actually taste it a bit more than I wanted to.


Snowball Cake 5/6

  • I don’t have the exact description but it had a custard bottom, cake layer, milk chocolate caramel Rum like layer, another custard layer, another cake layer and it was all covered with freshly dried coconut shavings. Probably around $5.50USD. It's quite expensive here.
  • I love the coconut shavings! This cake was very custardy with a Rum taste. I think they use a very potent Vanilla Rum extract so it almost taste like there’s actually Rum in it.
  • It’s creamy and very sweet, but good!
  • It’s like a coconut vanilla custard trifle in taste and in texture it was like a tiramisu (without the cheese taste). It had egg nog like flavours, especially in the cust ard and there are real vanilla bean seeds in it.

  • You can hear the moistness when you cut through it with your fork…sounds gross, but it’s really good. The cake layer is quite wet and soaked/
  • The whole cake is spread with vanilla custard or a cream that’s a bit thinner than pastry cream before it’s covered with coconut.
  • The chocolate layer is a bit too sweet. I think it’s a very low % of cocoa powder and it tastes like melted milk chocolate spread.
  • It’s a bit too sweet and I wouldn’t want a whole piece. I needed to eat it with a glass of milk. It was still excellent though.

Twice Baked Almond Croissant 6/6

  • My friend meant to order the Twice Baked Chocolate Croissant but by mistake called out Twice Baked Almond Croissant – which I tried last time.
  • I actually started writing about it and how disappointed I was that there was no chocolate…until I realized…lol
  • No changes, still delicious. Except I didn't like how oddly shaped it was, the one I had last time was better looking.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Tangthai Cuisine of Thailand




Restaurant: Tangthai Cuisine of Thailand

Cuisine: Thai
Last visited: January 20, 2010
Area: Vancouver, BC (Robson Street/West End/Downtown)
1779 Robson Street
Price Range: $10-20 (closer to $20)


1: Poor 2: OK 3: Good 4: Very good 5: Excellent 6: Tres Excellent!!

Food: 4
Service: n/a (due to circumstances)

Ambiance: 4

Overall: 4

Additional comments:

  • 2nd location – original location on West Broadway
  • Family owned
  • Experienced and trained Thai chefs/cooks
  • Authentic Thai with some modern influences
  • Some creative dishes I’ve never seen at other Thai restaurants
  • Can chose level of spiciness
  • Home made/ home cooked
  • Curry sauces made from scratch
  • Beautiful décor
  • 2 levels, private room available
  • Slightly more expensive
  • Attracts Westerners/locals in neighborhood
  • Lunch and dinner
  • Lunch specials 11:30-4pm
  • Vegetarian options
  • Open 7 days, open late

**Recommendation: Prawn skirt, Tom Kha Kai, Pla Muek Pad Keaw Wan (Stuffed squid), Nua Pad Takhai


The nature of this visit was not under normal conditions. I was invited by Chow Times on behalf of Tangthai for this special tasting session especially for Vancouver food bloggers. I was joined with Sherman’s Food Adventures, My Secret Eden, 604Foodtography and of course Chow Times. Therefore the food was complimentary, however we accepted on the condition that we had the freedom to write and express our true opinions. The owner, Dhitichaya Ruengsamarnwong (yes, very long name) was 100% receptive to the conditions and wanted the food to speak for itself. There was no expectation from the Tangthai.


We were thus served a proper sit down dinner having food served the way they usually would on a regular night. However it wasn’t quite “regular” as there were dishes that they are planning to introduce that are not yet on the menu and we were lucky enough to try them first. The owners are genuinely nice people and treated us with the utmost respect. I honestly think their service would transfer over to diners on a regular night.


The food on the whole was pretty good, with some dishes better than others. I’m not Thai so it’s hard for me to speak of ‘authenticity’ however some dishes I felt were more authentic Thai than others…to the point of it not tasting good to a Westerner since we’re commonly given “watered down Thai food”. I did my own research on Thai cuisine before attending and was educated about Thai cuisine during dinner as well so I think I have a pretty good idea of what’s going on. We got everything served the “authentic Thai way” which means pretty damn spicy – but you can request for something more mild…I wouldn’t.


