Bangkok Four catering to the Thai-food craze
Greer Wylder
Studies from the National Restaurant Assn. show that Thai food is one
of country’s fastest-growing nontraditional ethnic cuisines.
Thai cuisine has grabbed the attention of Orange County. In the
past few decades more than 70 local Thai restaurants have opened. At
the family-owned Bangkok Four restaurant, you can find Thailand’s
complex cuisine in a prime South Coast Plaza location. The modern,
elegant restaurant features floor-to-ceiling windows, and stark white
and crisp pale blue interiors. At lunch, Bangkok Four caters to a
hurried business crowd; at dinner, the ambience is better suited for
romantic, stress-free dining.
Its sister restaurant, Bangkok Five on Highway 111 in Rancho
Mirage, was rated by Palm Springs Life Magazine as “one of the most
highly recommended restaurants in the desert.” Only Bangkok Four and
Five are extant -- the Taechanarong family closed the first three
restaurants.
Thai cuisine shares Southeast Asian ingredients, cooking methods
and serving practices. It has both Chinese and Indian influences,
with its own twist of culinary individuality. Common regional
ingredients include rice, noodles and curries; similar cooking
methods are deep-frying and stir-frying. And, as with other Asian
cuisines, there are no courses.
There are three principles of Thai cooking: A Thai meal is served
all at once; diners can taste complementary combinations; each dish
and complete meals must have harmony, for both taste and textures.
Rice makes the foundation of the meal, while noodles play a secondary
role. Curries and other spicy dishes flavor cool rice, and since
meats are costly in Thailand, compared to Western expectations
they’re added sparingly. Thais also have Buddhist influences, so they
avoid adding large chunks of meats, favoring smaller shredded pieces
mixed with fresh herbs and spices.
Distinct Thai flavors come from indigenous produce and spices:
tamarind, galangal (Thai ginger), Thai basil, and palm sugar. Coconut
milk, an essential Thai ingredient, mellows flavors, adds interesting
richness and smoothes sauces. Important aromas and flavors come from
fresh lemongrass stalks, sliced and crushed for soups, sauces and
teas, citrus-floral flavored kaffir lime leaves and fiery hot
chilies. Those ingredients enrich the spicy, salty, sour and sweet
dishes.
While many Thai restaurants try fusion dishes, Bangkok Four offers
authentic Thai cuisine. The kitchen will not use MSG, preferring top
ingredients for delicious tastes. And dishes can be regulated for
spicy flavors -- servers will ask for heat preferences on a scale of
one to 10, or offer suggestions for beginners. Aromatic jasmine rice
accompanies dishes.
The most famous starter dishes at Bangkok Four include the coco
shrimp, tempura-style black tiger prawns with shredded coconut and
toasted sesame seeds, served with a spicy ginger sauce ($7.95). And,
Mom’s dumplings -- created by the Taechanarong family’s grandmother
-- are steamed dumplings filled with seasoned shrimp, Shiitake
mushrooms, ginger and served with spicy ginger sauce ($7.95). Thai
sticks are skewers of grilled chicken, beef and pork, topped with
curried peanut sauce ($7.95).
Soup choices include hot and sour shrimp soup (tom yom goong) with
straw mushrooms and lemongrass ($5.75), and a spicy, rich coconut
broth soup (tom kha kai) that has sliced chicken breast, kaffir lime
leaves and mushrooms ($4.95). Six salad selections include som tom, a
light shredded green papaya with crisp green beans, tomatoes, nuts
served with a spicy lime and chili garlic dressing ($4.75) and Thai
salad, a simple green leaf salad, with wedges of egg, peanut dressing
and crisp taro root chips ($5.75).
As with most upscale Thai restaurants, its signature dish includes
the whole catfish (pla duug), prepared crispy on the outside,
juxtaposed by a steamy moist and tender inside ($17.95). The
farm-raised fish comes covered with a Thai chili garlic sauce, mixed
with a combination of cilantro and lemongrass. The crispy duck (ped
op) is marinated, then steamed and finally glazed with a sweet plum
sauce ($16.95).
Its most famous Thai noodles (pad Thai) are stir-fried with
chicken, egg, sprouts and toasted ground peanuts served on the side
($11.95). Thai beer (Singha), a strong malt beer, goes well with
spicy dishes ($3.50). Dessert choices include excellent homemade
coconut ice cream with a fritter banana, green tea or mango ice
cream.
* BEST BITES runs every Friday. Greer Wylder can be reached at
[email protected]; at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; or by
fax at (949) 646-4170.
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