Surprise! New Favorite Takeout Salad Resides at Wok Town
Categories: First Bites
| Jackie Sayet |
| The "Stir Fry Miso Beef Salad" ($8.95) is a fresh and crisp unexpected find at an Asian takeout place |
Now imagine a menu with light options like crisp salads, low oil stir fries, noodle soups, finger-licking edamame tossed in a creative selection of light sauces, and house-made -- I repeat -- house-made dumplings and spring rolls.
Add back the customary late night hours, Chinese cooks manning the kitchen, convenience, and fast service, and you have an unusually hard to find, though simple at its core, Asian fast food concept. Welcome to Wok Town, in downtown Miami.
The "Stir Fry Miso Beef Salad" is labeled with a daisy icon on the menu, meaning "low oil" i.e. a smaller amount of oil than usual is used for the dish. The only stir-fried component is the beef, making this salad crunchy and refreshing on a backbone of both raw and blanched vegetables, including strips of red and green bell pepper, white onion, and carrots, on a bed of chunky squares of iceberg lettuce topped with bean sprouts. The ringer could be the greens of leeks, which are known to be discarded in favor of their caramelization-friendly white base. After a quick shock in boiling water, these tops become your new go-to salad topping, with a pleasant snap and supremely mild onion flavor. The sesame, ginger, and scallion dressing brings it all together. It could get addictive.
| Jackie Sayet |
| Come to mama, 'mame. |
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| Jackie Sayet |
| Bite me. |
| Jackie Sayet |
| Tender tendrils. |
Of course this pleasant mix of offerings isn't just a fluke, some fortunate crack of a cookie. Israeli restaurateur Shai Ben-Ami and Columbian-born handbag designer Nazly Villamizar (his wife, who is preggers and working the register, too!) own and operate Wok Town. Arriving in Miami in 2001, Ben-Ami began at News Cafe on Lincoln Road, working for Mark Soyka and then Asian eateries, Miss Yip and Domo (previous tenant in the Sra. Martinez space.) The idea for Wok Town was hatched about six months ago.
| Jackie Sayet |
| Ben-Ami and Villamizar (left to right) peek through the only "Cuban Coffee" Asian pick-up window. |
The menu is designed to be simple, with a few sections like "Start to Wok" (appetizers,) "Positive Wok" (healthy options like salads and steamed vegetable bowls,) "Boxes & Bowls" (fried rice items, and noodle soups and stir fries,) and "The Main Wok" (classic Chinese and Thai stir fries like proteins or vegetables in black bean sauce, orange peel, and coconut curry.) It appears basic, but amounts to about 30-40 items when you take into account all possible combinations. For an extended lunch hours (11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., Monday - Friday), a $9.99 special offers one selection from Positive Wok, Boxes & Bowls, or Main Wok, plus an Asian coleslaw, cup of soup, or veggie spring roll, and brown or white rice. A "Happy Hour" menu of group-priced food, not alcohol yet, aims to draw crowds during 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. They're open until 10:00 p.m., a rare find in our city center.
In the future, the couple plans to add a website, a beer and sake license, outdoor seating (permitting is in process,) Sunday hours, and Friday and Saturday late night service (open until 3:00 a.m.,) to capitalize on the business La Moon solely enjoys.
Ben-Ami adds, "After a night out, what could be more amazing?"
Wok Town
(305) 371-9993
119 S.E. 1st Ave.
Miami (Downtown)
| Jackie Sayet |
| Villamizar designed Wok Town's vibrant, industrial look. |
































