Noodlehead is a great restaurant with an eclectic feel. They serve food
from Thailand, and all the dinners are under nine dollars. There is a
very specific menu that gives you a variety of tastes to choose from.
This great restaurant is something for everyone to try, and it will not
break your budget for a night out with friends.
Nearly
a decade ago, the opening of Typhoon on Shadyside's South Highland
restaurant row seemed to signal a sea change in local Asian dining. It
elevated Thai food from "ethnic" category to stylish cuisine, served
with refinement in an artistic, upscale setting. In Typhoon's wake,
other restaurants now provide a similarly splurge-worthy experience of
Thai dining, while a new, far more humble but still delectable, trend
has taken hold in the once-elegant space Typhoon occupied: noodles.
To
say that Noodlehead isn't elegant is not to suggest that it isn't
fashionable. But the recycled wood-plank walls, old-fashioned filament
light bulbs, picnic-style utensil caddies and eclectic seating (from
industrial stools to plastic-fantastic mod chairs) evoke a feeling more
than a specific place or culinary tradition: simplicity, authenticity,
rusticity, noodles.
Such rough-hewn chic does not necessarily
come cheap, but by taking cash only, not accepting reservations, being
BYOB and not even having a phone, Noodlehead is able to offer an
elemental approach to the delightful street food of Thailand in which
nothing is over $9.
Noodlehead's tightly curated menu is
another part of this equation. It has four short sections: a pair of
noodle soups at $6 apiece; five no-substitution noodle dishes for $9;
three more with your choice of shrimp, chicken or tofu, also for $9; and
five finger-food "snacks," each at about $6. You can try the entire
menu for $104 — and, with the help of some holiday guests, we nearly
did.
As their title suggests, the snacks are small plates, and
good for sharing. Thai fried chicken came as a mound of moist, sliced
cutlet, coated in a light, ultra-crisp crust that was delightful on its
own and better with a generous dollop of sweet garlic-chili sauce. Pork
belly steamed buns were actually less labor-intensive rounds of fluffy
dough folded over several chunks of succulent pork belly in a
smoky-sweet, barbecue-esque sauce, while paper-thin slices of
house-pickled Asian cucumber added brine and tang.
An order of
pig wings inevitably led to jokes about when pigs will fly. But these
morsels of pork shank were worth the groaners. Butchered to resemble
drumsticks, they were spicy and intensely flavored; unlike chicken
wings, pork has more than enough robust flavor of its own even beneath
minced herbs, spices and chilies. Perhaps disadvantaged by following the
pig wings, garlic nam pla chicken wings were plump and crisp, but not
especially flavorful.
After all these delights, it was noodle
time. The 10 noodle preparations on offer included fully six different
types of noodles, a testament to Noodlehead's commitment to its craft.
Thin rice noodles were tender in both Sukothai and Love Boat soups; the
former punched up the flavor quotient with sliced pork loin, slivered
green beans, peanuts and hard-boiled egg in a spicy lime broth, while
the latter relied on the rich savor of simmered beef and pork
cracklings.
For more information see City Paper.
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