Our menu is inspired by the traditional cooking techniques and authentic ingredients of Thailand. We welcome everyone to come taste the distinctive flavors of Thai street food and experience the magic in every dish. Photography by Ely Roberts.
SAMPLE MENU
APPETIZERS
EGG ROLLS Three rolls with cabbage, carrot, bamboo shoots, mushrooms, glass noodles and ground pork, then wrapped in pastry
SALAD ROLLS Two rolls with shrimp or tofu, romaine lettuce, carrots, cilantro, cucumber and Thai basil wrapped in rice paper
POT STICKERS Five crispy house-made, pan fried pot stickers stuffed with pork, onion and cabbage
NOODLE DISHES
PAD THAI Rice noodles stir fried with egg,green onion and bean sprouts, choice of chicken, tofu or shrimp
PAD KEE MAO Fat rice noodles stir fried in house-made sauce with carrots, bell peppers and Thai basil, choice of chicken, tofu, or shrimp
PAD SEE EW Fat rice noodles stir fried in housemade sauce with carrots, egg and cabbage, choice of chicken, pork, tofu, or shrimp
CURRY DISHES
RED CURRY – GANG DANG (gf) Chicken, tofu or shrimp red curry with bamboo shoots, bell peppers and Thai basil
PINEAPPLE CURRY (gf) Chicken or tofu red curry with pineapple, bell peppers and Thai basil
PUMPKIN CURRY – PHAC TONG (gf) Chicken, tofu or shrimp red curry with pumpkin, bell peppers and Thai basil
VEGETARIAN DISHES
PAD PAK RUEM Stir-fried vegetables of the day and rice
PRA RAM Steamed cabbage, carrot, spinach, topped with a peanut sauce
Yoli in Bend brings the authentic flavors of Korea to your table, drawing inspiration from the chef’s cherished childhood memories and personal experiences. The menu predominantly features traditional Korean cuisine while also incorporating elements of modern culinary innovation.
Transport yourself to the bustling street markets and lush jungles of Asia at JIA Asian Street Kitchen. Drawing inspiration from Vietnam, China, Thailand, and beyond, their family-style dishes satisfy global cravings amidst a colorful and chic setting. Read our full restaurant recommendation of JIA Asian Street Kitchen, here.
Indulge in modern Thai cuisine amidst a vibrant ambiance at Dear Mom Cafe. The thoughtfully curated food menu reflects Thai traditions infused with Central Oregon influences and harmonizes perfectly with its selection of libations.
Photo by Tina Paymaster
SAMPLE MENU
CHEF SPECIALS
Sai Oua + Nam Prik Noom Housemade Northern Thai sausage, seasoned with herbs and spices, served with a smoky green chili dip (Nam Prik Noom)
Pork belly + Nam Jim Jeaw Crispy pork belly served with a tangy dipping sauce made
with roasted rice powder, lime and chili (Nam Jim Jeaw)
Som Tum Papaya Salad Green papaya salad with shredded green papaya, tomatoes, peanuts, dried shrimp and lime, tossed in a spicy-sour dressing
Khao Soi Crispy Chicken A Northern Thai favorite! Egg noodles in a creamy coconut curry broth topped with crispy noodles, served with crispy chicken,
pickled mustard greens, shallots and lime
Gang Hang Lay Pork Ribs Slow-braised pork ribs in a rich curry made with tamarind,
ginger and mild spices, served with jasmine rice
Pla Sam Rod Crispy fried tilapia served with our signature Sam Rod sauce,
bell peppers and jasmine rice
Chu Chee Golden, crispy tilapia topped with a rich and creamy Chu Chee
curry sauce and kaffir lime, served with jasmine rice
RICE PLATES
Crab Fried Rice Jumbo lump crab meat, cage-free egg, onion, tomato, cilantro,
zesty Thai seafood sauce, served with house broth to cleanse the palate
Panang Shrimp Sautéed shrimp in spicy panang curry with a zesty kaffir (makrut) lime flavor, sweet peas served with crispy basil, sunny-side up egg and jasmine rice
Moo Pad Prik Thai Dum Sautéed pork with a rich and aromatic black pepper sauce,
bell peppers, onions and garlic, served over jasmine rice
Thai Paella Thai style paella loaded with seafood, tomato, shallot,
galangal, kaffir lime and lemongrass
Thai OG Holy Basil Beef The old-school and traditionally spicy! Wok stir-fry holy basil ground beef, bell peppers and chilies (Pad Gra Prow), served with jasmine rice,
fried egg and a side of Thai style fish sauce (Prik Nham Pla)
Daddy’s Garlic Shrimp The best garlic shrimp ever, inspired by the famous Hawaii
