Episodes

  • Portland's Thai Takeover: Why Everyone's Fighting Over Khao Soi and What's Really Happening on Division Street
    Feb 10 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    **Portland's Culinary Renaissance: Sizzling Openings and Flavor Explosions in 2026**

    Listeners, Portland's food scene is firing on all cylinders, blending innovative Thai mastery with hyper-local vibes that make every bite a revelation. Kicking off the year strong, OK Chicken & Khao Soi at 3226 SE Division Street burst onto the scene in early January, helmed by Earl Ninsom, Sam Smith, and Eric Nelson—the dream team behind Yaowarat and Eem. Bridgetown Bites reports their charcoal-grilled meats, crispy fried chicken, and soul-warming Northern Thai larb paired with khao soi noodles deliver smoky, spice-laced perfection in the historic Pok Pok space, proving Portland's Thai dominance is unbreakable. Meanwhile, Chalunthorn “Yui” Schaeffer's Yui reopened at 4246 SE Belmont Street #2, offering a tight menu of rare Thai staples in a spacious hall once home to Musashi’s—Portland Monthly hails it as a triumphant return, with dishes that burst with lemongrass tang and herbal depth.

    Looking ahead, spring promises Fremont Garage at 4403 NE Fremont Street, a food cart pod nodding to its auto-shop roots, and the enigmatic Hearth & Vine at 10 NW 12th Avenue, where Seattle connections and chef-driven menus hint at wood-fired wonders. Bridgetown Bites anticipates these alongside Portland Mercado at 7238 SE Foster Road, evolving into a community hub with farmers' markets amid construction. Local ingredients shine through, from Oregon seafood at the January 24-25 PDX Seafood & Wine Festival to wasabi innovations at June's WasabiFest by SakéOne.

    Trends lean into focused regional flavors, pop-up evolutions like Sure Shot Burger's brick-and-mortar shift, and events like February's Dumpling Week and April's Baker’s Dozen Coffee Beer & Doughnut Festival, all amplifying Portland's cart culture and craft ethos. Chefs like Ninsom weave Thai traditions with Pacific Northwest bounty—think fresh citrus from Rubinette's Citrus Fest and vibrant ferments echoing the city's DIY spirit.

    What sets Portland apart is this unpretentious alchemy: global techniques meet hyper-local farms, birthing a scene that's accessible yet boundary-pushing. Food lovers, tune in now—your next obsession awaits in this flavor-forward frontier..


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    3 mins
  • Portland's Thai Food Glow-Up: Inside the Khao Soi Wars and Why Everyone's Fighting Over Dumplings
    Feb 7 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    # Portland's Thai Renaissance: A City Redefining Regional Cuisine

    Portland's culinary landscape is experiencing a remarkable transformation, particularly within its already celebrated Thai food scene. Two standout January 2026 openings have positioned the city at the forefront of authentic regional Thai cuisine, signaling a broader shift toward focused, expert-driven dining concepts.

    Yui represents a triumphant homecoming for the beloved mom-and-daughter establishment. After years operating as a pop-up on Tuesday nights at Alberta Street's Bonne Chance wine bar, owner Chalunthorn Schaeffer reopened her restaurant in a spacious new location on Southeast Belmont Street. Schaeffer's culinary pedigree is impressive—she built her career at Michelin-starred establishments like New York's Bar Masa before founding Yui during the pandemic. What sets this restaurant apart is its rejection of Portland's typical "pick-a-protein" Thai model. Instead, dishes like massaman curry arrive thoughtfully paired with just two options: tofu or braised beef. The menu draws heavily from Northern Thailand, particularly Chiang Mai, with specials featuring lesser-known items like sakoo, tapioca dumplings with sweet radish and soy. The standout khao soi—a coconut noodle soup developed by Schaeffer and her mother Ta Triamchainon—earned validation from one of their Chiang Mai-born chefs, who confirmed it tastes authentically like home.

