Organic eatery offers option to meat
Mary Furr
Come sit with me under the Bodhi Tree, as Buddha once did in India,
and learn about the newest organic vegetarian restaurant at Main and
6th streets, which opened August 28.
The Bodhi Tree is owned by the Pham family. The mother, Kim Huynh,
is the talented cook, while son Quoc Pham is the manager and daughter
Huong the server. She is so helpful in interpreting and recommending
the exotic yet healthful menu.
There are three tables on the sidewalk in front and tables and
chairs, but no booths, inside the bright restaurant. Its pale yellow
walls are hung with large pictures of Oriental scenes and flowers.
It’s very restful with only the sound of water tumbling over a tiny
grotto at the entrance.
Lunch Specials ($5.95), served from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., are a great
introduction to this strictly vegetarian restaurant in which
everything is free of any animal products and so fresh you can smell
the scent of cilantro in the jicama spring rolls (2 for $2.75, 4 for
$4.50). Wrapped in transparent rice paper the rolls are as large as
hot dogs filled with crunchy jicama, carrots, vermicelli and tofu.
They are served with a small bowl of dark, spicy peanut sauce. They
are wonderful.
Lunch begins with vegetable soup with a mild creamy broth with
dice-like squares of tofu, carrots, zucchini, asparagus and mushroom
halves. It’s excellent -- who would miss meat? On the lunch special
you may choose any entree -- tofu, vegetable, “chicken,” “beef” or
“calamari” ($7.95) or “shrimp” ($8.95) and then select a sauce to go
with it. There’s everything from hot and spicy to curry to Kung Pao,
a spicy classic, which I selected to go with my “chicken.” You can
crate an entree as if you were in your own kitchen -- it’s marvelous
and doesn’t require any work.
My friend selected vegetables which gave him spinach, zucchini,
green beans, carrots, broccoli and mushrooms. Both our entrees came
with a soup of sticky rice to mix with our sauces and chow mein of
slender noodle with celery, and water chestnuts. Slices of faux beef
completed this dish of complex but delicate flavors.
Bodhi Tree has two delights you shouldn’t skip. One is coconut
milk served in a big hollowed-out coconut that is refreshing as a
drink as well as being a great conversation piece. The other is cream
served in a tulip glass it has big chunks of coconut meat surrounded
by the slices of peach and four deep fried halves of baba beside it
on the plate. Daughter Huong says the Bodhi Tree desserts are
diabetic friendly since both her father and grandfather have diabetes
and that the banana fritters are something they can enjoy.
The Bodhi Tree, in addition to the lunch specials, serves
sandwiches with soup and salad ($4.50 to $5.50) and a variety of
vegetarian seafood, chicken and beef that comes with the “exotic
spices of the Orient home style cooking.”
You won’t believe your taste buds!
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail
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