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Bai Pai
Fine Thai dining in a neighborhood setting
One of the nice things about dining in Seattle these days is that you
don’t have to go far to find great places. Most neighborhoods have some
really good choices. Ravenna is lucky enough to be home to Bai Pai, a
Thai restaurant and lounge. It’s not just a casual Thai cafe, it’s more
upscale, casual fine dining, yet not overly expensive. And the lounge is
actually a lounge with cool red lighting around the refrigerated cases
behind the bar and very cool jazz in the background.
Toward the end of 2003, owner Jack Kanand was set to retire after a
lifetime in the restaurant industry. He had moved to the U.S. from
Thailand in 1970, obtaining a job at the original Stuart Anderson
restaurant on Elliott Bay, eventually becoming the "broiler man." Moving
on to the University Tower Hotel, he worked as the chef and then dining
room manager. Accepting a general manager position, he worked for Ivar’s
at both the Captain’s Table and the Salmon House. Over the years, Jack
also tended bars in hotels and at one time worked for Gerry Kingen (of
Red Robin and Salty’s fame) making all the "foo foo" drinks at the Great
American Food & Beverage Company.
Ready for his own business, he decided to open a Thai restaurant on
Sand Point Way. While getting it ready, he worked for Gerry Kingen
again, this time as a part-time bartender at Salty’s on Alki. "I read a
lot about alcohol, where it comes from, what it’s made of," explains
Jack. "I understand what works with different types of food." After
selling the restaurant, he opened another Thai spot in the Roosevelt
neighborhood and kept it until that wonderful goal of retirement was
reached.
After two years of retirement, however, Jack realized he’s not really
the retiring kind. He wanted to create an upscale Thai restaurant.
"People wanted to give me the opportunity to open a number of
restaurants," says Jack, "but I wanted just one. I want to be the chef
and ensure that the food comes out just the way I want it to." His food
is always Thai, but there’s a little fusion going on as well. His shrimp
cocktail has a cilantro, garlic, raw tomato cocktail sauce with a ginger
mango relish. He does rack of lamb with a mussaman curry sauce. His
basil dressing for greens is different and delicious.
Photo above: Smilin' Jack in front of one of the many pieces of
art in the restaurant
Some recipes are his mom’s, like the green curry. "I can’t always get
exactly what I need to create it the way she did," says Jack. "So I add
things here and there and get it as close as possible." Jack is from a
family of nine and everyone had to cook. "Families all had their own
gardens. There were no food processors—we had to pound the lemongrass,
lamb leaf and chilies. That was the kids’ job. We picked, sliced and
cooked. There’s nothing like that taste—so fresh and good."
Bai Pai is small, seating 87, and has limited storage space. That can
be difficult, but works out for Jack as he likes things fresh. In the
afternoon between lunch and dinner, he’s often out hand-picking the
unusual items he likes to use in his cooking. He looks for different
types of mint like cocomint. He shops around for various types of fresh
fish to use with tamarind, curry or tri-flavor Thai-style sauce and for
his specials.
"I love wine and how food and wine make each other better. Wine can
go with anything and people are less concerned now with the ‘red with
meat, white with fish’ concept. It’s true that the best wine is the one
you like. And wine is great with Thai food." He keeps about 150 labels
on hand and offers approximately 25 wines by the glass, plus champagne.
In the hallway between the dining room and lounge, a
temperature-controlled, glass-enclosed wine closet holds customers’
wines. "It’s a European touch that I like," says Jack. "If someone
stores their wine here, I don’t charge them a corkage fee when they come
in. There’s no storage fee either."
Bai Pai Restaurant
Fine Thai Cuisine & Lounge
2316 NE 65th Street
Seattle, WA 98115
206-527-4800
www.baipairestaurant.comHours:
Lunch 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Dinner 3 p.m. to close
Happy Hour (bar only)
Mon-Tues 4 to close
Wed-Thurs, Sun 4-7 p.m. |
Beyond what he envisioned for food and wine, he wanted his restaurant
to feel good. "It can’t feel inexpensive," he explains. "Tablecloths add
a touch of class. Music is important. On weekends, we have live music.
It’s background music until 9 or 10 p.m., generally Broadway tunes.
After that, we do more contemporary jazz." Jack also wanted a sense of
neighborhood where everyone knows everyone else. That’s part of the
reason he chose the Ravenna neighborhood. After 20 years of working in
the area, he’d built up quite a customer base.
He caters fairly frequently for the University of Washington and will
do events from 30 or 40 people up to 250. "We’ll do a large buffet with
items ranging from a whole salmon to dim sum, sushi, phad Thai and a
barbecue section." He’ll also close down the restaurant for private
events, like the surprise 60th birthday party where he made
oysters Rockefeller, Châteaubriand and various Thai dishes. His "ice
sculpture connection" created Mickey and Minnie Mouse as the
centerpiece.
Both of Jack’s children have had some involvement in the restaurant
although son Christopher, now 23 and a Stanford economics graduate, is
living in Palo Alto, California. Daughter Lindy, 21, is at Cornish
learning web design. She created the Bai Pai website.
For Bai Pai lovers, there’s not much worry about Jack deciding to
retire again. He’s realized his plans for an outdoor patio with all
kinds of fun martinis. And he’s tossing around the idea of a second
restaurant geared more to a younger crowd—a more contemporary design,
fun satay bar, open kitchen where all the action can be viewed--and with
just a little more flash. Nothing is set yet, but once Jack gets an
idea, we’re generally in for a treat.
Connie Adams/August 2007 |
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