Categories
Thailand

Day 36 – Deep fried rice crackers with dipping sauce

Deep fried rice crackers with dipping sauce

Click on image for full size version
Click on image for full size version
 Paste
 3 Coriander Roots, finely chopped
 15g Garlic, finely chopped
 30g Dried red spur chilli, re-hydrated and finely chopped
 1/2 Tsp Black pepper corns
 1/2 Tsp Salt
 Preparation
 80g Mince chicken
 1 Cup Coconut cream
 1 Tab Vegetable Oil
 1 Tab Curry paste (above)
 1 1/2 Tab Tamarind juice
 1 1/2 Tab Palm sugar
 15g Red onion, finely chopped
 1 Tsp White sesame seeds
 15g Roast peanuts, ground
  1. In a mortar make the paste. Pound the black pepper until it is a fine powder
  2. Add red spur chilli and salt. Pound to a paste
  3. Add Coriander root, and garlic. Pound to a fine paste and put to one side
  4. In a wok fry on a medium heat put 1 tab of paste per serve with vegetable oil until it is fragrant
  5. Add coconut cream and chicken. Cook until chicken is cooked
  6. Add red onion and cook until oil forms around bubbles
  7. Add peanuts, tamarind and palm sugar. Taste and adjust
  8. Serve with deep fried rice cakes or toasted dry bread snacks. Use sesame seeds as garnish
Categories
Thailand

Day 36 – Tumeric soup with chicken (Gai Tom Kamin)

Tumeric soup with chicken (Gai Tom Kamin)

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1 Chicken thigh
1 Lemongrass, ‘crushed’
10g Turmeric
10g Red onion
4 Cups Stock
1/2 tab Lime juice
  1. In a pot put stock, lemongrass and red onion together on a high heat and bring to a boil
  2. Add chicken and bring back to the boil
  3. Add turmeric and turn the heat to low
  4. continue to heat at a very low temperature, skim off the fat and scum that gathers at the top. Continue to heat for about 1.5 hours
  5. Serve when required. Just before serving add approximately 1/2 tab of lime juice
Categories
Thailand

Day 36 – Curry Pork Neck Southern Style

Curry Pork Neck Southern Style

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Paste
7g Dried bird’s eye chillies, Soaked in water, finely chopped
10g Very spicy chillies, finely chopped
7g Garlic
10g Red onion, finely chopped
1 Coriander root
4g Galangal ginger
1 Lemongrass, white only, finely chopped
1Tsp Kaffir lime skin, finely chopped
3g Black pepper corns
7g Turmeric
1/2 Tsp Salt
1/2 Tab Shrimp paste
Preparation
1 Tab Vegetable Oil
1 Tab Paste (above)
2 Cup Stock
130g Pork Rib meat
4 Kaffir lime leaves
1/2 Tab Fish sauce
1 Tsp Palm sugar
  1. Place black pepper in the mortar and pound to a powder
  2. Add dried chillies and salt and pound to a paste
  3. Add very spicy chillies and lemongrass and pound to a paste
  4. Put the rest of the paste ingredients in the mortar and pound to a paste. Put to one side
  5. In a wok on high heat put vegetable oil
  6. Put paste in pot and cook until oil changes colour
  7. add stock and ribs and turn to low heat
  8. Season with fish sauce and palm sugar. Taste and adjust
  9. Add kaffir lime leaves and serve
Categories
Thailand

Day 35 – Out and about – Bridge over Khwae Yai River

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Click on any of the images for the full size version.

Going to the grave yard was actually quite moving.  Looking at the ages of all of the Australian troops and understanding how they must have suffered in the heat at the hands of their captors.  It was great to see that some of the graves are clearly regularly maintained as the constant polishing of the brass has worn out the embossing on some of the badges had started to wear out.

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At the bridge there was a farmer moving his cattle along.  He stopped for me to take his photo after I had chased his ‘beasts’ around trying to get a 1/2 decent shot.

