Hai Hai, the delightful newcomer from the talented couple behind the similarly delightful Hola Arepa, is one of those charmed restaurants where nearly every one of its well-engineered components fosters a single emotion: happiness.
The vivacious, travelogue-esque food and drink. The camaraderie that blossoms out of the menu's emphasis on shareability. The service staff's all-in attitude. The tropics-in-the-Twin Cities setting. The easygoing prices.
The couple's follow-up to their Latin-flavored Hola Arepa focuses on a different corner of the globe. Christina Nguyen is of Vietnamese descent, and she and her husband, Birk Grudem, are channeling that rich cultural and culinary heritage — as well as tapping their extended travels through Southeast Asia — into their exciting new venture.
What's admirable about Nguyen's cooking is that she's skipping the whole Greatest Hits compilation.
"I disappoint people every day because I don't have pho, or bánh mì," she said. "But there are so many other restaurants that do all of that so well. At Hai Hai, we're trying to go toward ingredients, and dishes, that people can't find anywhere else."
Which explains the presence of water fern cakes, small ramekins filled with steamed rice, ground pork, mung beans, crisped-up fried shallots and sweat-inducing Thai chiles, a combination that's best described as an open-faced dumpling. Nguyen grew up eating a version of the dish, but experienced it in a new way when the couple were exploring the historic Vietnamese city of Hôi An, and the experience struck a chord.
A firsthand encounter of a much-copied, pomp-and-circumstance dish called cha ca al Vong — in the equally famous Hanoi restaurant of the same name — inspired another Hai Hai wowser. Nguyen extrapolated its principal elements (turmeric, dill, shrimp paste, fish sauce), incorporated flaky, snow-white, pan-fried cod (a favorite of hers) into the formula and added rice noodles. The results are spectacular.
The polyglot menu takes excursions away from Vietnam, culling memories of extended vacations the couple have enjoyed in Thailand and Bali. A standout is when Nguyen mimics a Balinese suckling pig delicacy. Instead of pork, she uses chicken thighs, marinating them in a full-bodied blend of Balinese aromatics (turmeric, lemongrass, coconut, lime leaves, chiles) for a day, then using the grill to forge a delectable contrast: juicy, tender meat and crackling skin. It's currently my favorite way to spend $14.