shrimp truck! Served with a sunny-side up egg and spicy
seafood dipping sauce over jasmine rice
Cashew Chicken Mom’s crispy chicken stir fried with cashew nuts and pineapple,
served Thai jasmine rice and a fried egg
Photo by Tina Paymaster
NOODLES
Grandma’s Pad Thai Classic stir fry thin rice noodles, cage-free egg,
bean sprouts, chives, shallots and peanuts
Khao Soi – Coconut curry noodle A famous Northern Thai dish! Egg noodles in aromatic rich coconut
curry broth, bean sprouts, pickled mustard, raw shallots,
crispy wonton, cilantro, smoke garlic chili oil and lime
Photo by Tambi Lane
CURRY
Yellow Curry Aromatic rich curry with crispy red norland potatoes,
mixed vegetables, served with jasmine rice
Green Curry A famous and spicy central Thai dish! Curry with your choice
of meat, bird’s eye chili, baby corn, sweet peas, bell pepper
and Thai basil, served with jasmine rice
Photo by Tina Paymaster
SMALL PLATES
Chicken Skewers Grilled marinated chicken skewers served with
homemade spicy peanut sauce and Thai cucumber pickle
Midnight Chicken (Wings) Caramelized fish sauce chicken wings served with pickled vegetables
With views of Bend’s Mirror Pond, Sen is a restaurant specializing in traditional Thai-style hot pot. From the owners of Wild Rose, Sen is known for their shareable House Hot Pot Set as well as their noodle soups.
Toomies is located in the heart of downtown Bend and is well-known for authentic Thai cuisine. As the first Thai restaurant in Bend, Toomies is a popular spot for house specials such as the Crispy Fish or roasted duck.
Poke Row is a sushi restaurant in Bend’s NorthWest Crossing neighborhood. Founded by the owners of 5 Fusion and Sushi Bar, Poke Row offers fresh poke bowls and burritos.
Noi is a Thai restaurant located in downtown Bend. With multiple locations in the Pacific Northwest, Noi is known for its signature dishes such as the crispy garlic chicken.
Chomp Chomp in downtown Bend is a casual restaurant that draws inspiration from both Pacific Northwest and Japanese Northwest cuisine. Chomp Chomp is known for its innovative menu and selection of cocktails inspired by Japanese aromatics and citrus.
Dump City Dumplings is a restaurant in Bend bringing Chinese and Thai-inspired recipes to their dishes. First established in 2010 as a food cart, the restaurant today is known for its classic Pad Thai dumplings and Roujiamo pork sandwich.
Kanpai is an upscale sushi restaurant on Bend’s west side. With sushi rolls served a la carte or on tasting menus, Kanpai is a popular spot for poke bowls, specialty sushi rolls and oysters.
CHI Chinese and Sushi Bar is a restaurant in Bend, Oregon that specializes in modern Chinese and Japanese cuisine. With views of the river, CHI is a popular spot for sushi, noodles and cocktails.
Oishi Japanese Restaurant is all about variety. With an ever-expanding menu of delightful sushi as well as kitchen items, there is something for everyone. Sushi-lovers and Japanese cuisine aficionados can enjoy mouth-watering, fresh food in an elegant, yet welcoming atmosphere. Photos by Tambi Lane.
SAMPLE MENU
SASHIMI
SASHIMI COMBINATION 3 pieces each of salmon, tuna, yellowtail, albacore, white fish and octopus
HOUSE SPECIAL ROLLS
007 ROLL Salmon, cream cheese, avocado, shrimp, soy paper, deep fried and topped with special sauce
OISHI ROLL Sweet shrimp, seared albacore, yellowtail, salmon, scallop and salmon roe with garlic ponzu sauce
CRAZY ROLL Baked spicy tuna, cucumber, jalapeño, smelt eggs, deep fried and topped with house special sauce
ALBACORE LOVE ROLL Hot water seared Albacore, crabmeat, cucumber, avocado, green onion and garlic ponzu sauce
PETER PERFECTION Yellowtail, tuna, spicy tuna, cucumber, avocado and cilantro with spicy special sauce topped with fresh hand-grinded wasabi root
NOODLES
NABEYAKI UDON Japanese noodle soup with shrimp tempura, fishcake, poached egg, chicken, mushroom, green onion and seaweed
MUSHROOM UDON Shimeji mushroom, king oyster mushroom and seaweed with Japanese noodles in vegetable broth
Wild Rose is one of Bend’s most beloved spots for Thai food. The family Northern Thai recipes entice with flavors not found anywhere else. At long last, Chef Paul Itti of Wild Rose gets to cook his favorite dishes: his father’s.
