Billy Ngo blends his heritage with modern flair at Chu Mai in midtown Sacramento
A giant in Sacramento’s upscale dining scene, Buu “Billy” Ngo is best known for Japanese cuisine. With this year’s opening of Chu Mai — one of his most personal and complex projects to date — he draws inspiration from the food he grew up with.
“I’m mainly known for sushi because of Kru Restaurant. But I’m ethnically not Japanese,” Ngo said.
“The first job I ever had was at a Japanese restaurant, and I fell in love with the cuisine. That’s how it started. But this restaurant is actually going back to my roots.”
Ngo grew up the child of ethnic Chinese immigrants from Vietnam. He delves into where those culinary worlds collide and commingle. But, he wants the dishes not to be too literal.
“I want the flavors to be authentic, but not the dishes,” he said.
“For people like me that were first or second generation, I want the flavor to remind them of what they had at home or from mom or grandma, but done in a completely different way.”
Certainly, the presentations at Chu Mai are far from home-style. The dishes are artful, visually stunning and playful.
One example is the “egg salad” ($19), which comes as a bowl of a chawanmushi-like egg custard topped with a jumble of quail tea egg, century egg, and trout roe — egg on egg on egg. Pickled fennel and chili crisp add brightness and textural pop.
The lobster & shrimp “cheung fun” ($24) deconstructs a dim sum classic. Cool rice noodle sheets are laid with hunks of the seafood, pickled shiitake, garlic butter sauce and nuoc cham, cut into pieces with scissors at the table. The acidity of the shiitake delivers bursts of brightness.
One recent highlight was a grilled lemongrass pork steak ($48) on a generically named green sauce. But the sauce was anything but plain — intensely herbal with cilantro and anchored by the kick of fish sauce.
The bar program is equally creative, with beverage director Jose Carrasco at the helm.
“He has full control. He’s super talented. We’re doing different things, like jujubee. We’re incorporating fish sauce into a cocktail. That’s a savory element. We’re incorporating MSG, stuff like that,” Ngo said.
The dinner menu changes frequently, based on seasonality and Ngo’s whims.
“It’s completely different from when we first opened as a new restaurant,” he said.
“We have to change it to keep it fresh, because the kitchen is very small, what you see is what you get.”
The small, open kitchen is also why the restaurant opts out of lunch service, even with a small menu.
“We don’t have a whole walk-in area that’s where prep gets done, and it’s used for the line during service. During lunchtime, they’re just all prepping for dinner service.”
The kitchen may be diminutive, but the dining room is expansive, with high ceilings and kaleidoscopically colorful artwork.
“I really don’t think I chose the space. I think the space chose me,” Ngo said.
He wasn’t really looking to open a new restaurant when the opportunity arose. His restaurants — Kru, Kodaiko and Fish Face — had all weathered the affects of COVID and were running well. It should have been time for him to take it easy.
His friend Ali Reza Youseffi, a prominent local developer, was working on the development of what would become the mixed-use ARY Place, and asked Ngo if he was interested in taking over the space.
“Absolutely not,” Ngo said.
Youseffi convinced Ngo to take a look at the build-out in its raw state.
“No walls were up. You could see into the garage,” Ngo said.
Youseffi tragically died in 2018, after a battle with stomach cancer. He was 35. Two years later, Ngo’s mother also succumbed to cancer. That’s when Ngo decided to act on the new project, to honor them.
The development bears Youseffi’s initials, and the restaurant is an inversion of his mother’s maiden name, Mai Chu.
Ngo says Chu Mai was a comparatively smooth opening, but it’s never easy.
“Every opening is always the hardest the six months before and first year after. It’s hard because things change. I think we’re finally in the groove of things,” he said.
Chu Mai
Address: 1829 17th St., midtown’s Richmond Grove
Hours: 5 p.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday-Wednesday and Sundays; 5 p.m.-10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays
Phone: 916-553-7096
Website: chumaisacramento.com
Vegetarian options: Vegetarian options are peppered throughout the menu
Noise level: Somewhat loud
This story was originally published December 28, 2025 at 5:00 AM.