    Equally significant is OK Chicken and Khao Soi, the brainchild of restaurateur Akkapong Ninsom, whose previous ventures Yaowarat and Eem have garnered considerable acclaim. Opening in the historic space formerly occupied by Pok Pok, one of Portland's most celebrated Thai restaurants, OK Chicken specializes in charcoal-grilled meats, fried chicken, and regional Northern Thai dishes, paired with nonalcoholic juices and teas. This focused approach signals a citywide movement away from broad, encyclopedic menus toward restaurants that master specific regional traditions.

    Beyond restaurant openings, Portland's food calendar brims with celebrations of culinary diversity. Dumpling Week runs February 15 through 21, while Dumpling Fest on March 4 brings tasting events featuring Chinese soup dumplings, Indian kofta, Korean mandu, Nepalese momos, and Mexican tamales. The Good in the Hood Festival, Portland's largest multicultural music and food event, returns June 27 through 29 at Lillis-Albina Park in North Portland, celebrating what the city does best: honoring diverse traditions through food.

    What emerges from Portland's current dining moment is clear: the city's food culture has matured beyond novelty. Listeners are witnessing a culinary scene that prizes expertise, authenticity, and regional specificity. Whether through family-driven Thai kitchens or restored historic spaces, Portland demonstrates that great food doesn't require complexity—it requires knowledge, respect for tradition, and unwavering commitment to quality..


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    3 mins
  • Portland's Spicy Secret: Why This Thai Chef Just Became the Hottest Ticket in Town and What's Cooking Next
    Feb 5 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    **Portland's Culinary Renaissance: Thai Heat and Festive Feasts Ignite 2026**

    Listeners, Portland's food scene is sizzling hotter than a wok over open flame, with January 2026 ushering in game-changing openings that spotlight Northern Thai mastery. OK Chicken & Khao Soi at 3226 SE Division Street, helmed by acclaimed chef Akkapong “Earl” Ninsom alongside Sam Smith and Eric Nelson, channels Chiang Mai's bold flavors into charcoal-grilled meats, crispy fried chicken, and soul-warming khao soi—a coconut curry noodle soup rich with tender chicken, pickled greens, and fiery chilies that dance on your tongue. Bridgetown Bites hails this Pok Pok successor as a frontrunner for the year's biggest debut, its nonalcoholic juices cutting through the spice like a Pacific Northwest breeze.

    Nearby, Yui on SE Belmont Street—4246 SE Belmont Street #2—marks Chalunthorn “Yui” Schaeffer's triumphant brick-and-mortar return, blending Thai staples with rarities like sakoo tapioca dumplings stuffed with sweet radish and soy, plus pork-shrimp shumai. Portland Monthly praises its tight menu, now in a spacious hall once home to Musashi’s, elevating the city's already stellar Thai offerings with fresh, focused precision.

    Look ahead to Hearth & Vine at 10 NW 12th Avenue, poised for an April splash with Seattle ties and a chef-driven vibe that promises wood-fired wonders amid stunning interiors. Sure Shot Burger transitions from cart to mortar next to Taqueria Los Pepitos Locos on NE 42nd Avenue, while Portland Mercado at 7238 SE Foster Road gears up for summer with cart pods, farmers' markets, and community events.

    Local ingredients shine through Oregon seafood at the PDX Seafood & Wine Festival January 24-25 at the Oregon Convention Center, pairing Dungeness crab and albacore with 30-plus wineries. Festivals like Dumpling Week February 15-21, Baker’s Dozen Coffee Beer & Doughnut Festival April 11, and WasabiFest June 13 weave in hyper-local twists, from citrus at Rubinette Produce Market to wasabi innovations at Redd East.

    Portland's gastronomy thrives on this fusion: indigenous bounty meets immigrant ingenuity, from Thai larb laced with Willamette Valley herbs to sustainable seafood nods. What sets it apart? An unpretentious innovation hub where chefs like Ninsom honor roots while pushing boundaries. Food lovers, tune in—this is dining with soul, ready to captivate your senses..


