LTH,
As Steve said, Tom Yum Thai was ok, not bad, better than many, but nothing to get enthused about. For example, the ground pork in the larb had an overly neutral flavor and the dressing was somewhat one-dimensional, with a subtext of sweet. But, on the other hand, there was a little hit of chile, we asked for it very hot, and the faintest texture from toasted ground rice.
House-made green curry with catfish was one note with a slightly overpowering flavor of, and this is a guess, dried galangal. Red duck curry was more about the sweet profile than the layering of flavor and spice. One-dimensional comes to mind here as well.
Like Steve said, nothing objectionable, just not much Thai in the Thai, almost as if the restaurant owner/cook had simply resigned themselves to mediocrity. We asked about a Thai language menu, but were told no. Tom Yum Thai simply seemed one of those places, of which there are many, that's going through the motions. Not much love, food or customer wise, going on here.
Now, contrast lunch with the dinner MsWiv and I had at Elephant Thai. The place was packed, 3-forks in the Tribune will do that to a place, Ann, the owner, was constantly in motion, serving, smiling, chatting. Wall board of interesting specials and they are happy to amp up the chile if one is so inclined, and not just for regulars.
We started with Moo Ping, juicy marinated pork grilled on skewers served with a chili laden dipping sauce, followed with Crab fried rice, real crab. I ordered the Crab fried rice Thai style, a trick Erik M told me a few years ago in reference to Siam's House version. Thai style, in this case, means with a sunny side up egg, lime and chili on the side.
The dish that most glaringly contrasted Steve's and my lunch was a wall board special of Tilapia Pad Cha, deep fried Tilapia in fresh pepper sauce w/Thai eggplant. The Tilapia dish was bursting with flavor, little branches of fresh pepper with tiny pepper buds, strings of fresh galangal, basil, red/yellow pepper all complimenting fresh tilapia. This was a dish made with enthusiasm, by someone who likes to cook, likes people and is not weary of the whole process.
I also like the fact that Ann cooks what, for the most part, she likes. One of the first times I was there I asked about Thai fried chicken, which I love, and she said she did not make it because she did not especially like fried foods. Ann is a very healthy eater and much of her menu reflects that fact.
A few previous Elephant Thai threads
here and
here.
[Edit] Now that I think of it, the pepper was on the vine, but Ann said it was in brine. She added fresh was very hard, if not impossible, to get in Chicago. The pepper vine looked like the one
here, but smaller.
Enjoy,
Gary
Elephant Thai
5348 W Devon
Chicago, IL
773-467-1168