 

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Categories
Thailand

Day 35 – Out and about – Palm sugar plant

The boat tour took us to a palm sugar farm. We had the opportunity to see palm sugar being made, how it was farmed and a really fit guy running (the only way to describe it) up a tree. Great to see how that sugar that we use so much is produced.

Boat repair and production shop in the palm sugar plant
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The newest labour force for the palm sugar trade.  Perhaps if Thai cooking doesn’t work out this might be her new calling?

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Categories
Thailand

Day 35 – Out and about – Damnoen Saduak Floating Market

 

Pim did a great job of sorting out a van to take us outside Bangkok for the day.  Stop 1 (except for the coffee) was the floating market.  The floating markets where great.  Pim organised for 300b ($10) the whole group to have a boat down the canals.  It was a really brilliant morning with fruit, vegetables, pancakes, fish, and chicken all on offer down the canals.   Any of the photos can be clicked on to get a full size version

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Categories
Thailand

Day 32 – Menu

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Today’s menu was a Thai style barbeque with small pieces of squid, prawns and pork neck to be dipped into the various dipping sauces.  The sauces are all great but are best served with certain types of meat.

Red meet and pork is great with the rich flavours and earthiness of the Eastern style spicy and sour dipping sauce

Pork is best with Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce where the complex flavours of the sauce can come out

And a great, fresh Seafood dipping sauce with…. seafood

The Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce makes a really great Thai-Style Sukiyaki Soup and Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Stir Fry

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Uncategorized

Day 36 – Out and about – Upside down ice cream (I will find out the real name)

This place was impressive. With the monks wandering around the car park and, in fact, a car park that turns into a night market it will be a place that deserves a revisit… I fear I’m going to run out of time.

Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version
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Thailand

Day 33 – Non-cooking day

I still have to update the blog with the recipes.  I will get to this on Sunday.  James is in Bangkok and we decided to show some paper who’s boss..

Bangkok shooting range in one of the army barracks for 3000b ($100) you shoot 3 types of handgun,  .45mm, .9mm and a ’38’. Two clips in the 9mm & 45 and 15 rounds in the 38.  As James said ‘the quickest $100 you can blow in Bangkok’.  They did offer a M16 at 2000b ($65) but I think we had already illustrated to the paper that we shouldn’t be messed with.

Categories
Thailand

Day 32 – Seafood dipping sauce

Seafood dipping sauce

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Click on image to open a full size version
50g Green Chilli
13g Coriander
15g Garlic
17g Lemongrass
120g Sugar Syrup
100g Fish sauce
120g Lime Juice
  1. In a stone mortar and pestle pound chilli, coriander root, garlic and lemongrass
  2. In a bowl combine mortar contents, sugar syrup, fish sauce and lime juice. Put in a serving dish
Click on image to open a full size version
Click on image to open a full size version
Categories
Thailand

Day 32 – Eastern style spicy and sour dipping sauce

Eastern style spicy and sour dipping sauce

Job_5829-named
Click on image to open a full size version
100g Tamarind Juice
80g Fish sauce
80g Palm Sugar
2Tab Chilli Powder
1Tab Aromatic sticky rice powder
6g Saw Coriander, finely chopped
35g Red onion, finely chopped
6g Chinese coriander, finely chopped
6 Kaffir lime leaves, stem removed and very finely chopped
  1. In a pot bring the tamarind and palm sugar to the boil. Boil until all the palm sugar is dissolved. Put to one side to allow to cool slightly
  2. When cooled enough that you could put your finger in the mix add the sticky rice powder and stir in
  3. Add chilli powder, saw coriander, Chinese coriander, fish sauce and red onion and stir in. move to a serving dish
  4. Place finely chopped kaffir lime leaves to top of sauce
Click on image to open a full size version
Click on image to open a full size version
Categories
Thailand

