About Little Serow
Somewhere around minute 30 of standing in line at this
    reservationless, signless, basement-level restaurant, a churlish thought
    might strike: All this for Thai food? To pay $45 per person and sit on a
    stool?
Suppress that thought and persevere. What awaits you is to your
    average Thai restaurant as Cirque du Soleil is to community theater.
    Chef/owner Johnny Monis—who is also behind our number-two restaurant, Komi
    (page 64)—is a hands-on presence, which means you can expect much the same
    vigilance as at his fine-dining restaurant upstairs.
The seven-course, family-style menu changes weekly and shows
    off first-rate meats and produce (when was the last time a cucumber
    smelled like anything?) and spices that are nearly drug-like in their
    potency. If the cooking transports you to the rugged terrain of northern
    Thailand, where Monis and his wife and business partner, Anne Marler,
    were married in 2011, the rest of the experience—electric-green walls, a staff
    decked out in thick-framed glasses, twanging bluegrass on the sound
    system—channels the vibe of a hipster party, both stylized and
    determinedly low-key. Don’t miss: Recent standouts have
    included chili relish for bundling in rice and herbs; minced pork with
    lemongrass and sawtooth; catfish with galangal and kaffir lime; and pork
    ribs marinated in Mekhong whiskey.
 Open: Tuesday through
    Saturday for dinner. Expensive. 
 
                         
                            






 
                                





