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US Thai

This little storefront curries favor with fans of Thai food.

In one was a simple red-pepper sauce. Not too bad, I thought. It was the kind of thing I mix in with my pho in Vietnamese restaurants or smear on lettuce wraps when I'm feeling frisky. In the other was a dry spice mix the color of crushed bricks and rage that should have come in a lead-lined bottle with multilingual warning labels and the phone numbers for various support groups dedicated to the slow rehabilitation of those who've tried just a little too much. A pinch of it was nice when added to a mild Penang curry with chicken, floated on the back of a bowl full of rich, sweet coconut milk, lime leaf and basil. It was hot, sure. Smoky, deeply earthy in tone, like blackstrap molasses and razor blades. A pinch plus a little more was like pouring high-proof whiskey on an open wound. Adding a little more than that quickly made me forget my hangover, because my sinuses were on fire. When you're crying gasoline, all the little aches and pains of daily life seem to just dry up and drift away.

Before I messed it all up, the curry was amazing. Kyaw has an incredible talent for those dishes intrinsic to Thai cooking. After trying his curry for the first time, I dreamed of it that night -- then went back a day later with a crowd and ordered five of the six offered on his menu, which we passed around a long table, grabbing bites and fighting over bowls. The silky-sweet and pinkish Penang was just as good the second time around, and the masaman was the best I've ever had -- rich with potato chunks and brightened up with slashes of yellow onion. The green curry -- sharp and colored like crème de menthe, with big hunks of soft zucchini, eggplant, sweet bamboo, bell pepper and, oddly, green beans -- wanted for seafood but was decent with chicken. The fish curry was huge, its flavor overwhelming the five catfish fillets piled into the bowl, but everything was brought into line by a singing top note of lemon and a cushion of strange, ethereal sweetness. And the jungle curry that followed was just freaky: a spicy, thin broth full of vegetables, tangled with sliced carrots and baby corn, with only a distant taste of curry somewhere in the background.

The food at US Thai curries favor with devoted customers.
Mark Manger
The food at US Thai curries favor with devoted customers.

Location Info

US Thai Cafe

5228 W. 25th Ave.
Lakewood, CO 80214

Category: Restaurant > Thai

Region: West Denver Suburbs

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Details

5228 West 25th Avenue, Edgewater, 303-233-3345
Hours: 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday.

Egg rolls: $3.50
Dumplings: $4.95
Toomkah: $5.95
Pineapple fried rice: $6.95
Curry: $7.50
Fish curry: $9.50

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We ate dumplings that were heavy on the ginger, their bite tempered by steaming and by strong pork paste. The toomkah soup was like Campbell's cream of galangal -- warm and slightly thick, astringent with lemongrass, busy with soft and sharp herbal flavors that I've come to understand as the defining interplay of rough and honest Thai flavor: lemon giving way to cream, stepping aside for pepper, gutshot with galangal, bowing under the teasing sweetness of coconut. And even the simplest dish, a pineapple fried rice with chicken, came dusted with yellow curry powder and studded with cashews -- sweetened by one thing, dirtied up by another.

Nothing about Thai cuisine is simple; it only seems that way on a menu or a plate. That's why the cooks who don't understand it are so tempted toward fusion. In truth, though, Thai is a peasant cuisine gone mad with excess, street food from well over the rainbow that can only be brought back to earth by cooks like Kyaw, who have grown up with ginger on their tongues and coconut milk in their veins.

Step into US Thai on a busy afternoon, when both of the small dining rooms are full and the rail of the central open kitchen is crowded with dupes, and you can watch the blur of Kyaw and his cooks at work. With the grates popped on the ancient, fire-breathing hot-top and water cascading down the backsplash to keep the whole place from burning down, they never stop moving, never stop tinkering, never stop adding to a plate, a bowl, an oil-seasoned wok, until an entree hits the rail. A dozen combative spices, countless vegetables (done rough-chopped, julienned, slivered, batonnet-cut or shaved, each in their proper way), curry as a paste, curry as a powder, nine proteins, broths and bases held aside, rice in the steamers, noodles in the lowboys, fryers always in use, flames always leaping. It's an incredible dance, with results that are almost infallibly delicious, every flavor true.

All cooks try galangal at some point in their careers. All cooks try lemongrass and curry. And we all fail at fusing Thai to anything else, because Thai, as a cuisine, cannot be prized apart. Thai isn't just about galangal or lemongrass or curry or pineapple or lime, but rather about all of these things, all together, all at the same time. It's about using everything you have for every plate you put up.

This is what Kyaw understood from the start. He knew Thai like he knew his own blood, the taste of his own breath. Unadulterated, unfused, this is Thai done pure, in all its complex wonder. And it is simply amazing.

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  • Khem 06/15/2009 8:53:00 PM

    I'll have to agree. As a Thai-American, nothing is more annoying that people trying to "pass-off" their restaurants as Thai when all it really is...is a Chinese or Asian fusion restaurant in disguise. That's fine if you want the "white man's" version of Thai food, but to get the real stuff, you half to get it from REAL THAI PEOPLE. I have yet to capture the essence of the true Thai taste in my cooking and the same is true with my mother. My grandmother's cooking was absolutely the best (that's what she did for a living) and I always compare other people's cuisine to hers. Kudos to US Thai! Kap khun mahk...arroy dee!

  • jd 05/27/2009 6:04:00 AM

    Pretty good food ! very tasty and good quality for very low price. if you like real tha�ood, you have to try this one for sure

  • Jill 02/16/2007 6:54:00 PM

    Where's the Bite Me link?????

  • Ashleigh 02/15/2007 8:05:00 PM

    As someone who spent a good deal of time living in Thailand, I have to say this is the best description of Thai cuisine that I have ever read. No one can master the little, intricate details that make REAL Thai food what it is. Great review and description, and I cannot wait to go and try this place out.

 
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