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FORKPLAY October 17, 2016

Samui Lights the Way to Fort Greene

Dear Friends and Family, 
 
     The publicist for Samui, a restaurant named for an island off the east coast of Thailand, insisted it would be upscale, different, modern, definitely worth a trip to Brooklyn. Yeah. Sure. Isn't that the usual publicist talk? I'm not one to race off to Brooklyn at the drop of a peppered chicken wing. Figure $80 round trip and it adds an hour to the evening. But there she was, offering to drive. I was a pushover.
 
       She picks me up way west on 73rd Street in a vintage red convertible. I must admit I'm already impressed. But then we pull up in front of Samui, across from the Brooklyn Navy Yard. It's a knockout. I stand mesmerized by the giant circus façade, flashing red, then royal blue, then purple, then green. Inside, there are three giant geometric copper chandeliers and hand-blown blue glass barnacles crawl on the curved white wall behind the bar. It's bigger and grander than I could have expected.
  
       I can hear the tropical strains of music as if in my living room. With my disco-damaged hearing, I almost never hear music in restaurants, only noise, or loud beats, never the actual rhythm. Maybe it's our tall circular booth, padded with deep turquoise velvet, acting like an acoustic delivery system.
 
       It takes a while for cocktails to come. The turmeric garlic chicken wings land first -- fried, of course, juicy and greaseless, the garlic elusive, not necessarily  needing the sweet chili peanut dip. I can't say there is anything remarkable about my chili margarita -- yes, at last -- a moderate kick of jalapeno in tequila with pineapple and lime.
 
       But then pushed toward me comes a plate of crunchy fried noodles -- blue potato chive fritters in  dark knots -- a largish portion for a $9 "small plate," and a delicious notion. I snatch a second helping before passing them across the table. You want to eat them really hot.
 
       In a few decades of checking out the city's Thai outposts, I've never come across anything like Samui's pancake studded with mussels and garlic chive, some  bean sprouts piled alongside. And the crispy shrimp and chicken-stuffed pancake with coconut that Napadol sends out for us to sample will be an elegant addition to the menu.
 
       Now, I wish I'd asked for the curry puff and the crispy shrimp roll, too. This is probably the first time I've bypassed papaya salad and not tried the Tom Yum King soup at a Thai evening. I considered the spicy grilled beef salad, but worried we might not have room for entrees.
  
       Yes, we need to ask for serving spoons. Again and  again. We need to ask for soup bowls. We need to ask for clean plates. The servers are smiley and good-natured, but perhaps the local clientele has not been as demanding at this early date as we are.
  
       I dish up a chunk of duck, a few slippery rice noodles, a big brown sculpted shiitake from the duck soup. "Taste the broth," our guide and goad cries. I take a slurp. It is fiercely intense and complex. "Oh my God," I cry. She giggles happily.
 
       I have nothing against pad thai, but I'm glad my crew lets me choose the Drunken Noodles instead
tonight. The satiny and sticky wide rice pasta is flecked with sweet peppers, onion and fried basil leaves. The smartly savory short rib in the fine coconut creamy maksamun curry is juicy, and not as fatty as it might be. "She cuts out a lot of the fat," the promoter notes. There are roasted carrots and potato chunks alongside, too. And sticks of cinnamon. I've sampled less than half the menu, and so far everything is good or very good.  
 
       Indeed, the only dud is the crispy red snapper. I fell for the "crispy." And the mango salad promised with it as an alternative to tamarind peanut sauce. Certainly, the curls of fish look assuring. I bite into one. It's flavorless. Almost all of it goes back to the kitchen, though no one bothers to ask why.
 
       There are local beers on tap at the bar upfront, along with a collection in bottles including Thai. But after our cocktails -- chili margaritas, cucumber ginger sangria and the Mekhong Thai Whiskey with Thai ice tea -- my friends move on to Albariño, a Spanish white wine by the glass.
 
       Desserts could be more memorable. The poached pear is wishy washy, and I'm not sure what my pals see in Asian bananas cuts afloat in pandan soup.
  
       Samui stands out like a carnival on a quiet street. There's not a lot of Brooklyn heat in this corner of Fort Greene right now. But the Brooklyn Navy Yard is supposedly about to have its moment. Chef Napadol and her music-producer husband HaNi Al-Bader live next door. She had cooked in her grandmother's home-based restaurant kitchen before coming to America and finding success in jewelry and real estate.
   
       The shabby garage with its 25-foot ceilings just steps away got her thinking about cooking again,  creating a lighter, more modern version of Thai food. StudiosGO created the stylish 109-seat space from the brick-walled shambles. Graffiti artist Andrea von  Bujdoss (aka Queen Andrea One) was hired to paint the sweeping Technicolor façade.

       The wave in the bar wall acts as a canvas for 3D projections of local artists' work created by Aryn John Freysteinson of RabCup Corp. Other craftsman  fashioned the copper chandeliers and the hand blown glass "barnacles" that climb the bar wall. Of course, the sound and seasonality of the music come from a playlist by Al-Bader.
 
       Al-Bader and A Napadol make the rounds of tables tonight as a late crowd pours in. It's a big investment in a neighborhood that is barely budding. Still I think it's clear A. in her soft flowing turquoise Thai dress. is here for the long haul. I know because those are Uggs I see on her feet.

15 Vanderbilt Avenue just off Flushing Avenue, Fort Greene, Brooklyn. 917 909 1032. Dinner Tuesday to Thursday 5:30 pm to 10:30 pm., Friday and Saturday 5:30 to 10:30 pm. Brunch Saturday and Sunday 11 am to 4 pm. Closed Monday. 

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To see this week's BITE with all its photographs, please CLICK HERE.

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Today's Forkplay colors are carnival turquoise and barnacle blue.

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Click here to follow my twitterings. See fabulous new treasures on my Etsy vintage handbag site by clicking here.

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The photographs of Samui's façade, the fried chicken wings, crispy blue potato fritters, the mussel pancake, the shrimp chicken coconut pancake, crisp fried red snapper curls, Drunken Noodles, short rib coconut curry, poached pear, the custom-built copper chandelier, and chef A Napadol may not be used without permission from Gael Greene. Copyright 2016. All rights reserved.