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    3 mins
  • Portland's 2026 Food Scene is Spicy Hot: Thai Royalty Returns and Burger Carts Level Up
    Feb 3 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    Portland's Culinary Renaissance: Fresh Flavors and Bold Bites Await in 2026

    Listeners, Portland's food scene is sizzling with anticipation as 2026 unfolds, blending innovative openings with a calendar packed with mouthwatering events. Picture the steamy allure of Northern Thai curries at OK Chicken & Khao Soi on 3226 SE Division Street, where Earl Ninsom, Sam Smith, and Eric Nelson—titans of Portland's tastiest spots—debut in early January, infusing coconut-rich khao soi with local herbs that burst with earthy spice.

    Just blocks away, Chalunthorn “Yui” Schaeffer revives her magic at YUI on 4246 SE Belmont Street #2, serving lesser-known Thai gems like silky curries and tangy salads that transport you to Bangkok's street stalls. Brick-and-mortar dreams come true at Sure Shot Burger, relocating from their NE 42nd Avenue cart to a cozy spot next door, slinging juicy patties with house-ground beef sourced from Oregon ranches. Hearth & Vine at 10 NW 12th Avenue promises an April unveiling, with Seattle-connected chefs crafting wood-fired wonders in a stunning space, while Portland Mercado on 7238 SE Foster Road gears up for summer, blending Latino carts, farmers' markets, and community feasts.

    Trends lean into hyper-local bounty—think Willamette Valley mushrooms and Hood River apples elevating everything from farm-to-table French at L'Echelle to rotisserie chicken at LaVerne's and creative bites at Bar Nouveau. Cultural mashups shine, as seen in recent hits like Dream Deli on SE Division, where corned brisket rye nods to Italian-Jewish fusion, all made in-house.

    Events amp the excitement: Dive into PDX Seafood & Wine Festival on January 24-25 at Oregon Convention Center, savoring Dungeness crab paired with Oregon pinots amid 175 booths. Dumpling Week from February 15-21 spotlights global wrappers, from Korean mandu to Nepalese momos, while Baker’s Dozen Coffee Beer & Doughnut Festival on April 11 unites Portland's obsessions in frothy, glazed glory.

    What sets Portland apart? Its unpretentious embrace of immigrant stories, hyper-seasonal ingredients, and DIY spirit turns every meal into a communal adventure. Food lovers, tune in—this city's gastronomy is a living, flavorful rebellion worth every bite..


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    3 mins
  • Portland's Thai Food Takeover: How One Chicken Shack Just Stole Pok Pok's Crown and Changed Everything
    Jan 31 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    # Portland's Culinary Renaissance: A City Where Thai Cuisine Reigns Supreme

    Portland's food scene is experiencing a remarkable moment. The city's restaurant landscape continues to evolve with bold new concepts, celebrated chefs returning to beloved spaces, and a dining culture that refuses to stagnate. This January alone has proven that Portland remains one of America's most dynamic culinary destinations.

    The most striking trend emerging from Portland's current restaurant landscape is the extraordinary depth of its Thai food culture. The month of January witnessed the triumphant return of Yui, a cherished mom-and-daughter establishment that had operated as a pop-up for several years before settling into a spacious dining hall on SE Belmont Street. The restaurant showcases a tightly curated menu of traditional Thai staples alongside rarely seen regional dishes that demonstrate the chef's deep knowledge of the cuisine.

    Even more significant is the opening of OK Chicken and Khao Soi, helmed by Earl Ninsom alongside the impressive team behind Yaowarat and Eem. This focused, regional restaurant specializes in charcoal-grilled meats, fried chicken, and Northern Thai khao soi paired with thoughtfully crafted nonalcoholic juices and teas. What makes OK Chicken's arrival particularly momentous is its location in the space formerly occupied by Pok Pok, one of Portland's most celebrated Thai restaurants. This symbolic passing of the torch underscores how Portland's culinary community honors its heritage while pushing forward.

    Beyond these January openings, Portland's restaurant pipeline promises continued excitement. Fremont Garage, a food cart pod paying homage to the auto repair shop that previously occupied its NE Fremont location, targets a spring 2026 opening. Hearth and Vine, arriving in April on W Burnside, brings Seattle restaurant connections and promises to be an exceptional dining destination. Portland Mercado, the much-anticipated market project, expects significant progress through spring 2026 with vendor openings anticipated for summer months.

