
Photos by Jeff Scher
You’re surrounded by exposed bricks and beams, gray-tinted walls, concrete, and wood, and the tables and chairs are made from reclaimed teak. The vibe is low-key and warm, with big windows offering a romantic view of Longfellow Square lit up at night.
You can leave your assumptions about Americanized Thai restaurants at the door the minute you enter Boda, which occupies a storefront on Congress Street next to Joe’s Smoke Shop. There’s not a plastic flower or tacky travel poster in sight. Instead, you’re surrounded by exposed bricks and beams, gray-tinted walls, concrete, and wood, and the tables and chairs are made from reclaimed teak. The vibe is low-key and warm, with big windows offering a romantic view of Longfellow Square lit up at night.
We met our friends Nicole and Braden, fans of Bob and Dan’s other restaurant, the vegetarian Green Elephant, for dinner on a frosty February evening. One look at the appetizers (incongruously called tapas, the Spanish word for small plates), made it clear this wasn’t your run-of-the mill Thai place. Instead, try tiny kanom-krok quail’s eggs with soy sauce and scallions, or miang kum som-oh, bite-sized pummelo fruit salad on betel leaves topped with coconut, peanut, lime, ginger, shrimp, and shallots in a palm-sugar dressing.
Our table’s favorite was a plate of four crisply fried shrimp cakes, which were made with ground Maine shrimp combined with a red curry paste made with dry red chili, lemongrass, garlic, onion, chopped green beans, and sliced lime leaves. A light sweet-and-sour sauce added complexity and tang to the shrimp cakes, which were topped with crunchy cucumber and ground peanuts.
Among the more familiar offerings were skewers from the grill bar. Our pork satay was tender and perfectly grilled, and was served with a luscious homemade peanut sauce topped with cucumber salad. A spicy garlic-lime dipping sauce elevated salty-sweet bacon-wrapped scallops to a new and exotic level.
I know pork hocks are basically pigs’ ankles, but curiosity got the best of me and I’m glad I ordered this dish for my main course. Boda’s pork hocks braised with star anise arrived at the table elegantly plated with jasmine rice, hard-boiled egg, and tofu, along with small dishes of Asian mustard green pickles and spicy-and-sour chili-lime sauce. Simmered more than four hours in a dark stock made with “parlor spice,” or Chinese five-spice, the pork was amazingly tender; the flavors in this Thai dish of ethnic Chinese origins were layered and complex: savory, sweet, piquant. The rice proved the perfect delivery vehicle for the extra stock served with this dish.

complex flavors. Photo: Jeff Scher

Magazine Issue #
Display Title
Maine Course: BODA
Secondary Title Text
"Very Thai" Kitchen & Bar