Chef Paul Itti
It’s 1970, midday in the lush hills outside of Chiang Mai, northern Thailand, and a man leaves the small health care center in the countryside where he is the director and heads home. He goes straight to the kitchen to prepare lunch as he does every day, his nine-year-old son by his side. The boy’s eyes are level with the blade as his father wields it with the precision of a surgeon, slicing raw pork, then methodically moving the long blade through it, mincing it perfectly.
With a long, slender, fresh lemongrass stalk, the father whisks the pig’s blood, infusing it with the herb’s flavor. The boy anticipates his father’s masterful execution of the dish, one of his favorites, larb.
Nearly a half-century later, Paul Itti would recall those afternoons as a boy, what drove him to cook for a living, and why he chose his father’s dishes as the focus of Wild Rose, the restaurant he opened in 2013, in a low-ceilinged, century-old building in downtown Bend.
“The meat has to be perfect—he’d show me how to chop it finer,” said Itti, 56, sitting in his restaurant during a break between lunch and dinner service. “The soup had to be perfect, with the chicken tender—just right. He was picky, in a good way.”
When Itti turned 21, he moved to Seattle to go to college, just as many of his cousins had done before him. He began studying interior design, and then accounting at Seattle Central Community College. Away from school, he waited on tables at a nearby Thai restaurant. He fell in love with one of the cooks at the restaurant and married her three months later. “I said, ‘Let’s do this,’” he said. Itti graduated, worked in accounting for three months, and quit.
“I liked the restaurant a lot better,” he said. “Accounting was eight to five, and lots of numbers. I love meeting people and cooking, so I got a restaurant.”
The First Restaurant in Seattle
Itti and his wife, Ampawan, opened a Thai restaurant in Kelso, Washington, and a year later, their daughter, Rosie, was born. They wanted to leave the city to raise her, and moved to Port Townsend, where they opened Khu Larb Thai restaurant in 1989, the first Thai restaurant on the Olympic Peninsula. They were serving the dishes that Ampawan, who is from Bangkok, had cooked for the restaurant in Seattle. Itti learned from her how to make pad Thai with peanut sauce, cashew chicken, and American takes on Thai food—not the cuisine of northern Thailand, or his perfectionist father.
Over the years, Itti took up golf, and became good friends with his first golf teacher, Lyndon Blackwell. After Blackwell moved to Bend, Itti visited, loved the golf courses and the small-town atmosphere, and moved here in 2013. When he looked at the restaurant space on Oregon Avenue, part of a former J.C. Penney store opened in 1908, the landlord suggested that Itti try his hand at a new trend in Thai food.
“He said, ‘Look at Pok Pok [the widely acclaimed restaurant that began in Portland, serving northern Thai cuisine],’” said Itti. “That’s my hometown. I don’t have to look at Pok Pok, I was born in Chiang Mai. It’s in my blood.”
Itti realized that Americans’ ideas about Thai food had become more sophisticated, and as Chiang Mai has grown as a destination, its cuisine has also become more well known. The dishes that Itti had cooked at home—the ones that Rosie’s classmates would make fun of when she took them to school for lunch—were being embraced.
Now was the time for him to cook his father’s dishes. At first, he would make an annual trip to his hometown of Sanpatong, about fourteen miles from Chiang Mai, to get five spices only available in that region, as well as the curry paste made by a woman he considers to be his sister, a longtime family friend. To make the paste, she picks chilis by hand, roasts them, dries them and grinds them, just as Itti’s father once did. Now he makes the trip three times a year to keep up with demand in his eighty-seat eatery, co-owned by Rosie. (His last trip included bringing back nearly ninety pounds of the stuff in several suitcases, he said.)
The ingredients are integral to many of the signature dishes at Wild Rose, such as khao soi, a yellow coconut curry broth with egg noodles, shallots, pickled cabbage, crispy egg noodles, green onion, cilantro, lime and hot basil pork, with aromatic “holy basil” over sticky Jasmine rice and topped with a fried egg. Even as the menu and fanbase have expanded, the flavors remain firmly grounded in the family tradition. A quick review of the menu reveals “Grandfather’s tom kha soup” of coconut milk, lemongrass, galanga, kaffir lime leaves, straw mushrooms and cilantro and includes an exuberant declaration: “Our grandfather’s secret recipe!” Whenever Paul Itti sips the hot, herbaceous liquid, he’s a little boy in Thailand again, discovering why perfectionism matters.
