Dining Review -- Jennifer K Mahal
Lunchtime in the newsroom consists of one person saying, “So, who’s
hungry,” five people ordering food and two people picking it up. So when
it came time for me to do a lunchtime dining review -- thanks to a dining
critic taking a week off -- I turned to the hungry editors, reporters and
photographers in the office. We picked a place to which several of us
have been, but no one from here has reviewed -- Diho Siam in Costa Mesa.
Diho Siam can be found in the shopping center across from Triangle
Square. It’s an intimate dining space, filled with colorful artwork
inspired by the life of Buddha. One of the most interesting things about
the restaurant is that it offers both a Chinese food and a Thai food
menu.
For the purposes of this review, the dining choices were limited to
the daily luncheon specials. There are 11 Thai specials and 16 Chinese
specials available between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Variety is not a problem.
The Thai dishes are available with chicken, beef, pork, vegetables or
tofu. Thai lunches come with a side of jasmine rice. The Chinese lunch
specials come with an egg roll and fried rice.
City Editor James Meier ordered the satay chicken off the Thai menu
($5.75). The dish is described on the menu as a marinated skewer of meat,
barbecued and served with a peanut sauce and cucumber dip.
“The peanut sauce used to marinate the satay chicken creates a
delicious taste that sticks around nicely as a faint aftertaste,” he
said. “The portion of four kabobs comes close to filling one up, but its
plate mate -- a couple of portions of white rice decorated with thin
strings of carrot -- guarantees the lunch special will provide a full
stomach for the average person.”
Meier, who has been to Diho Siam a number of times, said the
restaurant is worth “giving a whirl.”
Kerry Flynn, our newsroom manager, decided to try the almond chicken
off the Chinese menu ($5.25) -- stir-fried chicken with diced water
chestnuts, bamboo shoots and carrots. Flynn liked the vegetables in the
dish, calling them “crispy and fresh,” but found the overall taste to be
“a little bland.”
“I’m not sure where the ‘almond’ came from in the name of the dish,”
Flynn said. “I found only one almond half.”
Reporter Deirdre Newman had better things to say about the Thai cashew
nut chicken ($5.95).
“It has a zingy flavor due to the medley of vegetables and the spicy
sauce that accompanies it,” she said. “While the onions and red and green
peppers pack a potent punch, the chicken is a little dry and chewy.”
She loved the jasmine rice, calling it “very soft and more tasty than
some dry globs that have accompanied Thai food in the past.”
Newman also tried the Thai iced tea, which she said is a “luscious
complement to the dish, with a light, smoky flavor that cleanses your
palate after each bite.”
June Casagrande, who covers Newport Beach for the Pilot, said she
thinks Diho Siam’s Thai food is “great,” but some of their Chinese dishes
have fallen below her expectations. For this review, she tried the orange
peel chicken ($5.25).
“I love that place, so I’m disappointed to say the orange chicken is a
little below their standard,” Casagrande said. “The orange sauce is
delicious, but the chicken is a little dry.”
For soup lovers, she recommended the tom kha, hot and sour coconut
soup. It is “excellent.”
Photographer Don Leach thought the pa-nang chicken ($5.50), chicken in
spicy red curry with coconut milk, was “simple, well done and very
tasty.” The coconut milk sauce was “super good” over the jasmine rice,
but the dish could have used a little more chicken. But, he said he would
definitely be going to Diho Siam again.
There was no meat whatsoever in my meal -- green jungle curry made
with tofu ($5.50) -- but there were plenty of fresh veggies. A nice
amount of spice warmed up the coconut-based broth and brought a tingle to
my tongue. The tofu sopped up the sauce well. Chewy mushrooms, crisp
sugar peas, carrot slices, bamboo shoots and broccoli made for a variety
of tasty textures.
I did not like the Thai coffee I got to complement my meal, however. I
like sweet things, but this was a bit too sweet. I wanted the ice to melt
faster, just to lighten the taste.
Overall, the lunch specials at Diho Siam seemed to please. Most of the
staff thought it was a place worth going back to. The lunch prices are
inexpensive and the to-go service is great -- they had the order ready on
time. If you go, try the Thai.
* JENNIFER K MAHAL is features editor of the Daily Pilot. She may be
reached at jennifer.mahal@latimes.com. Stephen Santacroce is on vacation.
His columns appear every other week.
FYI
WHAT: Diho Siam
WHERE: 1835 Newport Blvd., Suite D154
COST: Inexpensive for lunch
CALL: (949) 645-3259
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