Tonight I called G Wiv for the name of the shrimp dish I'd liked so much at Hoanh Long, and he informed of two things: the name, and the fact that Hoanh Long was closed on Mondays. (This last he knew because he'd just written the Reader capsule review.) Flailing about for a substitute, I asked him for an idea of somewhere else to eat, and he suggested having the very similar phla kûng at Spoon.
Spoon! There's an idea. I hadn't been there in months, maybe even a year, which is ridiculous since it's (slightly ambitiously) walkable from my house. But my Thai jones had been well served by TAC Quick lately, with a little assist from Elephant and others, and I'd just not made it back in a good while. So Spoon it was.
I was handed the three menus-- the American one, the Tribune Thai menu recommendations, and Erik's more complete two-page Thai menu (not sure if it's everything that he's posted here, but it's a lot of it at least). And while perusing it I was reminded of something else I'd tried long ago and had really liked, which would be good for offering my wife something less likely to blow her head off-- nãem khâo thâwt, aka "that thing with ham in it."
We ordered the shrimp dish, phla kûng:
For the first time, my wife seemed to genuinely enjoy something pushing her heat threshhold, even using it as the occasion to regret having ordered pad thai from our (serviceable) neighborhood joint a few nights earlier. We'll make a chilihead out of her yet. Bright, eye
and sinus-opening, this is different from Hoanh Long's dish, but excellent all the same.
We also ordered banana blossom salad (didn't really need another picture of that) and kai thawt, Thai fried chicken (didn't strictly need another picture of that either, but took one anyway):
I've always liked Spoon's kai thawt and dipping sauce as the gold standard for Thai fried chicken, but I have to say that good as it is, I now find the grilled meats at TAC miles beyond any of that, when it comes to savory meat and a multidimensionally flavorful Thai dipping sauce.
Finally, the nãem khâo thâwt, first introduced to me by Erik's post above. (I isolated a few of the key ingredients, it's not normally that spartan-looking.) What a great, comfy, easy-to-love dish-- the little nuggets of deep-fried rice are insanely scarfable, the bits of ham or sausage (looks more like sausage now) and lime flavor and chili all add up to an irresistable dish that couldn't be more accessible, yet stands up as real Thai food. I could see as my wife dug into it that I'd chosen well.
On the way to our next stop I spotted this remarkably well-preserved painted billboard, probably teens or 1920s, uncovered by the demolition of a building on Lincoln a little north of Lawrence. What a great slice of urban archeology. What a great meal of urban cross-cultural discovery. What great finds in this great city.