Review: Laotian-style barbecue seizes the spotlight at Kra Z Kai’s in Corona - Los Angeles Times
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Review: Laotian-style barbecue seizes the spotlight at Kra Z Kai’s in Corona

Laotian beef jerky with fried rice, papaya salad and a combo plate with sticky rice from Kra Z Kai's.
Laotian beef jerky with fried rice, papaya salad and a combo plate with sticky rice from Kra Z Kai’s.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)
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Restaurant Critic

Youthful and energetic, Musky Bilavarn ping-pongs around his small Laotian restaurant, Kra Z Kai’s in Corona, like a dervish: There he is manning the gas grill in the kitchen, there he is taking a phone order at the counter, there he is refilling your iced tea before you even notice the cup is half-empty.

Much of his energy, it seems, is spent explaining Kra Z Kai’s (pronounced Crazy Kai’s, the “Kai†rhymes with eye) menu to new customers, who stumble into the restaurant’s blandly sleek dining room with only a vague notion about Laotian cooking.

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It’s similar to Thai food, Bilavarn tells them with his implacable grin, only different.

Laotian restaurants are elusive in the United States, but a spot like Kraz Z Kai’s is an even rarer bird: a suburban meat palace devoted exclusively to the aromatic, umami-intensive universe of Laotian-style barbecued meats.

Four-year-old Kai helps his dad, Musky Bilavarn, inside the family's Laotian barbecue restaurant, Kra Z Kai's.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

Kra Z Kai’s is probably the only Laotian barbecue restaurant in Southern California, maybe even the country, Bilavarn tells me. California has the largest population of Laotian Americans of any state (around 60,000 as of the 2010 U.S. Census), with sizable communities in the Bay Area, Sacramento, Los Angeles, San Diego and the Inland Empire, many settling in the state as part of Laos’ post-civil war diaspora of the late ’70s. With few well-defined Laotian enclaves in California, though, Laotian cooking is still hard to find outside the family kitchen.

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Bilavarn, who was born in Laos and grew up in Riverside, learned to cook from his mother, a veteran of Vietnamese and Thai restaurant kitchens. Like his mother, Bilavarn spent years in professional kitchens and was most recently managing a Papa John’s before he opened Kra Z Kai’s last summer in a shopping center just off Interstate 15. Bilavarn has devoted his first restaurant to Laotian grilled meats for personal reasons: He’s passionate about barbecue and cooking it for an underserved Laotian community.

The pork BBQ short rib at Kra Z Kai's Laotian barbecue restaurant in Corona.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

Because Laos is landlocked between Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Myanmar and China’s Yunnan province, its cuisine is unsurprisingly multicultural. It most frequently overlaps with Thailand’s northeast Isan region, home to a majority ethnic Lao Isan population.

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In the United States, such Lao culinary touchstones as sticky rice, papaya salad and laap (or larb), the meat salad widely regarded as the unofficial national dish of Laos, are commonly regarded as Thai specialties. Grilled meats are a common feature of Laotian cooking, especially the street food you’ll find at bustling night markets of cities like Vientiane and Luang Prabang, where extravagant piles of chicken and pork line the grills.

Apart from the menu, the most distinguishing feature of Kra Z Kai’s, tucked next to a barbershop at the edge of a strip mall, is the aroma of garlic, lemongrass and grilled beef that settles inside the dining room in a heady, fragrant haze.

Laotian-style beef dip, a staple of Laotian family gatherings and parties, is served at Kra Z Kai's in Corona.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

What you’re smelling is the Laotian-style beef short ribs, thin-sliced flaps steeped for 48 hours in a garlic-infused oyster sauce marinade that are grilled to the perfect and precise point of caramelization. There is beef dip, quintessential Laotian party food, boneless slips of grilled meat served with an intensely herbal chili-cilantro lime sauce. A gentle swish in the sauce sets off a flavor catalyst: a whomp of garlic, a high-note jolt of citrus and the tender, smoky char of well-done beef. Scoop up a pinch of sticky rice with your fingers and roll it into a crude ball before dunking it in the sauce.

For Angelenos who venture into Riverside County only once a year for Coachella, the thing that might inspire a 40-something mile drive into Corona is the house-made sausage, a crusty-edged, brat-size link of coarsely ground pork, onions and leeks. You’ll find variations on the pork sausage at many Laotian-Thai restaurants; Bilavarn’s version is first-rate, its fattiness neatly punctuated by the bright, sour perfume of lemongrass.

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Glazed barbecue chicken wings, thickly lacquered in a sweet, shiny oyster sauce glaze, are as easy to snack on as popcorn. And speaking of snacking: Try the Laotian-style beef jerky — fried, grizzled meaty strips whose salty soy sauce notes deepen with every chew. Like everything else, the jerky pairs naturally with a clump of hot sticky rice, dispensed at Kra Z Kai’s as freely as paper napkins and toothpicks. (“The Lao eat more sticky rice than any other people in the world!†the restaurant’s menu boasts.) Sticky rice is the main vehicle for moving great quantities of grilled meat into your mouth: dense, plastic-wrapped snowballs of it come with the caramelized pork ribs, barbecued chicken thighs and marinated grilled beef.

The Laotian-style papaya salad at Kra Z Kai's in Corona is a crisp, fragrant muddle of sweet, sour and spicy flavors.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

Bilavarn also makes an intensely fragrant, crisp papaya salad. The stringy green shreds, laced with chopped cherry tomatoes and crunchy fresh longyard beans, are tossed with a light dressing of chiles, fish sauce and pungent shrimp paste — a brilliant, super-funky muddle of sweet, sour and spice.

The last time I drove the 91 Freeway into Corona, over the hills that are the color of toast in the summer that turn mossy-green with the winter rain, past the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and the big box stores of Anaheim Hills, a man standing outside Kra Z Kai’s stopped my party on our way out. He was squinting at an oversize poster in the restaurant’s window with the phrase “ເຊີນà»àºŠàºšâ€ (“Enjoy!â€) printed in the undulating curves of standard Laotian script above a well-lighted portrait of glistening pork sausages. The man pointed to the restaurant: “What is this place?†he asked. “Is the food in there any good?â€

It’s Laotian-style barbecue, sir, and it’s very good.

Kra Z Kai’s BBQ

Musky Bilavarn, owner of Kra Z Kai's, a Laotian-style barbecue restaurant in Corona.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)
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A small counter-service restaurant in the Inland Empire brings Laotian-style barbecue to Southern California.

LOCATION

1218 Magnolia Ave., #110, Corona, (951) 268-6968

PRICES

Laotian sausage $8.99; beef dip $11.99; beef short ribs $11.99; pork ribs $9.49; barbecue chicken $7.99-$8.99; Laotian papaya salad $7.99

DETAILS

Credit cards accepted. Lot parking. No alcohol.

RECOMMENDED DISHES

Laotian sausage; papaya salad; beef dip; barbecue chicken

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