Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Thai Pepper



Location: Ashland, OR

Food: Thai

Close To: Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Oregon Cabaret Theatre

Thai restaurants have attained a foothold in American cuisine in the past twenty years, and they range from inexpensive places that offer takeout (such as Lotus Thai Bistro) to more upscale restaurants whose offerings transform and uplift common favorites like Pad Thai. If you want to combine first rate Thai cuisine with a show at OSF for an unforgettable evening, Thai Pepper in Ashland is an excellent option.

Thai Pepper’s menu items are a combination of twists on common Thai menu items and its own interesting creations. Seafood (especially shrimp) sees a lot of use, including in its tiger rolls ($10), won ton rolls stuffed with crabmeat and cream cheese served alongside a sweet-spicy chili sauce. You may have tried this as “crab golden bags” or "crab rangoon" at other locations, but the two-bite size, graspable shape, and appealing plating makes the dish more appealing. The chicken satay skewers ($13), served with peanut sauce, are also an excellent choice.

For the main course, diners have a host of diverse options. Many restaurants offer pad thai, but Thai Pepper’s version ($17 with chicken, $19 with shrimp) emphasizes tangy citrus notes, especially lime. Thai Pepper also offers a number of specials; one of the most common is a rack of lamb glazed in soy sauce and served with a platter of vegetables ($27). The lamb is cooked perfectly, with the smoky notes from the sauce combining well with the tender texture.

More meat-heavy dishes include the Evil Jungle ($18), a coconut beef curry served over a bed of cooked spinach. The fresh spinach provides a contrast to the savory beef flavor. If you prefer curry, there are a number of options ($16 to $19), all made with fresh vegetables and served with a delightfully sour cucumber salad.

Thai Pepper's vibrant atmosphere is part of what makes it such a great dining experience. Housed in a two-story building overlooking Ashland Creek, you can have a nice dinner in the more social bar area, go downstairs for a quiet, intimate space, or enjoy your meal at a heated table outside. Even when in a hurry to get to a play,


For those of you whose vacations in Ashland are largely taken up by theatre performances, it can be nice to take a break from your busy schedule and enjoy some good food. When it comes to upscale Asian cuisine within walking distance from the theatre, there’s no better choice than Thai Pepper.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Rogue Valley Morning Trip



If you’ve signed up for a lot of shows at the Oregon Shakespeare festival, it can sometimes feel like you can’t stray very far from town. On a day you don’t have a matinee, it can be fun and relaxing to take the ten-minute drive to the nearby towns of Medford and Central Point and experience their great food and attractions.

Your first stop will probably be two neighboring buildings that both offer a lot to taste, Lillie Belle Farms Artisan Chocolates and Rogue Creamery. Lillie Belle, built with a small storefront adjacent via window to the chocolate production area, specializes in a wide variety of rich truffles ($2 each). They offer a tab service, so you can pick and choose your favorite truffles at leisure and eat them fresh, right there in the store.

Some of my top picks for truffles incude: The Añejo cup, filled with tequila cream and lime and topped with salt; the fleur de sel lavender caramels; candied orange peel dipped in chocolate; pyramid-shaped piña colada bon bons; delicate absinthe ganache chocolates, with a  hint of anise flavor; and of course the incredibly rich Madagascar chocolate ganache. Their flavors change rapidly, and with over 20 to choose from, you will have a hard time making a decision (or leaving!)

Rogue Creamery offers a number of fresh cheeses but specializes in blue cheese, the powerful savory notes of which are perfect after your half-hour eating rich chocolates. (They don’t necessarily have to be separate, though: The two food stores have collaborated on a sinful blue cheese truffle!) The store offers eight to twelve varieties of cheese to taste, alongside their signature blue cheese powder, which is great on a large number of foods. My favorite is corn on the cob.

The store isn’t limited to cheese, either – they carry food from all over the Rogue Valley. There’s fresh-baked bread, fig and blackberry preserves, salami, beer, and soda. If you want to have a nice picnic around Medford or in Lithia Park, you could do worse than to stock up on your favorite food at the Rogue Creamery.

