The Charlottesville 29

Where to eat in Charlottesville

Tag: Charlottesville best restaurants

Pad Thai

Pad Thai
156 Carlton Rd. #202 . Charlottesville, VA . (434) 293-4302
http://padthaicville.com/index.html


Why Pad Thai?

While many “Thai” restaurants alter recipes to suit American tastes, Pad Thai offers real Thai home cooking — literally. Utaiwan Ouypron and her husband Santi make the same food they once served at an eatery they ran out of their home in Thailand, before coming to the United States in 2005. You can taste the difference. It’s no wonder so many top chefs are regulars. Among many excellent Thai restaurants in the area, Pad Thai remains a fixture in The Charlottesville 29.

What to Order

While the menu is stellar, we always like to ask the Ouyprons which of the daily specials they recommend. Below is a list of our recommendations, along with the Ouyprons’ favorites, as well as Pad Thai’s appearances in Five Finds on Friday, where area chefs and personalities have named a Pad Thai dish as one of their favorite in town.

Our Picks

  • Grandpa’s Favorite
  • Drunken Noodles
  • Beef Tongue Pad Kapao (special)
  • Swai Pad Numprikpao (special)
  • Thai Beef Consomme Noodle Bowl
  • Stir Fried Cabbage

Chefs’ Picks

  • Bar Snacks
  • Red Curry
  • Clear Broth Noodle Bowl
  • Chinese Broccoli with Pork Belly

Five Finds on Friday Picks

  • Thai Beef Consomme Noodle BowlAndrew Silver (formerly, Zocalo), Josh Lowry (formerly, Zocalo), John Shanesy (formerly, Parallel 38)
  • Clear Broth Noodle Bowl (fka Wonton Noodle Soup) — Vu Nguyen (formerly, Brazos)
  • Tom Yum Noodle Bowl with Beef Tongue Brian Ashworth (formerly, Ace Biscuit & Barbecue)
  • Spicy Noodle BowlPhillip Gerringer (formerly, South Fork)
  • Roast pork with shrimp wonton and wonton noodles — Ivan Rekosh (formerly, Zocalo)
  • Drunken Noodles with Chicken, Spicy — Melissa Close-Hart (formerly, Palladio)
  • Drunken Noodles, “Thai hot” — Ian Redshaw (formerly, Lampo)
  • Drunken Noodles with BeefRachel Willis (Cakes by Rachel)
  • Drunken Noodles with Tofu and VegetablesRebecca Edwards (formerly, Tavola Cicchetti Bar)
  • Drunken NoodlesLee O’Neill (Radical Roots Farm)
  • Grandpa’s FavoriteBen Jordan (formerly, Michael Shaps Wineworks)
  • Grandma’s FavoriteFrank Paris (formerly, Miso Sweet)
  • Tom Kha SoupJin Bang (Mochiko)
  • Tongue, Tendon, and Trip PhoJohn Meiklejohn (formerly, Yearbook Taco)
  • Stir Fried CabbageNina Promisel (Greenwood Gourmet Grocery)
  • Som TumBrooke Ray (International Rescue Committee)

padthaibowl

 

 

Eater’s April 2014 Heat Map of Charlottesville

Charlottesville-Heatmap-Parallel-38-Charlottesville

It was fun helping Eater to update its latest heat map of Charlottesville, as our area’s restaurants and chefs do not always receive the attention they deserve.  For its heat maps, Eater strictly enforces a policy requiring that, for a restaurant to be included, it must have been opened or undergone a major change within the last twelve months.  While that prevented me from including many longtime favorites in Charlottesville, it does shine a light on exciting recent additions to Charlottesville’s ever-improving food scene.  Check out the full map here.

El Tepeyac

El Tepeyac380 Greenbrier Drive . Charlottesville, VA . (434) 964-1231
http://eltepeyaccville.com/

[UPDATE: El Tepeyac closed on May 24, 2015.]

Why El Tepeyac?

Even when it was a mere food counter in the back of a tienda, we were regulars at El Tepeyac, the Mexican/Salvadoran restaurant off Route 29 North owned by the Solorzano family.  After it converted to a full service restaurant in October 2012, it became one of our favorite spots in town.  For the transformation, Adolfo and Bertha Solorzano recruited their daughter Maria, a savvy management consultant from Chicago, who helped her mother enhance the decor, service, and cocktail list, which now includes fresh margaritas, and even Horchata con un Toque—rum with house-made spiced rice milk.   Adolfo is in charge of the food, using his own recipes to create pupusas, tacos, gorditas, and full platters.  It’s no wonder top chefs from all over Charlottesville love it so much.

What to Order

One of our favorite dishes in all of Charlottesville is El Tepeyac’s Pupusa de Queso con Loroco, a thick, handmade, corn tortilla filled with cheese and loroco, an edible flower with a floral, truffly flavor.  Solorzano’s family ran a pupuseria in El Salvador, and it shows. All the pupusas are excellent, served with the traditional vinegary slaw, curtido.  Below are our other favorites, as well as picks from Solorzano, and appearances in Five Finds on Friday, where chefs and personalities have named an El Tepeyac dish one of the best in town.  It seems that fried yucca is a hit:

Our Picks

  • Yucca Frita con Chicharron
  • Tacos (Pastor, Lengua, and, on weekends, Carnitas)
  • Gorditas (Pastor, Lengua)
  • Torta de Milanesa

Chef’s Picks

  • Yucca Frita con Chicharron
  • Pupusas (Queso con Loroco, Revueltas) 
  • Sope de Carne Asada

Five Finds on Friday Picks