Tag Archives: Little Kitchen of Westport

“06880”‘s Newest Feature: Restaurant Tab

“06880” always looks for ways to serve our community. Readers always look for ways to find out what’s happening around town – including where to eat.

Which is why “06880” introduces today a new feature: a “Restaurants” tab. It appears permanently in two places on our home page: at the top (directly underneath “06880”), and on the right side (under “Pages”).

It’s a way to feed the hunger of our readers — for both information and food.

The drop-down menu (ho ho) includes:

  • Links directly to a restaurant’s website
  • Its social media handles
  • Its phone number
  • And a 2- to 3-sentence description (from them) about why they’re special.

Each restaurant can choose its own category. (NOTE: Restaurants pay a small fee to be listed.)

Click here (or above, or on the right side of the home page) to access the “Restaurants” tab. For more information on being listed, email 06880blog@gmail.com.

What to eat tonight? Click on our “Restaurants” tab!

Menu Moments: What To Eat At Little Kitchen

Little Kitchen — the fast, tasty pan-Asian restaurant in Compo Shopping Center — has been around more than 2 decades. (It started in an actual “little kitchen” — the old Soup’s On — on Main Street.)

Nearly every item is made in house. Cuisine includes Thai, Japanese and Chinese. In the latest installment of our continuing series, Westport nutritionist Heather Bauer serves up her top healthy picks for the popular spot.

Healthy choice appetizers

  • Small hot-and-sour (100 calories per cup), egg-drop soup (66 calories per cup) or Thai tom yum soup. NOTE: Soups are high in sodium, so if you’re salt-sensitive, pay attention.
  • 1-2 spare ribs (no more than that! — they’re 80 to 100 calories per rib). Enjoy, then pair with one of the steamed recommendations below.
  • Because Little Kitchen has a fusion menu, you can also order a house salad or edamame. Both are very healthy appetizer options.

Healthy choice entrees

  • Any dish with a steamed protein and veggies. Ask for sauce on the side; no cornstarch. Shrimp and veggies with sauce on the side is one of my favorites.
  • Moo shu chicken. If you order this steamed, mix in a little Hoisin sauce, and add light soy sauce. Request lettuce wraps instead of regular wraps if you do not order it steamed. If you ordered hot and sour soup as your appetizer, this also works as a nice sauce on the steamed moo shoo.
  • Moo goo gai pan. To order a dish that is not steamed, this is a great option. It comes with stir-fried chicken, mushrooms and lots of other veggies, but is lighter on the sauce.
  • Chicken lettuce wraps (on the menu under Appetizers): chicken, lettuce, protein/veggies, perfection. This is another top choice for a non-steamed option. Remember, no rice or other carbs in the meal; the sauce is the carb.
  • Sauteed asparagus with chicken or shrimp. Request sauce on the side; you can ask for this to be steamed.

Moo goo gai pan

Healthy sides

  • Order extra side of steamed bok choy or any steamed veggies to help fill you up.

Sushi

  • Appetizer: house salad, seaweed salad or edamame.
  • Entree: 1 naruto roll (yellowtail, salmon, tuna wrapped in cucumber) and 4-6 pieces of sashimi (ask for light soy sauce; at home, use coconut secret sauce).

Skips

  • Avoid sweet-and-sour protein choices; they are often deep-fried. Avoid egg rolls and crunchy noodles, and skip the sesame/General Tso’s/lo mein options.
  • Watch out for eggplant dishes. They seem innocent, but the eggplant acts like a sponge and absorbs way more oil than you would expect. Skip all Szechuan-style dishes; they’re cooked in a lot of oil at a very high temperature.

Additional tips, notes and tricks

  • Eat with chopsticks. It slows you down.
  • When ordering with a group, request one steamed dish.
  • Skip the rice/noodle dishes; the sauces will count as your carb.
  • When eating family-style, fill your plate with 50-75% veggies, and the rest protein. If you need to fill your plate for seconds, try to stick to only vegetables.
  • In general, order sauce on the side. Mix in the sauce served with low-sodium soy sauce.
  • If you order in, keep good condiments at home: sriracha and Coconut Secret coconut amino soy sauce as a replacement instead of soy sauce.
  • Brown or white rice? Remember that when you order dishes that come with the sauce in it, often the sauce is made with sugar and corn starch — so you don’t need the sauce and the rice. But if you choose a steamed dish and want to eat the rice, both have 200 or so calories per cup. However, brown rice has triple the fiber (about 3.5 grams per cup) and a lower glycemic index than white, meaning it takes more time to digest and will stick with you longer.
  • Try to drink 2 liters of water by 3 p.m. on days when you go out for Chinese. Your body will handle the sodium more easily.

Naruto roll

Be Careful Out There

There’s something about the Compo Shopping Center parking lot.

With scary regularity, cars plow into storefronts there.

This afternoon, it was Little Kitchen.

Fortunately, no one yet has been seriously hurt.

(Photo/Nancy Eckl)

Another Little Kitchen

How many little kitchens — er, Little Kitchens — can Westport support?

At least 2.

There’s the pan-Asian place in Compo Shopping Center. Up sprouts Leera Little Thai Kitchen, which is taking over the “Make & Mingle” storefront across from the old post office.

(Photo and hat tip/JP Vellotti)

(Photo and hat tip/JP Vellotti)

That strip of Post Road East was once home to La Villa (before that, Mr. Sandwich), S&M (and later Joe’s) Pizza, Baskin-Robbins and Häagen-Dazs.

Now there’s Finalmente, Post 154, Blue Lemon and Westport Pizzeria. Plus Leera Little Thai Kitchen.

Very quietly, that section of town is becoming a foodie’s destination. Who knew?