If you’re looking for a more substantial meal, you could try Great Harvest Bread Company in Medford. Though technically part of a chain, the bakery has become a part of Medford’s community, winning twelve consecutive awards for Best Bakery from the local newspaper. Great Harvest bakes five or six different types of bread each morning, many of them very dense and chewy. For all-purpose uses, I prefer the honey whole wheat, but for straight eating with a little butter, the Cinnamon Chip is the best.

Great Harvest also offers a variety of cold and hot sandwiches. My personal favorite is the grilled cheese ($5.65, with optional add-ons), which – in an evolution of the already excellent grilled cheese formula – adds a garlic and herb spread. Their impressive bakery counter makes it hard to pass up a dessert to end your meal.

After eating, you might want to pay a visit to the Crater Rock Museum in Central Point. Many different minerals are on display, including a black-light section for naturally luminescent rocks. There are also regular lectures and a section for art made with semi-precious stones. The museum is small, but you could easily spend an hour or two wandering through its rooms and marveling at its displays.

A half-day out in the Rogue Valley is a great break from attending shows. If you find other places you like to go to, mention them in the comments. Building your own Ashland traditions is part of the fun of the trip!

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Palo Alto Players: Chinglish



Joyce F. Liu and Chris Mahle. Photo courtesy Joyce Goldschmid.


Comedians since Plautus have used misunderstandings to make audiences laugh. For nearly as long, unskilled playwrights have overused this technique, dragging scenes out far longer than they need to be or unnecessarily obfuscating the characters’ viewpoints. However, David Henry Hwang’s cross-cultural comedy Chinglish uses the comical misunderstanding with a master’s stroke. There is a point at which the main character, after describing several incredible Chinese-to-English mistranslations, stops, saying “I could go on, but…” Indeed you could, and thank God everyone in this play goes on just enough to keep it moving.

Misunderstandings – cultural, professional, and romantic – are at the heart of Chinglish, which combines a rollicking comedy of manners with a mid-scale boardroom drama. Former Enron salesman Daniel Cavanaugh (Chris Mahle) attempts to sell his family’s sign-making services to  a small (only 4 million!) town in China, but faulty translators, political corruption, and a whirlwind affair with a minor political official causes the business trip to slowly devolve until it stands at the edge of disaster.

Mahle’s Daniel Cavanaugh is a very interesting comedy character, a composed businessman who quickly falls apart when dealing with his Chinese clientele. The main characters in most comedies are either stoic straight men or wacky pratfallers, but Mahle switches his character’s status as frequently as the numerous English-Mandarin bilingual characters change their language.

Other notable cast members include Jeffrey Sun as Minister Cai Guoliang, a nepotistic government official. Sun plays his character as externally fun-loving but internally calculating, not because he’s necessarily sinister but because he’s found he has to make compromises to get ahead in politics. Cai is played up as the villain as well as a remnant from China’s prior Cultural Revolution era, but he faces his eventual comeuppance with a stoicism rare for antagonists in a straight-up comedy.

Joyce F. Liu plays Xi Yan, a vice minister who begins an affair with Cavanaugh while simultaneously trying to get his signs to go through. Liu’s performance here is excellent: She simultaneously occupies a position of power while having to act like a clown to get Daniel to understand her. Liu will make you laugh while you shake your head at the poetry of language dashed against the rocky shore of understanding.


The Palo Alto Players rendition of Chinglish is a fun, punchy comedy that’s extremely rare in both its tone and its excellent quality. It only lets jokes go on for as far as they are funny, and the mistranslation-based humor stays fresh and interesting for the entire performance. It runs for another three weeks, and if you have the chance to see it, you should definitely go.

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Louisiana Bistro



Location: San Jose, CA

Food: Cajun

Close To: Tabard Theatre, City Lights Theatre Company, Broadway San Jose

For theatregoers, food lovers, or even people just looking for a night out on the town, there’s no better place in San Jose to find great food at a reasonable rate than the streets around San Pedro Square. Louisiana Bistro, located a few yards away from affordable parking (which they validate), has a big menu of delicious Cajun food, most of which is priced at $15 or less.

