Wings News
Fort Worth pop-up Kits Kitchen serves inspiring Asian fusion food
A Fort Worth pop-up kitchen is bringing some intriguing flavors to life: Kits Kitchen, which sets up inside Kung Fu Saloon at 2818 Morton St. every Monday and Friday from 6 pm-11 am, serves fusion combinations blending Asian, Mexican, and Southern flavors to create unique dishes like tacos soaked in pho broth, or Thai chicken satay gyro.
"Kit" is Kitthaya Phakornkham, who became inspired by the pandemic and a desire to “eat good.” In COVID times, he started preparing and selling food from his grandma’s backyard.
He’s a self-taught cook from a Lao family where family-style dinners and helping out in the kitchen were a big part of the culture.
“Cooking was not my first passion, I just knew I was good at it,” Phakornkham says. “What keeps me inspired is the creativity behind it. Not a lot of people have the energy or efforts to constantly change their menu and come up with new ideas."
Kits Kitchen started out with small jars of seasoning in March 2022. Months later, it became a full-fledged food pop-up in Fort Worth. The kitchen also opens for parties and other events if booked in advance.
Though the menu is typically not the same every time, there are some favorites that make a reappearance, including noodle dishes, phorria tacos (birria tacos simmered in a pho broth), and Lao fried pork ribs. According to Phakornkham, he can also “fry chicken wings with my eyes closed.”
When it comes to flavor combinations and deciding what does and doesn’t work for a dish, imagination plays a part.
“Coming up with dishes is just my imagination, some dishes work some don’t,” he says. “Once you’ve been in the kitchen so long you know what flavors can merge and what flavors are overpowering for each other.”
The pop up is a part time thing that Phakornkham opens when he’s not at his full-time job, which is also in the food industry at a chicken spot in Haltom City. He's also working on another concept called Smash Bros, a collaboration around burgers with Big Dawgs, a food truck that specializes in Southern food.
"It keeps the idea fresh when you merge two different kitchens together and are able to come out with different food items," he says.
"I’m an artist; every food item I put out is a work of art."