Logo
ART
ISSUE #33.08 • FOOD & DRINK • GUT REACTION
Dish

Mekong: A Vietnamese Grill


Mekong brings clean cuisine to a 'hood hungry for Vietnamese fast food.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 1 comment
Recently in "Dish"

November 19th, 2008
Proud To Be An American | 50 Plates’ new take on USA eats.2 comments

November 5th, 2008
The Credo Of Evoe | At Kevin Gibson’s new kitchen, simple means delicious.0 comments

October 29th, 2008
Coffee People | Ristretto’s new shop is full-bodied and smooth.7 comments

October 22nd, 2008
Peru View | Nasca serves traditional eats, minus the guinea pig.0 comments

October 8th, 2008
The Trickster | Share, sip and repeat at Tanuki.0 comments

October 1st, 2008
Orange You Glad? | A world of tapas at Casa Naranja.0 comments

July 23rd, 2008
CARBONI’S | The pizza has real potential; the barbecue is a lost cause.4 comments

May 28th, 2008
Olé, ok | At this Cha, it’s best to stick to basics3 comments

May 23rd, 2007
Round Up: Wine Sans Gas0 comments

April 18th, 2007
Pizza Fino | Kenton gets a dose of Northeast Alberta-bred pizza fever.3 comments


PRAWN AND ON AND ON: Garlic shrimp at Mekong Grill.
IMAGE: JENNA BIGGS
BY ANGELA ALLEN | 503 243-2122

[January 3rd, 2007] After 30 years, we can safely bid adieu to the unpleasant connotation of the word "Mekong," as in the Vietnam War's Mekong Delta. Now it represents a fresh, pared-down cuisine a notch up from Southeast Asian street food. Prepared and presented by brother and sister Tuan and Sarah Nguyen, Mekong serves quick-but-healthful takeout or dine-in fare along fast-gentrifying Southeast 13th Avenue, which also boasts a high-end cheese shop, a wine bar/shop, Grand Central Bakery and several popular Italian restaurants.

When Mekong opened in mid-September on Sellwood's Antique Row, it was swamped with customers lusting for simple Southeast Asian food. The staff could hardly keep up with a hungry neighborhood pleased to order at the counter, sans table service. Luckily, a larger kitchen staff has popped up to deal with the heavy weekend traffic.

The restaurant's appealing design (a bamboo-pole motif frames a big table that seats about 10) harmonizes with the clean, inexpensive food. About 30 diners can sit inside, with a few more fitting at sidewalk tables.

As refreshing and affordable as the choices are—nothing tops $8.25 (garlic shrimp skewers over vermicelli noodles)—the menu is limited. We've stopped in three times and exhausted almost all combinations.















icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

Four to five rice or noodle entrees ($7-$8.25) are served with skewers or chunks of either honey-lemongrass chicken, sesame beef, garlic shrimp, pork or tofu. Choose fragrant jasmine rice dishes and you'll find fresh cucumber, lively-looking lettuce, chives, fresh tomatoes and housemade nuoc cham, a fish sauce jazzed up with vinegar, sugar, salt, fresh garlic and chili peppers.

Vermicelli entrees, served intentionally lukewarm to cool, come with a fresh little salad of lettuce, bean sprouts, cukes, slim-sliced carrots, daikon, mint and chopped peanuts.

Appetizers are predictable: crispy eggrolls with fish sauce or two fat salad rolls with a rich, plummy peanut sauce cost $3.50. Tofu rolls, for 25 cents more, are also coupled with plum-peanut sauce. Wrapped tight, they sport a fresh scallion stem tucked into the rice paper.

The Nguyens are working on obtaining a liquor license. But for now, there's iced Vietnamese coffee with enough sweetened evaporated milk to keep you revved for the rest of the day.

Mekong: A Vietnamese Grill, 7952 SE 13th Ave., 808-9092. Lunch 11 am-3 pm, dinner 5-9 pm Monday-Saturday. $ Inexpensive.

 

Rate This Story
4.62 average/13 votes

 
read all 1 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Mekong: A Vietnamese Grill”

1

The Mekong Delta is an area in Vietnam, not part of the war. And Vietnamese coffee has sweetened CONDENSED milk. Completely different.

teresa, Nov 8th, 2007 6:23am
 
 
 




OMSI
Ad

Ad

Ad

Sponsored Links: WW Personals
Musician's Market
Snowboard Jackets
Legal Tips


Recently in Willamette Week
November 21st 2008House Of Gain | Aleksey Kalenichenko’s real-estate schemes cost banks hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s still a mystery how he pulled it off.
November 21st 2008Just Add Milk | Director Gus Van Sant delivers the story of the gay-rights movement’s patron saint in his most political film to date.
November 21st 2008Core Issue | Barack Obama says the way we pay teachers is rotten. Does Bill Sizemore (Bill Sizemore?!) have the answer?
November 21st 2008Ad Nauseam | Do TV ads about hot dogs, golf clubs and rape work? We bring in the experts.
November 21st 2008WW Voters’ Guide, November 2008 | Tough choices, no brainers: Our endorsements for the general election.
November 21st 2008Unlucky Strike | The Oregon lottery is going into detox—and our state budget is along for the smoke-free ride.
November 21st 2008Jail Junkies | Who knows more about stopping property crime: Kevin Mannix or an ex-addict who stole 1,000 cars?
November 21st 2008Shipracked | Judy Shiprack wants to be your next county commissioner. Here’s what she doesn’t want you to know about a real-estate deal gone bad.
November 21st 2008Señor Smith | Low-wage Latino workers keep Sen. Gordon Smith’s family business humming. Not all of them are legal.