I think ChiNOLA's idea of Suggest-a-meal is great, and I hope he does not mind me appropriating it. I also hope others appropriate away.
I've written many times about Yum Thai over the years, and while it is not my favorite Thai restaurant in the area, it is surely my favorite in my
immediate area. Yum Thai is a place where Select-a-meal really matters, as what you order can really influence your meal.
I should note, before proceeding, that I had dinner there tonight, although I did not quite do my Select-a-meal. Also, there was some concern expressed about Yum Thai due to family issues. Eddie was in the kitchen tonight, and she did a suberb job with the food, as good as ever. The other good news at Yum Thai is they have actually codified the secret menu. It's an actual menu (I mean it actually says "Menu" on it, oh for my own camera) on menu stock (i.e., thicker paper). The Thai script is clear. The translations, however, are foodfirsts and the transliterations are her phonetic spelllings not Erik's true version. Still, the best thing to do is figger out what you want and then point to the Thai scrip
instead of trying to say the Thai.
OK, Select-a-meal (for garlic lovers!). Note, if you use the terms I use, you should get this meal regardless of the menu, but insist of the Thai menu anyways, and insist on asking for it "Thai style."
Two yam or salads:
lime squid salad. This is the second of the squid salads on the Thai menu, and the one listed on the Yum Thai version as "like the pork above". It is quick cooked, criss-cut squid bodies (no arms) dressed with plenty of lime and even more garlic. In this dish the garlic is cooked, drawing out the heat but taming some harshness. It is not subtle, but the interplay between the lime and garlic against the bland squid work exceedingly well.
beef garlic salad. Oddly, my favorite dish at Yum Thai is not on the Thai menu. It is steak grilled but left pink showered with raw garlic and sliced jalepenos. If the squid salad is the jab setting you up, this is the right cross to the kisser. A brutally delicious item. All Arun's would have to do is take this same dish, substitute a higher caliber and quality cut of beef and they'd justify their price.
One soup/curry:
Mon curry. For some reason foodfirst translated this dish as "mon style" curry. Erik M calls it spicy peppercorn curry. To me, the dominant flavor is shrimp paste, and after the garlic assault, the funk of the shrimp paste will seem nearly meaningless. You will smell this one being made.
One vegetable dish:
Chinese brocoli with oyster sauce. My wife the Condiment Queen loves this dish but despises the small portion.
Two dishes that should be hotter but are otherwise delicious
gaeng som or sour curry with shrimp (might be called orange curry on the foodfirst menu). This is nearly as soup too as above, but do not let that stop you. Yum Thai manages to coax amazing flavor out of ordinary shrimps and these sweet shrimps against the mostly sour curry is another wonder of Thai cuisine.
the red curry with long beans (usually string beans). The red curry paste is used here as base for a stir fry not for something simmered. The green beans present a nice visual contrast.
Dessert
Thai custard. Nuked but delicious.
This should be enough food for 4 to 6 people.
Yum Thai is BYOB and there is a decent liquor store nearly next door. I recommend something Loire-ish, like Sancerre or Pouilly Fume to match all the lime flavors or a decent California sparkling like Domaine Chandon.
Last edited by
Vital Information on June 24th, 2005, 10:49 am, edited 2 times in total.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.