Day 32 – Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce

Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce

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Click on image to open a full size version
250g Red spur chilli
70g Garlic
70g Red onion
70g Bird’s eye chilli
15g Coriander root
80g Pickled garlic ‘juice’, vinegar mix from pickled garlic
50g Pickled garlic
150g Thai chilli sauce
150g Fish Sauce
150g Oyster sauce
50g Thai seasoning sauce(or Maggi seasoning sauce; Coles link here)
80g Soy sauce
350g White vinegar
250g White sugar
40g Soy bean sauce
3tab Sesame seed, dry fried in wok until brown
  1. Place all ingredients in a blender and blend until they are well combined (about 5 minutes)
  2. Pour contents of blender into a pot and bring to the boil. Boil until the sugar is dissolved
  3. Pour the contents of the pot through a strainer and squeeze out as much liquid as practical. Place vegetable meat from strainer into the blender and blend further. Attempt to gain a smooth consistency
  4. In a bowl combine the liquid from the filtering through the strainer and the newly blended vegetable meat. Place in a bowl for serving

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Categories
Thailand

Day 32 – Pantai Sukiyaki Stir Fry

Pantai Sukiyaki Stir Fry

Please click on image for full size image
Please click on image for full size image
2 Tab Vegetable oil
1 Clove garlic
Selection Meat and seafood, cut into fine pieces
2Tab Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce
1/2Tab Soy sauce
1/2 Cup Chicken stock
1Cup Egg noodles
1 Egg
  1. Make the Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce and put to one side
  2. On  a high heat place garlic, and vegetable oil in a wok and cook until garlic is fragrant
  3. Add noodles and egg and stir vigorously
  4. Add soy sauce, meat, stock and sugiaki sauce. Taste and add more sugiaki sauce if required. Serve

 

Categories
Thailand

Day 32 – Thai-Style Sukiyaki Soup

Thai-Style Sukiyaki Soup

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Click on image to open a full size version
2Cups Chicken stock
1Cup Egg noodles
2 Spring Onions, roughly cut
1Cup Cabbage, roughly cut
3 Mushrooms
1 Egg
3 Fish balls
1 Squid, cut to your taste
3Tab Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce
  1. Make the Pantai Sukiyaki Dipping Sauce and put to one side
  2. Place stock, cabbage, fish balls and mushrooms in a pot and bring to a simmer
  3. Add egg, squid and mushrooms and cook until the squid is cooked
  4. Add spring onion, noodles and sugiaki sauce. Taste and add more sugiaki sauce if required. Serve
Categories
Thailand

Day 31 – Menu

Click on image for full size copy
Click on image for full size copy

Today James arrived.  Although it’s rude to leave the poor guy floundering in Bangkok without a guide I felt it was more important to update the blog…. OK…… truth be told, he was flagging after crossing several timezones and going from Swedish, no dark summer to Bangkok no cold hot season.  We went back to the hotel and I’ve put today’s menu up… Here you go (time for bed for me)….

Roast coriander pork (Pick lab moo)
Northern style red curry pork belly (Kaeng Lee Hung Moo)
Not quite spaghetti and meat balls – Thai style

We put a little lime juice with the Roast coriander pork to take some of the fire out of it. if you like a real ‘zing’ add more paste to this recipe and get ready to blow your mind.

Categories
Thailand

Day 31 – Roast coriander pork (Pick lab moo)

Roast coriander pork  (Pick lab moo)