The first thing you’ll notice upon opening the menu is the range of appetizers. My recommendation here is the chicken wings ($9.25), which are crisp but have a lot of tender meat inside. The hot sauce on the side is fruity and aromatic, with a powerful kick that comes in later than hot sauces served at other wing establishments. They are bone-in, so those uninterested in that might try the Dixie Chicken Tenders ($9.50) instead. Don’t forget that Louisiana Bistro serves mint juleps!

The po’boy, a signature sandwich in Cajun cuisine, gets an entire section of the menu to itself. Served with a sweet but not cloying Cajun aioli on soft bread that doesn’t interfere with the texture of the meat, these sandwiches are a great choice for diners looking for a fun, casual option. The catfish po’boy ($12.95) can be ordered blackened or fried; my suggestion is to order it blackened, as the flavor of the spices and tender texture of the fish compliments the rest of the sandwich.

Louisiana Bistro’s other entrees include a big bowl of jambalaya ($9.95 for a small bowl, $13.95 for a large one) that, demonstrating the commitment of the restaurant to New Orleans authenticity, comes with two kinds of hot sauce on the side. There are a number of proteins that can be served blackened or fried, like their Big Easy Chicken ($13.95); these come with two sides, which are possibly the best items offered by the restaurant. Go for the sweet yams, which combine the fluffy texture of mashed potatoes with a complex, almost addicting flavor.

When it comes to desserts, you can’t ignore the Café du Monde Beignets ($6.00). These donut-like pastries are different at every restaurant; Louisiana Bistro’s are big and light. However, like all beignets, they are made for dipping, so dip away in either the chocolate or caramel sauce provided (I prefer the caramel sauce).


With so many excellent dining options in and around San Pedro Square, it can be difficult to choose. However, for great Cajun food, great service, and low prices, Louisiana Bistro stands out.

Hillbarn Theatre: Curtains!


Ensemble. Photo courtesy Mark Kitaoka.


One of Kander and Ebb’s last musicals, Curtains! is a charming metatheatrical murder-mystery that originally starred Frasier’s David Hyde Pierce in its original Broadway run. Hillbarn Theatre’s version is a gutsy, well-choreographed piece that makes use of the house’s intimate venue.

In terms of character, Curtains! is a farce, using a stock collection of larger-than-life goofballs to tell their story. At the center is Lt. Frank Cioffi (played by understudy David Meacham in the production I attended), a competent but dejected Boston police detective, who attempts to solve the case of a murder among a group of musical theatre players. Meacham’s Lt. Cioffi is similar to the original, played with an awkward, lively energy that makes him a protagonist everyone can root for.

A number of other goofy characters round out the Curtains! cast. Christopher M. Nelson plays composer Aaron Fox: His respectable singing voice becomes evident in his rendition of “I Miss The Music”, the best song in the show. The snooty British director Christopher Belling (Raymond Mendonca) is played a little softer than in other productions; while he still blusters and steals credit, in Hillbarn’s production he also truly cares about the welfare of the show.

The most interesting character decision, however, belongs to Boston Globe critic Daryl Grady (Russell Ward). In terms of casting, Grady has a lot of versatility, and I’ve seen versions where he’s played as a nebbish geek with thick glasses. However, Ward’s portrayal is neat, handsome, and charismatic; with a British accent, he could be right at home in an Oscar Wilde play.

Not to be ignored is the impeccable choreography by Jayne Zaban. The show within a show, Oklahoma parody Kansasland, has big, active dance numbers, but just as significant are the more intimate songs. “A Tough Act To Follow”, which stages an elaborate fantasy scene using Hillbarn’s small space, is an especially impressive feat.


Curtains! is not a challenging piece, but if you’re looking for a fun adventure with lovable (or loveably hateable) characters wrapped around a very solid mystery, it’s hard to find a better play.

Saturday, February 7, 2015

San Pedro Square Market


Near: Tabard Theatre, City Lights

Theatregoers are always on the look for places that serve great food in time for them to make it to their next show. San Pedro Square Market, located in the heart of downtown San Jose near several local theatres, takes the “food court” model (with trays and buzzers to let you know your food is ready) and redefines it with small, top-quality restaurants that cater to every taste.