On the table:

**Prawn Skirt 5/6

  • Egg wrapping stuffed with minced pork, crab meat, and water chestnut. 4 for $8.95
  • Prawn skirt or prawn spring rolls? I would have totally looked passed these if I saw them on the menu. It just sounds so typical. I’m actually really glad I got to try them though because they were good!
  • They were very crispy and crunchy and fried perfectly. Lots of filling and tightly wrapped. The shrimp is only at the end. They’re savoury, but also spicy and spicier with the sweet Thai chili dipping sauce. I enjoyed it though!
  • My only complaint is that they used artificial crab stick meat. I was looking for the texture of flaked crabmeat, but I guess for the price it’s understandable.

Satay Chicken and Beef 1.5/6

  • Chicken or beef satay served with peanut sauce and cucumber 4 for $6.95 or 8 for $13.95
  • I could pass on these. I tried both the chicken and the beef and found the beef a bit dry. The chicken was ok, but it was a bit tendon-y for my liking. It did have a grilled and crispy outside, just a fatty texture.
  • They marinated the meat in a yellow curry spice rub which was unusual to me for Thai cuisine. I found it made for a drier texture and didn’t do much in terms of flavour.
  • Peanut sauce: I had major issues with this sauce. It tasted like smooth jarred peanut butter with minced garlic and ginger. I like real ground peanuts in my peanut sauce. But apparently the authentic Thai way is actually to have smooth peanut butter and it’s more Malaysian to expect a crunchy peanut paste. I still like the Malaysian one better. This one really tasted like plain store bought peanut butter, a fresh one would have been nice and not hard to make.

**Tom Kha Kai 5/6

  • Spicy coconut soup with chicken, tomatoes, mushrooms, galangal, lime leaves, lemongrass and cilantro $3.95
  • I’ve never really had tom kha kai like this before. This one was very rich, creamy, velvety and smooth. It was almost like the texture of lobster bisque. The soup seemed very westernized to me, but I still thoroughly enjoyed it.
  • It’s a very aromatic soup that’s actually quite sweet in the beginning so there was quite a bit of palm sugar. The spiciness isn’t in the beginning but catches up with you after and lingers. There’s a strong lemongrass and coconut taste and I found it more sweet overall.
  • They used 3 different bell peppers and the yellow bell pepper is the sweetest. It was also the most cooked so I think they used the natural sugars from the yellow pepper to enhance the sweetness.
  • There was about 3 pieces of chicken filet, but no mushrooms in mine.
  • The broth was excellent, but I could have used more fresh herbs and ingredients. The portion was a bit small too because of the size and shape of the bowl.

Cashew Chicken 3/6

  • Chicken breast fried with cashew nuts, onions, crispy chilies, carrots, bell peppers, mushrooms, green onions, and snap peas $12.95
  • This was good, but it was also at the end of the meal when we were all stuffed and our taste buds were dead. So it was not spicy at all, which is common of cashew chicken – it never really is.
  • It looks really spicy, but its not. It’s more sweet and savoury. It was almost like tamarind sauce with sweet chili sauce and maybe some chili oil.
  • It was a bit too oily for my liking, but the veggies were fresh and crunchy and there was a good amount of chicken and cashews.

Herb Chicken Barbeque 2.5/6 (special, not on official menu)

  • Half chicken $16.95
  • I didn’t really care much for this dish. It was good and the chicken wasn’t dry, but I wouldn’t order it again. It was a Thai version of barbeque chicken. I couldn't really taste any of the marinade even though I could see some herbs and lemon grass. It was very regular to me.
  • What makes this dish different is the sauce. The sauce was very tangy and very salty! It was made of fish sauce so it was quite potent and there was also some lime. It was spicy again and infused with some cilantro. The sprinkle toasted rice on this sauce so there was a really delicate nutty crunch which I liked. The sauce is super strong though, which makes up for the blander chicken. Alone you probably won’t like it, but with the chicken it works.
  • I really think they should remove the tin foil before serving this chicken. It was really weird and ruined he presentation.

