What is it like to attend a dinner at LangBaan, which is hidden behind PaaDee (give your name at the front of PaaDee to be escorted to “The Back Of The House”. It’s an experience you have been looking forward to probably for a while, as you have to purchase your tickets online months ahead of time for a spot at one of their 8 seatings available a week, two seatings a night each Thursday-Sunday? Here’s a peek behind the bookcase door, with my Journey of a Dinner at LangBaan with their May 2017 Tour of Thailand menu.
PaaDee Happy Hour
I have been meaning to visit the restaurant PaaDee Thai comfort food พาดี (it’s name means bringing good things) ever since I heard the name and their desire to provide authentic street food and home food from Thailand. Yet, it was only recently that I finally got around to it. I had been hearing amazing things about their restaurant within a restaurant, Lang Baan (which means back of the house) and decided I couldn’t go to Lang Baan until I had experienced where it began, PaaDee.
This restaurant definitely lives up to its name. I was having a very mixed day- sad, irritated, annoyed, introspective. By the end of my happy hour visit, I was in good spirits. I don’t think it’s a coincidence.
First of all, what a deal! Happy hour is only served 5-6pm in the dining room, but is served all night at the bar??!! Wow.
The happy hour items include 6 snacks and 3 dishes which you would normally find from street cart in Northern Thai cities (most of my experience has been in Chiang Mai, with a little in Bangkok). Of the 9 items, I sampled
- Muu ping, a grilled pork skewer.
- Neua Yang, a steak and sticky rice appetizer
- Peek gai tod, fried wings glazed in Sriracha fish sauce. If you come here, you must get this, happy hour or not.
In terms of cocktails, I tried 2 of the happy hour cocktails: the Strawberry Pineapple Infused Shochu, on the rock was refreshing with a bit of sweet citrus that made it way too easy to drink. The next was The Waterfall cocktail, with Jinro shochu, shrub, muddled cucumber, lemon and thyme which I thought was the better drink personally
Not on the happy hour menu, but we continued on anyway…
Tao hoo tod, fried tofu with crushed peanuts and white sesame sauce. This was ok- I think I’ve had better, especially considering some high quality fresh tofu that is available in Portland. This was the only time I thought their sauces fell short, as I enjoyed all the other sauce accompaniments you see in this post.
Kanom gui chai, which are pan fried chinese chive cakes served with a sour soy sauce. These chive cakes were the size of my palm. And there were 3 of them! Yay! I was happy that F got to try these because often the best dishes in a Thai restaurant are not vegetarian friendly (ahem- see the fried wings above), but these are vegetarian and really good! I have a real soft spot for anything with gui chai, which are chinese chives. I’ve only seen them sold in Asian markets so I don’t usually get to cook with them.
Kanom Jeen Gang Keaw Gai, a green curry noodles dish with chicken usually (but we substituted tofu), Thai eggplant, bamboo shoot, red bell peppers, grachai and basil. Gang Kiew means green curry, and the Kanom Jeen refer to these thin white noodles. This is the way my mom serves green curry when she makes it.
F was very patient with me as I tried to follow through with my goal from the last Portland Bloggers workshop which was focused on photography and practice with more kinds of shots that try to tell a story with the food.
I definitely want to come back- but I got full all on appetizers so had no room for the other dishes that caught my eye, mainly the Gai Grop Sam Yan with crispy chicken, cashews, scallions and dry chilies over rice and the Plaa trout tod nahm pla, which this fried whole trout with fish sauce sounds just like what my family would order, but it also comes with apple salsa so.. what? I want to see what this is!
Everything I had did remind me of something I would expect to taste in Thailand, so it was very authentic. The flavors are a complex mix of what Thai palates look for- salty, sour, spicy, sweet. The atmosphere doesn’t have the real Thai feel/charm that Andy Ricker’s Sen Yai does, but honestly neither does Pok Pok (and this doesn’t hae the hustle bustle and long wait Pok Pok does). Honestly the fact I am comparing it equally with Andy Ricker and with Thai street food in actual Thailand says it all.
Happy Hour at Planet Thai, Beaverton
I am a wordy person. I know. That’s just the way I am when I write. Though in person I have all those same thoughts, I don’t always string them out verbally… I save it often for when I can type at my 90+ words per minute, because even as a fast talker I can’t keep up.
Yes dad, all those typing speed games you gave me and my brother and sisters on the Type-right a Pre-computer Typing Tutors when we were young totally paid off beyond getting us easily through typing class (I can’t believe my typing class was still on a typewriter, and the entire time I thought how they missed an opportunity by not using Word Invaders…)
Looking back, my parents were SO clever. Besides this trick to teach us, they also would take us to the Teachers Store to load us with all the workbooks for us to “play school” during the summer. I also remember super fondly listening to Little Thinker tapes where I would just sit by myself, listening to the storytelling on the tape which had pauses to play music and draw that part of the story, and that all the tapes could be put into one large plastic case. It seems they come in mp3 format now, but I still remember fondly the feel of the cassette tapes. What a clever way for a me as a kid to entertain myself.