Here is a small selection of some of San Pedro Square’s best restaurants:

Konjoe: Konjoe Burger Bar serves East-West fusion hamburgers, combining typical toppings like caramelized onions and jalapeños with kalbi sauce, kimchi cucumbers, and hoisin ketchup. The burgers are thick and satisfying, and after you eat one you’ll be thinking about it for days. To drink, Konjoe serves a selection of flavored lemonades that change every day.

Blush Raw Bar and Lounge: The only restaurant in the market to cordon off its own seating area, Blush offers a wide variety of sushi rolls, oysters, and trademark frozen drinks in a modern and upscale venue. Their eel is top-notch!

Bray: Bray is a traditional barbecue joint that serves crowd-pleasers like Reubens, sliders, and baby back ribs. However, their best menu item is the roasted corn, which is covered in a spicy sauce that piques the palate for bold, flavorful proteins ahead.

Loteria Taco Bar: Named after the traditional Mexican bingo game, Loteria offers a selection of twelve tacos that modernize classic ingredient combinations; for example, adding fresh pineapple to the pork el pastor tacos, brightening up the meat with a citrus zing.

Chocatoo: Chocatoo offers lots of tantalizing-looking desserts, but you’ll want to skip the fancy stuff and order one of their cookies. Gigantic, rich, and sinful, whoever’s at the counter will warm it up and ask you if you’d like a glass of milk to wash it down. This is the kind of cookie you’d see in a book as a kid and wish existed.

I exhort you to be adventurous and eat wherever you like – almost every eatery at San Pedro Square Market is top-notch. However, the above is some of the most reliably good food available, and can be useful as a jumping-off point. And don't forget to check their blog for the latest events!

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Theatreworks: 2 Pianos 4 Hands

Christopher Tocco and Darren Dunstan. Photo courtesy TheatreWorks.

Theatreworks’ 2 Pianos 4 Hands bills itself as a universal exploration of excellence, mediocrity, and disappointment – some of my favorite themes in the American theatre. However, it also presents lively physical comedy with vaudevillian characters, packaged in an unorthodox narrative that jumps between the stories of two upcoming classical pianists. This format, along with the well-rehearsed piano segments and versatile talents of actors Darren Dunstan and Christopher Tocco, results in an entertaining play that solves some of the issues of the genre.

Using a casting trick similar to The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged), the two actors play multiple characters – parents, teachers, and audiences – in the piano careers of youth virtuosos Ted (Dunstan) and Richard (Tocco). There is some multimedia use (a shadow-puppet dad swinging a golf club, for instance), but for the most part, we know the different characters through versatile acting work on both sides. No part, not even the main characters, requires incredible depth (as can be expected from a comedy), but 2 Pianos requires a breadth that Dunstan and Tocco capture magnificently.

One of the biggest issues in farce is that its larger-than-life characters can often become repetitive – for example, the sour maid in Boeing Boeing. However, the “two-actor” format means that the play can use characters only as long as they’re funny. Overbearing European piano teachers – giving their students ironically opposite advice on arpeggios – may be tiring after ten or fifteen minutes, but playwrights Ted Dykstra and Richard Greenblatt had the good sense to limit these characters to two minutes, constantly shuffling in new jokes as the old ones become tired.

Though the characters are exaggerated for comedic purposes, the protagonists are named after the playwrights for a reason. 2 Pianos gives a heartbreakingly realistic rendition of the foibles of practicing an art like piano, especially for children at their most energetic and playful life stage. Anyone who played an instrument as a kid can recognize some of themselves in the Ted and Richard of the first act: the playful improvisations, the attempts to weasel out of practice for a few minutes at a time, the stifling silence of not knowing the answer to your tutor’s question. You will probably cringe at some of the scenes, not because they’re poorly written but because they’re written with such an attention to detail. The protagonists’ eventual development into dedicated musicians through Act 2 is at turns miraculous and sad.


In a theatrical environment where the Noël Coward farce frequently dominates comedy, 2 Pianos 4 Hands refines the formula while introducing heavy themes and intricate structure. Experienced playgoers will love the elegance of its presentation, while its jokes and message will appeal to anyone who wanted to be great – or anyone whose parents wanted them to be great.

Restaurants Nearby: Sono Sushi, New Mongolian Barbecue, Ramen Shalala, Scratch