    The city's food festivals further illustrate Portland's commitment to culinary celebration. The PDX Seafood and Wine Festival, which recently concluded on January 24-25, showcased over 175 booths featuring fresh Oregon seafood, wines, craft beers, and spirits. Throughout 2026, Portland hosts Dumpling Week, Pizza Week, Burger Week, and numerous other specialty food celebrations that draw passionate listeners to neighborhood restaurants.

    What truly distinguishes Portland is how the city balances reverence for established culinary traditions with enthusiasm for innovation. The restaurants opening this year demonstrate that Portland's food culture thrives when chefs respect heritage while fearlessly pursuing their creative vision. This commitment to both preservation and progress makes Portland an unmissable destination for anyone serious about food..


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    3 mins
  • Portland's Thai Food Takeover: Why Two January Openings Have Everyone Talking About Khao Soi and Charcoal Chicken
    Jan 29 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    # Portland's Thai Awakening: A Culinary Renaissance Reshaping the City's Food Identity

    Portland's restaurant landscape has undergone a seismic shift this January, with Thai cuisine emerging as the unexpected protagonist in the city's ongoing culinary evolution. Two major openings have fundamentally altered what's possible in the regional dining space, signaling that Portland's already impressive food scene is entering a new chapter of sophistication and regional specificity.

    The month began with the triumphant return of Yui, a beloved mom-and-daughter establishment that spent years as a nomadic pop-up before finally settling into a spacious dining hall on Southeast Belmont Street. Chef Chalunthorn Schaeffer's carefully curated menu balances Thai staples with rarely glimpsed regional dishes, offering listeners a passport to authentic flavors too often overlooked in mainstream Thai dining. But Yui's opening pales in significance compared to what happened next.

    Opening in the hallowed space formerly occupied by Pok Pok, the legendary Thai restaurant that helped define Portland's gastronomic identity, OK Chicken and Khao Soi represents something more than mere replacement. Led by restaurateur Earl Ninsom alongside Sam Smith and Eric Nelson—architects of some of Portland's most celebrated dining moments—this focused concept specializes in charcoal-grilled meats, fried chicken, and Northern Thai regional dishes like khao soi and larb. The restaurant pairs these preparations with thoughtfully crafted nonalcoholic juices and teas, reflecting a philosophical shift toward wellness-conscious dining without sacrificing depth or authenticity.

    What makes this convergence significant extends beyond two exceptional openings. According to Portland Monthly, these January launches represent an "impressive expansion" of Thai food culture in a city already renowned for its excellence in Asian cuisines. The restaurants share a common DNA: regional focus, chef-driven authority, and an unwavering commitment to ingredient quality and technique.

    This culinary moment reflects Portland's broader restaurant philosophy. The city's food scene has long prioritized local sourcing, cultural authenticity, and chef autonomy over corporate homogenization. Yet increasingly, restaurants are moving beyond general cuisines toward hyper-regional specialization, elevating specific dishes and cooking traditions into focal points rather than peripheral curiosities.

    Beyond these January openings, Portland's 2026 calendar brims with possibility. Spring promises Hearth and Vine, a mysterious West Burnside project connected to Seattle restaurant talent, while summer anticipates Portland Mercado's full activation as a community gathering space. Food festivals like Dumpling Week in February and ongoing Portland Night Markets provide consistent venues for culinary experimentation.

    For listeners seeking genuine culinary adventure, Portland isn't just another food destination. It's become a laboratory where regional authenticity, local commitment, and chef-driven excellence converge into something distinctly, unmistakably Portland..


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    3 mins
  • Portland's Spicy Secrets: Thai Legends Return, Dumpling Drama, and Why Your Taste Buds Need to Move Here ASAP
    Jan 27 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    **Portland's Culinary Renaissance: Thai Flames and Global Bites Ignite the Scene**

    Listeners, Portland's food world is sizzling hotter than a wok over open flame, with January 2026 ushering in bold new chapters that blend local bounty with worldly flair. Picture the smoky allure of charcoal-grilled meats at OK Chicken & Khao Soi on SE Division Street, where Earl Ninsom, Sam Smith, and Eric Nelson revive the legendary Pok Pok space with Northern Thai gems like khao soi—rich coconut curry noodles swirling with tender chicken—and larb, that punchy minced meat salad paired with vibrant nonalcoholic teas. Just blocks away on SE Belmont Street, Chalunthorn “Yui” Schaeffer's Yui has burst back from pop-up fame into a spacious hall, dishing tight-hit Thai staples and rarities that make your taste buds dance with citrusy heat and herbal depth.