Click on image for full size version
Click on image for full size version
Paste
1 Tab Szechuan pepper
1/2 Tsp Roast coriander seed
1/2 Tsp Roast cumin seed
10g Dried bird’s eye chillies
20g Red onion
10g Garlic
8g Galangal ginger
1/2 Tsp Salt
Preparation
100g Pork mince
1 Tab Vietnamese coriander
2 Tab Spring onion
1 Tab Saw Coriander
2 Tab Coriander
1 Tab Paste (above)
1 Tab Vegetable oil
1/2 Tab Fish sauce
2 Tab Chicken stock
  1. In a stone mortar and pestle pound Szechuan pepper, coriander seeds, and cumin thoroughly until they are a fine dust
  2. Add dried chillies, bird’s eye chillies and salt, pound again until mix is a paste
  3. Add onion, ginger and garlic and pound to a paste.  Put to one side
  4. On a medium heat add oil to a wok
  5. Add 1 Tab paste to the oil and stir until the oil changes colour
  6. Reduce to a low heat and add pork and stock. Cook until pork to cooked
  7. Add fish sauce. Taste and adjust
  8. turn off heat and add all coriander and spring onion and serve
Categories
Thailand

Day 31 – Northern style red curry pork belly (Kaeng Lee Hung Moo)

Red curry pork belly (Kaeng Lee Hung Moo)

Click on image to see full size version
Click on image to see full size version
Paste
2 Tab Dried red Spur chillies
1 Tab Red spur chilli pepper
1 Lemongrass, finely chopped
¼ Tsp Galangal ginger, finely chopped
1-2 Shallots, finely chopped
1 slice Kaffir lime rind, finely chopped
1-2 Cloves Garlic, chopped
1 Coriander root, chopped
1 Tsp White pepper
1 Tsp Roasted coriander seeds
½ Tsp Roasted cumin seeds
¼ Tsp Shrimp paste
¼ Tsp Salt
Preparation (1 portion)
150g/td> Pork Belly, cut into 1cm squared, skin and fat included on the cubes
10g Ginger, finely sliced
30g Pickled garlic juice
2 Pickled garlic bulbs, pealed and crushed
30g Curry paste (above)
5g Shrimp paste
1 Tab Tamarind juice
2 Tab Palm sugar
2 Tab Roasted peanuts
1 1/2 Cup Chicken stock
  1. In a stone mortar and pestle pound coriander seeds, cumin and peppers thoroughly until they are a fine dust.
  2. Add lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime, and coriander root to mortar and pound until there isn’t any obvious sinew.
  3. Add dried chillies and salt pound unit pieces of chilli cannot be made out from the rest of the matter.
  4. Add shrimp paste and pound to mix in the paste. Put to one side
  5. Mix the ginger, garlic, curry paste, shrimp paste and stock in a pot with the pork.
  6. On a low heat simmer the pork mix with the lid on
  7. After 1 hour add peanuts and sugar put lid on and continue simmering
  8. After 1:30 minutes (additional 30 minutes to the last step) add tamarind
  9. Once there is fat sitting on the top of the simmering pot take off the heat (over 2 hours)
  10. Place in a bowl and serve
Categories
Thailand

Day 31 – Not quite spaghetti and meat balls – Thai style

Not quite spaghetti and meat balls 

Click on image to see full size version
Click on image to see full size version

This curry has been used in Jim Thompson’s house restaurant as a special by Chef for over 6 years.  It was a best seller.  It really is something you have to try, there is a good reason you charge 240b (little less that $10 but here it’s expensive) for it.  This can be used on spaghetti or on it’s own.  It’s really very special.

Paste
20g Dried red spur chillies, rehydrated by soaking in salt water and draining, finely chopped
10g Red onion, finely chopped
15g Garlic, finely chopped
1 Coriander root
6g Galangal ginger, finely chopped
1/4 Northern Style Fermented Soybeans Cakes (Tua Nao ; ถั่วเน่า), roasted on open flame until brown crust is formed
1 Tsp Salt
Preparation (1 serve)
1 1/2 Tab Paste
100g Minced pork
2 Tab Vegetable oil
1 Cup Chicken stock
1 Tab Palm sugar
1 Tab Tamarind juice
70g Small green tomatoes (quite sour), cut in 1/2
50g Italian tomatoes, quarters, sweet and juicy
  1. Make the paste by pounding in a dried chillies and salt until it makes a paste
  2. Add coriander root, garlic, onion, galangal and pound to a paste. Put to one side
  3. On a high heat put oil in a wok
  4. Add paste to the wok and keep moving until the oil changes colour
  5. Turn the heat to medium and add pork. Cook until pork is just cooked by massaging into the pork with spatula (a little pink is okay)
  6. Add tomatoes and stock. Cook until the tomatoes until their juice rises to the top. Add more stock if the mix dries out
  7. Add sugar and tamarind juice. Taste and adjust. Add more stock if required
Categories
Thailand

