San Jose MD in spicy ‘Dragon Balls’ lawsuit against Los Gatos restaurant claims truth is out

A doctor suing a Thai restaurant in Los Gatos over claimed internal burns from a spicy appetizer alleged in a recent court filing that she now knows what led to the incident.

San Jose neurologist Harjasleen Walia sued Coup de Thai in July, claiming its Dragon Balls chemically burned her vocal cords, esophagus and the inside of her right nostril, leaving her with permanent injuries.

The restaurant in an October court filing denied Walia’s allegations or causing injury to her.

She claimed in the lawsuit that when she had gone to eat at the downtown Los Gatos restaurant with her friend in July 2021, the Dragon Balls were advertised as spicy, so she asked her server that they be made with less spice because she does not tolerate spicy food. The server “said that they would have the chef make them less spicy,” the lawsuit claimed.

In a recent court filing, Walia alleged that a later admission — the filing does not specify when or by whom — made clear what led to her purported burns. “A new employee who prepared the dish made an error and added additional peppers, rather than reducing them as requested,” the Nov. 13 filing in Santa Clara County Superior claimed.

A lawyer representing Walia in the case did not immediately respond to questions about the alleged extra chilis. A receptionist at Walia’s medical office declined to make her available for an interview about the matter, saying, “I think she would pass, thank you,” and hanging up.

Dragon Balls are currently described on the restaurant’s website as “spicy chicken” balls with mint, shallot, green onion, cilantro, kaffir lime leaf and chili, for $11.

Walia is suing the restaurant and its owner, along with the unnamed chef who cooked the appetizer, the unnamed waitress who took her order, and anyone at the restaurant that day or before who “in any way influenced, designed, prepared, or participated in creating the Dragon Ball dish,” according to the lawsuit.

The doctor, who specializes in treating brain injuries and headaches, alleged that almost immediately after she started eating the Dragon Balls, she “felt her entire mouth, the roof of her mouth, her tongue, her throat and her nose burn like fire,” and that her “eyes and nose watered, and she began coughing.” She began to lose her voice and was later diagnosed with internal “chemical burns” from the chilis, she claimed in the lawsuit.

Walia points a finger at Thai “bird’s eye” chili as the problematic ingredient in her Dragon Balls.

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