PUBLISHED July 24th, 2020 06:00 am | UPDATED July 25th, 2024 01:50 pm
On Eye Candy this month, we head back to Bangkok (virtually) to speak to Ottara Pyne, sommelier and beverage director at Gaggan Anand Restaurant. The Burmese American wine professional has been in the restaurant industry for the past nine years and has ventured into hosting Sunday morning shows on IGTV delving deeper (for the layman, at least) into topics like orange wine, rosé, and hybrid varietals like the Zweigelt.
Hi Ottara, please tell us a bit about your background in the industry and how you ended up in Bangkok?
Hi y’all! For the past nine years, I’ve held every job possible from line cook to bar manager, but I began working in the wine industry specifically about four years back when I started my education with the Court of Master Sommeliers. The past couple of years have been heavily dedicated to the field of natural wine, with most of my time spent working in restaurants and vineyards alike.
I ended up moving to Bangkok at the end of 2018 after working my first vintage in Oregon wine country as I was hoping to chase the proverbial high with a follow up harvest in Australia. The city has always been somewhat of a second home with my family, parents included, having all spent some time living or growing up here. At the time though, Bangkok was a layover at the time that turned into something I never could have imagined. The scene here is hungry, open-minded, excited, and thirsty for innovation and progressive flavours.
Were you always into wine? How did your wine journey play into your current role at Gaggan Anand Restaurant?
I think that wine has always been in my life in some small or great way for the past decade. I spent my junior year of high school abroad living in France and fell in love with the idea of stomping grapes and drinking wine all day, so when I returned to the US for my final year, I quickly applied to all the university winemaking programs I could before settling on Washington State University.
I spent my first year of undergraduate studying what was effectively lab-grade, conventional winemaking and was quickly disheartened by this path of study so I ended up getting a degree in philosophy instead. Incredibly useful, I know. After graduating though I fell back into wine, doing everything from waiting tables to delivering cases of natural wine around Seattle in the back of my old Subaru.
We’re a group of non-traditional sommeliers that have spent time working in so many facets of the industry; conveying this, and the collective effort of creating a pairing that matches the idiosyncratic qualities of our food is what we try to bring to every dinner.
The pairing at Gaggan Anand is always made up of low intervention and natural wine made by producers whose wines we import ourselves in order to further and fully convey our personal relationship to wine. Honestly the best thing is that at the end of the day, we’re just supporting our friends and enjoying the labours of their love.
I’m sure everyone is curious – how is working with Gaggan like?
You know it’s funny, I never expected to be working in fine dining or even at the calibre that I have found myself in the past year and a half. Gaggan’s food and his restaurant are so fuelled by his completely unique personality and the fact that everyone that he brings on to the team gets to add their own quirky self to the mix.
It’s the reason why I – having hand tattoos (or painted nails) would disqualify me from working as a sommelier in the “finer” institutions of the world – have always felt like a welcome member of the team and the experience we try to create here.
So as you can imagine, it’s been very surreal to say the least. I can’t imagine I would have the platform that I do now without all of the people that have shown me such love since I joined and to Gaggan for always allowing me to be my authentic self, no matter what.
Tell us more about your wine show on Instagram. How frequently do you do it and what prompted you to start that in the first place?
First off, thanks for watching the show! I actually started it in the midst of lockdown back in April, out of a desire to create a bit more outreach with all the people I interact with about wine over social media. It start as an attempt to best summarise how to look for and buy wines for my friends, but as soon as I aired the second episode with one of my favorite winemakers in the world (James Erskine from Jauma), I immediately saw some potential to do something really interesting and connective.
Since then, I’ve been going more in depth with topics on the series, taught some wine classes on Zoom, and interviewed some really rad guests. The show will be more focused from now, talking about pairing natural wine and food from different countries throughout Asia and their respective regional cuisines. These episodes will all feature interviews with chefs and wine professionals raised, educated, and working in these different culinary cultures in order to broaden the acceptance and normalize the discussion of pairing food with the flavors we love out here.
I try to get an episode out every weekend, so follow me on Instagram @amarottara and I’ll do my best to keep you updated.
We also love your tattoos. Do you have a favourite artist to get inked by?
Thank you, they’re getting hard to hide at this point! I’ve been getting tattooed since I was 16 but there are a few artists and friends that I would trust to tattoo me, whenever and wherever.
First off my dude here in Bangkok, Luke Satoru, the owner of Black Pig Tattoo tattooed the branch of curry leaves on the side of my face, which is one of my most sentimental pieces to date. As for back home in the States, Tessa in Brooklyn, New York, has been tattooing me for the last six years.
Brad, based in Seattle, is an incredible tattooer and a restaurant industry veteran – our friendship was founded over talks of Mezcal. Last but not least, Phil, the owner of Black Dolphin Tattoo, put in hours and sessions of work to create my whole botanical themed sleeve and the bunch of Syrah grapes that I’ve got tattooed on my hand.
We also see that you’re passionate about minority issues and are actively raising funds for the #BlackLivesMatter movement.
I’d have to attribute my strong foundation of progressive beliefs to my parents and family. My father is an immigration lawyer who has spent his entire career helping immigrants and asylum seekers in the US, and my mother is a public health doctor who has been overseeing healthcare infrastructure development for decades in Asia, so social justice is inherently integrated into the work that they do. In addition, a lot of Burmese culture was forged in the fires of protest and dissent, and I’d like to think that my heritage perhaps influences me as well.
We are seeing a massive shift in our industry and in the world right now, there is a call for justice and equality by, and for, all the voices that have been silenced for so long. The food and wine industry, like many others, is one built on privilege and access. I’ve always preached accessibility in wine but its the realisation that if we don’t do the work to actually make wine more inclusive and transparent, then these words lose their inherent meaning.
Who are your top three wine producers to watch at the moment?
This is such a difficult question because I’m always getting to taste and drink such exciting things but if I had to decisively pick it would be these:
Milan Nestarec from the Czech Republic because his wines are just chocked full of life and personality. They are truly electric. Next, Kelley Fox from Oregon because her expressions of Pinot Noir are perhaps some of the most transcendent wines I’ve ever drunk. I mentioned the third earlier, James of Jauma in the Adelaide Hills – he’s one of the most magnetic and charismatic people I have had the pleasure to know and his wines are one and the same.
Where else do you enjoy eating and drinking in Bangkok?
The yakitori chicken oyster from Toritama with a whole bottle of chilled Beaujolais, the grilled goat ribs at 100 Mahaseth and funky rum daiquiris at Tropic City, the mama noodle donut from Little Donkey, a tall can of fruited sour beer at Mikkeller, a glass of grower champagne and the chicken wings at Marchwood, the Suhring bros unbelievable
Schweinshaxe, a glass of something orange at Kang Kao, and the egg noodles with bbq pork and wontons from the woman at the end of Sukhumvit Soi 39.
Last question: was there anything else that you wished we had asked?
The only thing I wish you had asked was where my next travel destinations are after the pandemic so that I could say Singapore and get a proper list from you of all the places I need to come eat and drink at as soon as I can! Cheers!