Wait, here I go ahead, typing a whole bunch of stuff when this is supposed to be a photo post of a Happy Hour at Planet Thai, Beaverton. This was supposed be a clever setup where this post shows you some pictures, and you have to use your own creative storytelling to fill in the blanks.
Just imagine it’s Friday, it’s finally 5, and it’s happy hour time! Planet Thai is right at the Beaverton Central Max station. Planet Thai boasts $5 martinis such as these, as well as 20 items on their happy hour menu 3-6pm daily, all $5 or less to nosh on, including the spicy saucy Street Vendor Thai Chicken wings and a generous side of Thai fried rice. That last martini isn’t on the menu, but is an alcoholic take on a Thai Iced Tea. When the weather is nice, they can pull back the garage door walls/windows by the bar so you can enjoy the summer breeze as you sip. They have only been open since January (this was the previous location of Typhoon, and this is the second location of a Planet Thai the other being in Vancouver WA), and seems to still be an undiscovered gem.
What are you thinking/talking about as you enjoy lime, pear vodka and blue curacao, and thai iced tea cocktails?
Is it Friday yet?
Manao Thai Review
While making a run at Portland U Brew in order to get some supplies for brewing a summer beer, I figured that while I had a car rented for the day and we were already on SE Milwaukie, how about having lunch in the area as well? My sisters just went to Thailand for a short stay and a visit to the rest of my family on both sides (my immediate family is in the US, but extended fam is all in Thailand, divided among Bangkok in central Thailand, Chiang Mai with their Northern cuisine, and my dad’s hometown of Nakhon Ratchasima also known as Korat in the Northeast). Thinking of them, I also have had lots of Thai food on my mind as I think about the deliciousness they are enjoying, as it’s been so long (since 2008) since my last experience in Thailand.
I haven’t actually eaten a lot of Thai food here in PDX because F often eats Thai already from the food carts during his workday, so having Thai for dinner or on the weekends isn’t the first thing we think of, and I should correct that. So far, of the Thai I’ve had, my experiences at Pok Pok, my visit to the food cart Nong’s Khao Man Gai for the Khao Man Gai specialty (and only) dish she offers, and E-San Thai where I loved their Nam Khao are standouts (and as I’ve written about before- click the links to read those entries). But I have quite the Thai To Do List- the wishlist includes PaaDee, Red Onion, Chiang Mai, Mee-Sen, Cha Ba Thai, and Manao, the latter of which is just down the street from P.U.B. Let’s see if I can work this list this summer.
Manao Thai was started by Ekkachai “Chef Chew” Sakkayasukkalawon, an alum from Andy Ricker’s empire including Pok Pok and Ping about a year and a half ago. Manao means lime by the way in Thai. Chef Chew has some staple Thai offerings, but also quite a few more unique Thai dishes that you won’t find as commonly on most Thai menus. Inside, you can tell this is a small family owned business who has kept the décor very minimal and functional.
We started with Manao’s Tao Huu Tod appetizer, a dish of fried tofu caramelized with sweet and sour sauce. A special on the board also listed Sai Ua, which is a Northern Thai sausage dish.
For mains, the vegetarian got the very passable Mussamun Curry with potato, carrot, onion and peanuts (here shown with tofu), I enjoyed both my dishes of the decent Kao Pad Kun Chiang, a dish of fried rice with egg, Chinese sausage, onion, tomato and Chinese broccoli, and then a more unique offering of Thai Chicken Wings, deep‐fried marinated chicken wings caramelized with sweet fish sauce. Are they as good as the Ike Vietnamese Chicken Wings at Pok Pok? Well, they are not as spicy, but still enjoyable and without the wait you would have otherwise had. This seems like a more casual, homey version that is more Thai than Vietnamese, and as noted is more sweet than spicy and good crispyness.
I was also excited to see a Thai dessert you don’t always see on menus here: Sweet Roti, an Indian‐style flat bread top with sweetened condensed milk and chocolate syrup. This is a very sweet dessert. But, I thought this was much better than what our usual stop would have been after P.U.B.- Dairy Queen!
I will probably be back again when we make another run to P.U.B., as there are other special Thai dishes that caught my eye, such as Kaa Muu Tod, a stewed pork leg dish stew with mustard greens; Kaeng hung lay, a funky Northern Thai pork shoulder curry; the labor intensive spicy Som Tum or papaya salad (get it with sticky rice) of which the mashing of the chilis gave Pok Pok its name; and Pad Wuun Sen Kai Kem dish with stir-fried salted duck egg with glass noodles and ground pork. There is a lot right in front of the restaurant for convenient parking. If you visit, please, take the opportunity to try out some dishes that are not the standard fare you will normally see. Make sure to check out the specials board too for more authentic flavors.