Spork is a local favorite eatery that elevates a fusion of Mexican, Asian and American cuisine to surprising heights. From the peanut tomato curry to the spicy fried chicken to dan dan noodles to the wide variety of tacos, it’s guaranteed that Spork is going to be a spot you return to again and again. From food truck to foodie fixture, Spork and its visionary trio fused a melting pot of flavors with urban style. See Spork’s current menu.
Spork owner Erica Reilly and chef Jeff Hunt | Photo by Joshua Langlais
Article written in 2018 about Spork in Bend
Stories about Spork, a Bend favorite offering creative, globally inspired fare at an affordable price point, generally focus on the kitchen. And there have been some impressive stories, including several “best of” nods and even a profile in The New York Times. The attention is well deserved. When you eat Chef Jeff Hunt’s innovative interpretation of street food and traditional dishes from around the world, you can taste his years of travel in countries such as Spain, Japan, Vietnam, Thailand, Mexico, Ecuador and Colombia, as well as his genuine passion for what he does.
Photo by Arian Stevens
While the heart of a good restaurant may lie in its menu, a great one also needs a soul and a vision. Spork has it all. The mutual respect and complementary talents of owners Hunt and Erica Reilly, general manager and beverage guru, along with help from consultant and idea-man Chris Lohrey, elevate this casual, counter-service spot into something much more.
Our story begins in 2001 at the old Astro Lounge on Minnesota Avenue, back in the (recent) olden days when Bend was still the Wild West to most people east of the Mississippi. He was a snowboarder from Illinois. She was a bartender from Orlando. Erica was Astro’s bar manager, and Jeff was in the kitchen. (“She took advantage from her position of power,” Jeff joked.) Their relationship ended after five years, but their partnership didn’t.
Jeff went on to cook in several other kitchens including Marz, at the time considered the best restaurant in Bend. Erica and Chris (who eventually were dating, but are no longer) partnered to buy in to legendary hotspot The Grove on Bond Street in 2003. When it was time for Erica to embark on her next venture in 2009, Jeff was the clear pick for chef.
Photo by Arian Stevens
Years before food carts were parked around every corner in Bend, Spork was a pioneering and popular food truck housed in an old Airstream. In 2013, they put down roots in their current location on Newport Avenue. Already expanded once in 2015, it’s a thoughtfully designed space with high ceilings, metal and wood industrial notes and a pervasive air of cool that isn’t at all cold.
The partners were a winning combination from the start. Erica was the hospitality maven and glue holding the whole thing together, who Jeff also characterizes as “the boss lady—like in Vietnam—the one in the corner with a box of cash who everybody’s afraid of.” Jeff,of course, was the talent behind the food and oft-world traveler on a constant quest for new flavors and culinary ideas. And Chris, who Erica describes as “the visionary, tastemaker and ethos designer,” consulted on concept and design.
Photo by Arian Stevens
They set out to ensure that Spork wasn’t going to be your average restaurant, nor your average workplace. All three were longtime veterans of the industry and wanted to do things differently. Spork opened with a mission to create a deeply satisfying dining experience, as well as a commitment to quality, locally sourced, green-conscious ingredients. But just as important was making a decent living while maintaining work-life balance for themselves and a positive work environment, fair pay and ample time off for their staff.
Photo by Alex Jordan
Even if you don’t know exactly why the experience at Spork is deeply satisfying—and it is—the food itself is only a part of it. A visit to Spork is always flavored by the atmosphere, the culture the owners have created, and the deep appreciation Erica, Chris and Jeff have for each other after so many years and so much change. “We’re a special team, and it’s just as rewarding as making a bunch of money,” said Erica.“At the end of the day, we are artists more than capitalists. We have a passion for what we create on each and every level.”
Lomo Saltado | Photo by Arian Stevens
As Chef Jeff Hunt will tell you, his food is “not trying to be authentic. It’s about flavor profiles.”
Along with its extensive menu of classic Vietnamese dishes, Dang’s Vietnamese is also affordable. The restaurant is known for the best pho in Bend and generous portions of noodles.
In downtown Bend, 5 Fusion & Sushi Bar is an upscale Asian fusion restaurant. Established in 2009, 5 Fusion & Sushi is a popular spot for oysters, specialty sushi rolls and cocktails.
At High Camp Taphouse, you won’t discover your ordinary pub grub. Instead, its menu proudly features authentic Himalayan cuisine. Complementing these delectable dishes are a variety of local craft beers, along with a curated selection of beverages such as kombucha and wine.