About Thai Taste
Meals :
Foreingers may know Tom Yam Kung,
a famous, original Thai spicy sour soup that has for a long
time been an export commodity from Thailand.
Some pcople take to Thai food immediately, others find the
pungent and spicy taste, laden with garlic and chillics,
a bit of a challenge. Almost all Thai food is cool,cd with
frcsh ingredients, including vegetables, poultry, pork,
and some beef. Plenty of herbs are used along with lime
juice. lemon grass and fresh coriander to give the food
its characteristically tangy taste. Fish sauce or shrimp
paste may be added to make dishcs taste salty. Throughout
Thailand, rice is eaten with almost every meal. Coconut milk is a main ingredient of Thai cuisine. and all kind of curries are mixed with coconut milk.
It is also used in Thai desserts. However, if you don't have a penchant for sweet desserts, opt for a plate of
fresh Thai fruit instead to end your meal.
A Thai meal is a communal affair, during which a group of diners will
share several dishes, including steamed white rice. A century
ago, meals were eaten by hand, pressing the rice into small
round balls. Today a spoon and fork are used for cating
rice, with chopsticks being used for Chinese-type noodles. Thai food differs from region to region. Unlike the north
and north-east, where glutinous rice is popular, Thai folk
in the central area prefer the plain, fragrant variety,
most commonly stcamed.
Taste
of North
Most northern dishes are generally milder than those of
others regions and patterned Burmese influence. Rice is
always the main with curries being secondary to the meal;
but the northern people prefer khao Nieo,
a steamed
glutinous rice, kneaded into small balls and used to soak
up sauces and dips.
Kaeng Hang Le, is a spicy pork curry that
relies on ginger, tamarind, and turmeric;
Khao Soi, a curry of egg noodles and meat that also originated in Burma, is heavily laced with coconut cream, and served with spring onions,
pickled cabbage and slices of lime;
Miang (tea leaves) is also Burmese and is eaten as an hors d'oeuvre;
Nam Phrik Ong, another delectable accompaniment, is a northern-style chilli-dip served with dried shredded pork and freshly cooked vegetables.
The exclusive method fin-serving northern food is on a
Khan Toke (small circular table). It is normally set up in lavish surroundings. Diners sit on the floor around the table and help themselves to assorted dishes; perhaps a minced meat dish seasoned with chilli, a salad, and numerous sauces.
Taste of Northeast
Taste of Northeast (Isan) food reflects
the influence of neighbouring Laos in a number of dishes.
Glutinous rice is the staple diet, and all food is highly
seasoned. This is supplemented by a heady mixture of strong
bitterness and saltiness, creating an excitingly forthright
taste locally known as saeb.
Sam Tam (green papaya salad), is one of
north-eastern Thailand's favourite dishes that has became
popular nationwide, and even in Thai restaurants overseas.
This is a spicy salad made from raw papaya, dried shrimp,
crab, lime juice, garlic and chillies. For the genuine Isan
version, Pla Ra, fermented fish, is also added to the dish;
Lap, is minced meat, chicken or pork, cooked
in heavily seasoned dried chillies, lime juice and fish
sauce
Nam Tok medium rare barbecued meat is cooked
with spicy sauces, lime juice, fish sauce and dried chillies;
Kai Yang, or grilled chicken, is another
dish that is always ordered after the formula of Lap, Nam
Tok and Sow Tam. Bathed with herbs and sauces, it is eaten
with a sweet sauce used as a dip.
Taste
of central plains
The central region also has what is termed the royal cuisine,
a more sophisticated version of regional cuisine. Influenced
by the kitchens of the Royal Court, dished are elaborately
prepared, making it as much an art form as a culinary masterpiece.
As the largest agricultural area in the country, rice is
an essential element of every meal. Various kinds of curries
are used to bring- a splash of variety.
Kaeng Phet, or curry, is eaten with rice;
Tom Yam, the most frequently ordered dish
all over Bangkok, is mixed with kung or shrimp, fish and
chicken and is flavoured with lemon grass chillies and kaffir
lime: leaves;
Kaeng Khieo Wan, a spicy green curry with
ingredients comprised of coconut milk,
sweet basil and chillies;
Tom Kha Kai, a thick coconut milk curry made from chicken or meat with lemon grass;
Kaeng Som , a spicy-sour soup with fresh vegetables, shrimps or fish;
Kaeng Liang, a traditional herbal, mild and spicy soup with vegetables;
Phat Phak, or fried vegetables with oyster sauce, and Phat Prieo Wan, sweet and sour versions, are best known to complement rice and curry;
Yam, this spicy salad dish is full of torpedo-shaped chillies, is quite popular and often ordered with a pre-dinner drink;
Nam Phrik, the most original Thai dish of
all, offers an array of different versions, all incredibly
pungent to a foreign nose.
