Mandalay (Burmese in Bloomington, Indiana)
A couple of weeks ago, I had to present a paper at a conference being hosted by Indiana University in Bloomington. The conference itself was food-related — "Food in Bloom: Cross Pollination and Cultivation of Food Systems, Cultures and Methods" — with a strong leaning toward anthropological approaches to food issues; I myself was there to speak about fish sauce from a cross-cultural perspective. Given the proximity of some fine state parks to Bloomington and Lucantonius' love of forests, we made the trip a family outing, with Amata and Lucantonius enjoying nature while I was attending the conference.
Being a university town, Bloomington has its share of good, informal eateries, including a cluster of 'exotic' places in a small stretch of 4th Street just west of campus. There one finds Indian, Thai, Turkish, Tibetan restaurants, some of which I've visited over the years, and also a Burmese place that a friend of mine had recommended to me. On this visit, perhaps since fish sauce was 'on my brain', as it were, I really wanted to go to Mandalay Restaurant and that is what we did on the Saturday night of that weekend. We had a genuinely excellent meal at a very moderate price.
Here's what we had (quoted descriptions taken directly from Mandalay's on-line menu):
A complimentary plate of chick-pea fritters with a chili sauce:

"Paratha with Yellow peas (Paratha, yellow peas, fried shallot, and spices)":

"Tea Leaf Salad (Pickled green tea leaves, cherry tomatoes, cabbage, fresh lime, fried garlic, sesames seed, and roasted nuts. *Dried Shrimp are optional*)":

Here's the garnish for the salad — raw garlic, chilis, dried shrimp:

What a great way to wake up the palate!

Though we knew we would be 'over-ordering', we decided to get three main dishes, in order that we have a chance to try more items — we also knew the left-overs would make for a good lunch (and they did). Here are the main dishes we ordered:
"Rice Noodles with Fried Garlic (choice of chicken or pork; Steamed rice noodles, garlic oil, soy sauce, and green onion)"; we got the version with the pork, which was tender and delicious, a perfect textural complement to the 'al dente' rice noodles:

"Pork Curry with Burmese Mango Pickle (Pork, dried mango pickles from imported Burma, ginger, garlic, tomato-onion base curry, and spices. Served with jasmine rice)":

An absolutely delicious curry, made special by the presence of the mango pickle.
"Nga Chout Tamin Jo (Known as Nasi goreng ikan asin in Indonesia, a dish of fried rice with special imported dried & salted fish, shrimp, green onion, bean sprout, carrot, and egg)":

Pristine shrimp, funky salted fish; complex
and well-composed.
Nota bene: There are bottles of fish sauce on each table for facultative application.
To drink we had Burmese tea and I brought along a six pack of beer.
All in all, I thought this restaurant was outstanding — the service was very friendly and efficient and the food was all delicious. The three of us look forward very much to returning there soon.

Bon pro',
Antonius
Mandalay Restaurant413 E 4th Street
Bloomington, IN 47408
Hours: Tuesday to Sunday
Lunch 11:30AM to 2:30PM
Dinner 5:00PM to 9:00PM
Closed Monday
BYOBhttp://www.mymandalayrestaurant.com/812.339.7334
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
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Na sir is na seachain an cath.