    Anticipation builds for spring stars like Fremont Garage at NE Fremont and 44th, a food cart pod nodding to its auto-shop roots, and Hearth & Vine on NW 12th Avenue, whispering Seattle-infused elegance under chef-driven vision. Local ingredients shine through Oregon's pristine seafood and foraged finds, weaving into Portland's farm-to-fork ethos—think Willamette Valley produce elevating every plate amid the city's multicultural mosaic.

    Festivals amp the excitement: Dive into Dumpling Fest on March 4, hopping restaurants for Chinese soup dumplings, Korean mandu, Nepalese momos, and Mexican tamales in tasting-plate bliss. June's WasabiFest PDX packs spicy wasabi twists from top chefs, sake flows, and live demos. Portland's Dumpling Week, Pizza Week, and PDX Seafood & Wine Festival keep the calendar bubbling.

    What sets Portland apart? Its unpretentious grit fuses hyper-local traditions with immigrant ingenuity, birthing innovative spots that feel like neighborhood secrets. Food lovers, tune in—this is dining with soul, where every bite fuels the revolution..


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    2 mins
  • Portland's Hottest Bites: Thai Thrills, Food Cart Chills, and Why Your Fork Needs to Be Here ASAP
    Jan 24 2026
    Food Scene Portland

    **Portland's Culinary Renaissance: Fresh Flavors Igniting the City of Roses**

    Listeners, Portland's food scene is buzzing like a beehive in bloom, where innovative openings and vibrant festivals collide with the city's deep-rooted love for local bounty. As Byte, your go-to culinary sleuth, I'm thrilled to dish on the hottest spots and trends shaping 2026.

    Kicking off the year strong, OK Chicken & Khao Soi at 3226 SE Division Street bursts onto the scene in early January, helmed by power trio Earl Ninsom, Sam Smith, and Eric Nelson. Expect Northern Thai masterpieces like soul-warming khao soi broths rich with coconut and curry, perfumed with lemongrass and galangal—Bridgetown Bites calls it a tasty addition we're lucky to savor. Nearby, YUI on SE Belmont Street welcomes back chef Chalunthorn “Yui” Schaeffer with her Thai lineup, from familiar curries to rare gems that tingle the palate.

    Spring brings Fremont Garage at 4403 NE Fremont Street, a food cart pod homage to its auto-shop past, and Hearth & Vine at 10 NW 12th Avenue, where Seattle-connected chefs craft wood-fired wonders in a stunning space. Sure Shot Burger transitions to brick-and-mortar next to its old cart spot, slinging juicy patties that pop with umami. Don't sleep on recent gems like LaVerne's, Bar Nouveau, and L'Echelle, praised by Portland City Cast for farm-to-table French finesse and rotisserie chicken with 70s flair.

    Portland's gastronomy thrives on hyper-local ingredients—Oregon seafood, hazelnuts, and berries—infused into everything from Javelina Indigenous Dining's native twists to Portland Mercado's summer 2026 revival at 7238 SE Foster Road, fostering community markets. Festivals amp the excitement: WasabiFest on June 13 spotlights spicy wasabi innovations from top chefs at Redd on Salmon Street, per Delish; Good in the Hood June 27-29 at Lillis-Albina Park celebrates multicultural eats; and staples like PDX Seafood & Wine Festival showcase Dungeness crab paired with Willamette Valley pours.

    What sets Portland apart? Its unpretentious fusion of food carts, indie chefs, and cultural crossroads creates accessible magic—no stuffy white tablecloths, just pure, plate-shaking joy. Food lovers, tune in: this scene demands your fork..


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    3 mins