Taste
of the South
The people of the southern peninsula are known for being
impetuous. They talk fast and act fast have a spice and
zest for life. Southern cooking seems to reflect these characteristies
to a certain extent.
Vegetables are taken raw or cooked. The most notable is
the large tree-grown bean known as Sato, a hit like garlic
because everyone knows when you've been eating it.
Kaeng Tai Pla,quite famous among southern
curries is cooked from fish kidneys with added vegetables;
Kaeng Luang, a yellow curry with fish and
bamboo-shoots. If you have a delicate palate, approach this
dish with
extreme care;
Muslim dishes are of course common in this
strongly Islamic region.
Khao Mok Kai, exhibits strong Middle Eastern
influences with its saffron rice and marinated chicken;
Kuai Tieo Khaek, noodle curry, inspires
thoughts of India, though it is believed to have originated
in the Malay peninsula.
Desserts
:
Most Thai folk like sweets. Unlike the rest of a Thai meal,
desserts are similar in most regions of Thailand. Many recipes
include coconut milk so people who are dieting should he
aware of this and try the seasonal fresh fruits instead.
A few dessert samples include Sangkaya Fait Thong,
or
custard in pumpkin; Mimi Bual Chi is banana cooked in coconut
milk and bua loi phuak, or taro balls in coconut cream.
Fruit
:
Fruit is important in the Thai diet and is plentiful
all year round.
All year round : Pomelos (large grapefruits),
tangerines, guava, a variety of bananas, papaya, coconuts,
watermelons, rose apples, sapodilla, star fruit, crab-apple,
tasty pineapples, grapes and apples.
Seasonal : Rambutan, a hairy-skinned fruit
is in season May to July mangosteen has a dark purple skin,
but delicate white sweet flesh inside and is in season from
May to September; mangosteen when green or when ripened,
is in season in April and May.
Durian, the king of fruits, has delicate creamy flesh making
it one of the most popular of Thai fruits, ill season in
June and July; lichee, originally a cold-weather fruit is
in season from April to June .
Where to Taste
Finding good Thai, and Chinese dishes, is quite easy. Many
Thai like to eat out in something that visitors will find
very interesting. It is a great experience and the food
is tasty and inexpensive.
Yaowarat :
Bangkok's "Chinatown" street houses offer
the best Chinese food in the city, both inexpensive restaurants
and on the cheapest food stalls.
Noodles, seafood and, at lunch time, dim-sum dumplings dominate
the menus. At night the neon glow from hundreds of hawker
stalls electrifies the atmosphere of the streets. Seafood
stalls line the pavements and sukiyaki stalls are equally
thronged. Birds nest soup is nutritious and always popular
with locals and visitors alike. Khao Tom, or boiled rice,is
available every night -just waiting for the "night
owls" who like to have an early morning snack.
Phahurat :
If Yaowarat is Chinatown, then Phahurat is "Little
India!" A short walk takes you from one food world
to the other. The Phahurat area accommodates a number of
authentic Indian restaurants, particularly northern Indian
cuisine. There are also interesting alternatives serving
Punjabi and Pakistani fare.
Sukhumvit :
This road has just about verything to offer in the way of
food. Starting from Soi 4, Nana), an enclave of Pakistani
and Middle Eastern restaurants fills the sois (small lanes)
with the aroma of spices. Further up the road, Indian cuisine
takes over, with restaurants offering both northern and
southern Indian specialities.
European restaurants are interspersed offering Italian,
French, British, German and Mexican food along both sides
of the street. American food is featured in fast-food outlets
and in hotels.
Bang Lamphu :
Known mostly to foreign back-packers, Khao San road is the
place to find the most economical accommodation and guest-houses,
visited by folk who know about Bang Lamphu. Most eating
places in this area cater for budget-conscious diners. Many
guest houses on Khao San road have open-air cafes serving
standard Thai and Chinese dishes. Other kinds of food to
be found in this area include Indian,Jewish and Muslim.
Silom :
One of Bangkok's major business areas linked with several
streets lined with food stalls and leading restaurants.
Seafood stalls sprout along the roadside near Saladaeng
Intersection after sunset until late into the night. Nearby,
Convent Road offers everythmg from Indonesian food to the
Gaelic fare of an Irish tavern.
At Thaniya Road, close to Patpong, a crush of Japaniese
restaurants has turned this road into a lively walkway for
Japanese visitors and sushi lovers.
Siam Square :
The shopping area is crammed with medium to highpriced restaurants
.as well as international fast food. Economically priced
American, European, Italian, Mexican and Chinese food can
be found here.
Dozens of food stalls sell meatballs, grilled squid, and
fried bananas along the walkways that connect the streets.
 
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