Thai Place – Any survey of Thai places in the KC metro seems to start and end with Thai Place. I haven’t been down here for too long, but in my limited exposure, this seems to be the case. There are four different locations of this local restaurant, all run by family members of Ann Liberda, proprietress of the Overland Park original, who in turn got her start at the area's original Thai joint, Bangkok Pavillion (recently burned down, rebuilt, and reopened).
Finally hit this place the other night, and it exceeded my (low) expectations, but didn’t hit as high as I’d hoped.
I can easily believe the best Thai food in town can be found here. Unfortunately, it’s not all that Thai. No papaya salad. No sticky rice. The Thai sausage in the Thai sausage salad, according to our waitress, is actually Chinese sausage, and I trusted her enough not to put this to the test.
Physically, it’s a very charming space. It’s a small, strip mall restaurant. Very intimate, cozy, white tablecloths, very cool light fixtures, pleasing Thai art on the walls, a small, but nicely stocked bar at the back. Certainly a good place for a date, but not uncomfortable for my wife and me and our two little kids. Service was extremely good. When asking about some “unusual dishes,” the waitress smilingly asked if we’d visited Thailand, and after giving a little background, acknowledged that you just can’t get the stuff in KC that you can get in Chicago or LA. Doesn’t mean I’ll stop looking.
The food. We ordered modestly. Chicken satay for the kids, yum nua num tok (“waterfall beef”), and yellow curry shrimp fried rice. Four levels of heat offered: mild, medium, hot, and Thai hot. We ordered the salad hot and the rice medium.
Satay was the weakest point. Big fat chicken tenders had too little surface area for satay to my taste. The spicing reminded of an Indian curry. The peanut sauce was okay, heavy on the coconut milk, very smooth in texture. The kids liked it. It was fine.
The fried rice dish was fine too, I guess, though the flavors didn’t strike me as Thai. The curry again struck me as more Indian than Thai. Reminded me of something you’d get at Big Bowl—very competent execution, nice presentation, big helping, came out hot, but lacking the pop of flavor you want. Did have good heat, impressive, especially for a medium order.
Nam tok/num tok is a favorite of mine, and this was a much better version than it’s going to sound like in a minute. No fish sauce detectable, but the beef was of good quality, and well-cooked with noticeable outer char, mint was fresh, toasted ground rice. The lime was a bit understated and lemongrass (which I wouldn’t expect, but I don’t think is outside the range of possibilities) I only know to be part of the dish because I saw it on the menu. Now is where it probably doesn’t sound too good. But the fact is, the elements that were present still add up to a pretty good dish. And the heat was a step up from the medium, a really substantial blast of chili, enough to overwhelm the dish actually, especially with the other elements lacking.
Prices were surprisingly high. The above three orders, a side of rice, and a house special “Thai Sling” from the bar (a bit margarita tasting, but not quite, not bad at all, though I’d like to see their hand at a real drink) was about $40 before tax and tip. This is the kind of thing I’m talking about when people start talking about cost of living in KC vs. Chicago. Sure the portions were good size, but I’d much rather get an extra dish or two and have a little less of everything.
All told, I think this place sounds worse than it is. Or maybe it’s just accepting the realities of where you live. The food was good, and I’ll certainly be back. They had enough interesting things on their menu to keep me happy for a while. But I’m damn sure spoiled for good Thai.
Thai Place
9359 W 87th Street
Overland Park, KS 66212
(913) 649-5420
http://www.kcthaiplace.com/
Last edited by
Aaron Deacon on February 12th, 2007, 11:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.