Los Angeles Times

Starry adventures revealed

- BY NOELLE CARTER noelle.carter@latimes.com Twitter: @noellecart­er

By his latest count, Nguyen Tran figures he probably has 15 costumes. The face behind the restaurant and brand Starry Kitchen just deposited two large bags’ worth of clothing on the counter at the Los Angeles Times Test Kitchen. Nguyen’s wife, Thi — the other force behind the brand — is busy unpacking and arranging the components for several outfits — including one space helmet — as Nguyen fiddles with a box.

“Anyone have a screwdrive­r? I need a Phillips head. Oh, and put the crab in the freezer.”

There’s a happy chaos as Nguyen inflates one of the costumes, a tauntaun snow lizard from the movie “The Empire Strikes Back.” Meanwhile, one of his assistants corrals a live Dungeness crab for Nguyen’s recipe demonstrat­ion while another follows the Trans’ 17-month-old son, Cillían, around the kitchen.

Nguyen is here to demonstrat­e the recipe for Singaporea­n chili crab with buttermilk beer beignets, one of Starry Kitchen’s more famous dishes and among the recipes included in Nguyen’s new book, “Adventures in Starry Kitchen: 88 Asian-Inspired Recipes from America’s Most Famous Undergroun­d Restaurant.” Part cookbook, part history and part guide to running an undergroun­d restaurant, the book shares Nguyen and Thi’s journey through the food world.

As he stirs a quick beignet batter, Nguyen explains the genesis of Starry Kitchen. “Thi and I love to eat. It’s that simple,” he says. That, and Thi has always been an amazing cook. “Thi’s way more talented than me in the kitchen. I give her full credit.”

Nguyen frequently comes up with ideas, and Thi will see it to completion. He credits her with coming up with most of Starry Kitchen’s dishes, including the spicy crab dish.

“I’m the face of Starry Kitchen,” Nguyen says, because Thi hates being on camera. “But she’s way funnier than I am.”

Starry Kitchen takes its name from a popular Cantonese cooking show broadcast on a cable channel out of Hong Kong, and the Trans’ brand can be traced back to 2008, when the couple began hosting undergroun­d dinners out of their tiny apartment in North Hollywood.

Before long, the wildly popular dinners earned praise from Yelp and scrutiny from the health department, and the Trans moved to their first brick-and-mortar location. Over several tumultuous years, the Trans would resurrect themselves and their brand as restaurant­s and pop-ups, weed dinners and delivery service, catering jobs and their latest brickand-mortar establishm­ent, Button Mash, in Echo Park.

“I’d estimate we’ve reinvented ourselves maybe 10 times,” says Nguyen.

When the last Starry Kitchen location, in Chinatown, closed 2 1⁄2 years ago, Nguyen considered leaving the business completely.

Nguyen needed time to think. He’d been offered a book deal, and after a month of unemployme­nt decided to start on the cookbook. “One, I wanted to tell people the real story about what happened to us. The other is to inspire people to either start a restaurant — or not,” he says. “No one gets how hard it really is.”

“Adventures in Starry Kitchen” contains 88 recipes, including the restaurant’s famous tofu balls. In addition to smaller recipes that generally serve two to four, the recipes include a “Balls Out” ingredient­s list offering much larger portion sizes, on average 40 to 80 servings. “I wanted this to also be an illegal undergroun­d handbook. I figured if someone wanted to start their own undergroun­d restaurant, this would help,” says Nguyen. “I just hope they invite me.”

Starry Kitchen’s recipes are a mash-up of cultures and flavors, which Nguyen sometimes refers to as Pan-Asian American food. Both Nguyen and Thi are from Texas, and the dishes largely draw inspiratio­n from a variety of Asian cuisines with an American twist such as the crab, which is served with beignets, or the cookbook’s chicken-fried steak, which they serve with a Japanese curry roux.

“We live in Los Angeles, and we might look at Irvine or Orange County as suburbia — but no,” says Nguyen. “I lived in real surburbia in Dallas. Everything is a chain restaurant or a big box store.

“I was so limited as a kid. I didn’t want to be chastised for not being white. It held me back.”

Nguyen’s parents are originally from Vietnam, and it wasn’t until he visited that country that he began to embrace his Vietnamese background. And as he started celebratin­g his Vietnamese heritage, he also began to cherish his Texas roots.

The crab dish is Starry Kitchen’s take on a famous Singaporea­n dish, and it took the Trans two years to develop it before they began serving it at their restaurant. In the cookbook, Nguyen claims that his is only one of seven restaurant­s in North America to offer the dish.

Originally, the Trans served the crab with fried steamed buns. Then they thought of buttermilk beer beignets.

“Being from the South, we used to go to New Orleans a lot,” says Nguyen, gently dipping mounds of beignet batter into hot oil using an ice cream scoop. “Thi came up with the idea for savory beignets.”

As he plates the dish, Nguyen thinks about the future. Much as they’ve loved their journey, they don’t see themselves running restaurant­s day to day, particular­ly now that they’re parents. Nguyen is looking into mass-producing Starry Kitchen’s tofu balls, and thinking of opening up other Starry Kitchens, but as something more akin to a franchise concept.

Before he takes the finished crab dish into the photo studio for a final shoot, Nguyen slips into his banana costume. Outside the Test Kitchen display window, a small group of people has gathered.

“The thing about the banana suit is the response you get from it. It makes people happy,” he says. Starry Kitchen has a reputation for being fun and crazy, Nguyen acknowledg­es — in his banana suit — noting that how much thought goes into the food, and how serious he and Thi are about each dish and technique, can get lost.

“But then, people shouldn’t always be too thoughtful about food. Sometimes eating is just about having fun.”

‘I wanted to tell people the real story about what happened to us. The other is to inspire people to either start a restaurant — or not.’ — Nguyen Tran, Starry Kitchen co-founder

 ?? Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? SINGAPOREA­N chili crab, one of Starry Kitchen’s signature dishes, took the Trans two years to develop.
Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times SINGAPOREA­N chili crab, one of Starry Kitchen’s signature dishes, took the Trans two years to develop.

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