**Nua Pad Takhai 5/6

  • Beef fried with lemongrass, onions, chilies, bell peppers and cilantro $13.95
  • This was a really simple dish and almost tasted like a Chinese beef stir-fry. As simple as it was, I thought it was done really well and it tasted good which is the important part.
  • Since the beef slices were quite thin thy soaked up all the flavours really well.
  • Besides beef the main ingredient is lemongrass, and that was the dominant flavour. It was very minced and not hard so it wasn’t distracting. They used it in the sauce and it absorbed into everything. It was quite spicy because of the chilies, but the lemongrass still stood out.

**Pla Muek Pad Keaw Wan 6/6 (special, not on official menu)

  • Ground chicken breast and vermicelli stuffed squid with figs in spicy green curry sauce (Possibly $16.95? – they may consider offering it as an appy)
  • I have never seen this dish before at any Thai restaurant in Vancouver. I was really excited! I love trying new things.
  • The 6/6 is partly because it’s different, but in terms of flavour and overall I would give it a 5/6. There were like a million different flavours going on in my mouth. No joke. I couldn’t pick anything out because every flavour lasted only a second before I tasted something else. I felt like Violet eating that chewing gum from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
  • This was the spiciest dish. The sauce was a green coconut curry sauce and it had quite the kick! It was sweet from the coconut milk and palm sugar, spicy from fresh whole black peppercorns, salty from fish sauce, tangy from a bit of lime and aromatic with galangal, fresh bay leaf and basil leaf. Every single herb and spice listed was fresh, not dried. Very rare to come across.
  • The noodles made for a very soft and tender chicken stuffing. It was almost like eating an ultra soft chicken meatball or a meatloaf. It almost tasted milky. I could compare the texture and even flavour to white bread soaked in milk – not really flavourful, but very interesting. I don’t even know if it was good as much as it was new to me.
  • The squid was actually the last thing that “wow’d” me…I was so distracted by everything else going on with this dish. The squid itself had no seasonings and it was a bit crunchy to me and I would have preferred it more tender and chewy.
  • I was trying to guess everything in this dish. The green wedges were actually figs! That was a nice surprise. They weren’t sweet, but had the texture of a firmer zucchini or eggplant. It was a firm and had a squeaky crunch. I liked them but they were kind of flavorless. What gave them flavour was the sauce.
  • The things that look like giant peas are actually baby figs. I ate 4 of them trying to figure out what they were and they weren’t good. They were very bitter and popped in your mouth…they popped out a seedy pulp almost like a cherry tomato would.
  • I actually recommended the owners to offer this dish as an appetizer. Since the clientele is predominantly ‘white’ and the dish is rather new to the Thai scene I think it would be appropriate to offer it as an appetizer so people could try it.

Pla Rad Prik 4.5/6

  • Fried crispy Tilapia topped with bell peppers, onions and a spicy sweet and sour sauce $15.95
  • I could be the only one that actually enjoyed this dish. This is an authentic Thai dish that Thai people order. I’ve had something very similar; the Pla Sarm Rod at Khai Thai with my Thai friends before so I knew what to expect…otherwise you won’t like it and think it’s overcooked and dry. The thing is – it’s supposed to be.
  • The tilapia is deep fried to the point were the fish becomes almost jerky like and dry. It’s extremely crispy and the goal is to get it to the point where it’s so crispy you can chew right through the bones and eat them! And I could!
  • I’m not sure if you can tell by the picture but they slice the body of the fish to open up the surface and get it even crispier. It’s really good, but maybe only to me.
  • The sauce is amazing. It’s reminiscent of that Pan-fried Prawn with Basil sauce I had at Rainflower. I love this sauce! It’s like honey garlic spare ribs sauce, but spicy. There’s tons of freshly cracked black pepper and it’s wonderfully aromatic, sweet and tangy too. It’s a tamarind based sweet and sour sauce and not a Westernized tomato based one. It was almost like a black pepper, spicy and tangy caramel sauce.
  • The only thing missing is deep fried basil leaves. For me it’s more than a garnish and a must to this dish. The one at Khai Thai has deep fried basil leaves.

Chucheepla 3.5/6 (special, not on official menu)

  • Deep fried Panko crusted eggplant (bottom layer) and deep fried basa fillets (top layer) served with curry sauce (Possibly $15.95?)
  • It’s not on the menu, but they want to bring it on. This will fly easy with Western flavours and the Vancouver scene. For me it didn't seem traditional Thai (even though it is) and the flavour seemed more Thai-Japanese fusion.
  • Almost anyone would like this dish, unless you don’t like deep-fried food.
  • The dish isn't authentically served with eggplant but I enjoyed it more than the fish. The fish was too battered and it was just a regular flour batter.
  • The thin slices worked well for the eggplant because the eggplant had the Panko batter which made it very crispy especially if you had them right away.
  • It was topped with a curry sauce, which I thought was a peanut sauce. I could have used the sauce on the side because it ended up getting soggy.
  • The sauce to me tasted like a peanut garlic ginger sauce, but it was really a curry sauce. I thought it was a Japanese curry sauce, but it wasn't. It still tasted very nutty to me and they did try to make it their own. This one wasn't spicy to me, but at this point my taste buds were overwhelmed.

Pad Thai Krung Tep 3/6

  • Classic rice noodle dish with eggs, chicken, shrimps, sliced tofu, preserved radish, chives, bean sprouts, and traditional Pad Thai sauce, served with a side of ground peanuts and lime $12.95
  • It was good and there was nothing wrong with it, but it was also very whatever. It wasn’t greasy and the noodles weren’t clumpy or overcooked. It’s just everything else was so flavourful that this one came across as ok even though it was pretty good.
  • This was a Thai style Pad Thai so it’s tamarind based and not tomato based. The tomato based is the Western version. Therefore this one is almost soy based, but a bit tangier. I really needed the squeeze of lime juice; otherwise it was a bit plain.
  • I don’t remember many shrimps being in it and I could have used more ground peanuts. I actually wanted more of a dried shrimp flavour to it.

Desserts

Thai Pudding 3/6

  • Home made Thai milky iced tea pudding. Served cold $5.95
  • This was simple, but good. It was more like jello than it was pudding, it’s not as creamy. It wasn’t too sweet and the sweetness wasn’t sugar, but actually sugar cane. The tea flavour really came out and I liked it.
  • I didn’t like the piece of cake that was served on top. It was a bought angel food cake and it was really dry and chewy…almost stale. I would disregard this aspect because they don’t always do that.
  • I’d pay $3.95 for it, but $5.95 I think is too expensive.

Tapioca with Jackfruit & Mango 1/6

  • Tapioca pearls served with coconut milk, jackfruit, and mangoes. Served warm. $3.95
  • No thank you. I really love the Chinese Coconut Tapioca Pudding which is similar to this Thai version. For me the best is still at Kirin so far.
  • I think they should serve it cold.
  • It was very salty! It was sweet too, but the saltiness was first. If you’re Thai then this is authentic and suits your taste buds, but if your not (like me), it’s very salty and almost tastes like it’s spoiled especially since it’s served warm.
  • The owner did say the saltiness is for Thai taste buds and also her own taste buds, so I think she’s going to pull back on that.
  • Not commenting on the flavour now, the tapioca still wasn’t good because it was clumpy.
  • The only part I like was the use of fresh coconut meat, that made it a bit gourmet, but the taste was just not for me.


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