Day 30 – Menu

Chicken blood and feet for green curry
This one doesn’t appear on today’s menu

 

There isn’t a stand out dish today. I guess if I was pushed the cups would be it, they are very easy (other than the cups) and very tasty. I think if you come to my place for a dinner party the first thing you are going to see will be these.
Eastern style pork soup
Stir fry noodle with prawn curry
Stir fry noodles with mince beef and golden surprise
Crunchy spiced beef cups

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Thailand

Day 30 – Crunchy spiced beef cups

Crunchy spiced beef cups

Click on image for a full size version

Crunchy Cups
1/2 Cup Rice flour
3/4 Cup Plain flour
1 1/4 Cup Lime stone water
1 1/4 Palm sugar
1/2 Tsp Salt
1 Tsp Black sesame seeds
1 Brown onion, cut into quarters
1 Tsp Salt
Filling
150g Minced pork
1 1/2 Tab Fish sauce
2 Tab Lime juice
1 Tab Fragrant sticky rice flour
1/2 Tab Chilli powder
2 Tab Tempura Flour
4 Thai ‘saw’ coriander leaves, finely chopped
  1. Make teh cups by mixing all the ‘crunchy cups’ mix together in a bowl with a whisk until it is smooth. Put to one side
  2. To make the cups you need one of these and then you do this. Basically you get the cup mold very hot in the oil. you pull it out, emptying the oil in the cups. Dab it on some paper to remove oil from the bottom of the mold and then dip it in the batter. Leave it there long enough to cook some batter on the molds and then put the molds in the hot oil to cook. The cups will either fall off or, with a little encouragement come off and cook until they are golden brown. Repeat
  3. Make the filling mix by putting the meat in a bowl and adding the rest of the ingredients. Massage the ingredients into the meat. Form balls about 1cm in diameter and deep fry at a medium temperature. Take care that the balls don’t stick on the bottom. When balls are dark brown remove, drain and place in a cup
  4. These can be dressed with deep fried very finely chopped red onion and kaffer lime leaves
Categories
Thailand

Day 30 – Stir fry noodles with mince beef and golden surprise

Stir fry noodles with mince beef and golden surprise

Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version
80g Minced beef
1/4 Brown onion, small cubes
2 Cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 Spring onion, finely chopped
3 Sprigs Chinese celery, finely chopped
2 Tab Vegetable oil
120g Thick egg noodles
3g Curry powder
1/2 Cup Stock
1 Egg yolk (golden surprise)
1 Tab Corn flour
1 Tab Water
1/2 Tab Soy sauce
1 Tsp White sugar
1 Tab Oyster sauce
2 hand fulls Coursley cut curly lettuce
  1. In a small bowl mix water and corn flour. If more water is required add more water, the mix should be the thickness of single cream. Put to one side
  2. Place the lettuce on a plate ready to receive the noodles. Put to one side
  3. In a wok on a high heat add 1 Tab vegetable oil to the wok. Cook the oil until it is smoking. spread oil around wok by moving the wok around
  4. Put noodles in wok and spread out to resemble a noodle pancake. Move wok to prevent sticking. When the bottom is brown flip the pancake.
  5. When this side is brown move the noodles quickly with a spatula to separate
  6. Remove the noodles from the wok with a spatula and place on top of the lettuce
  7. Make an indent (a cup with the noodles that will hold the yolk) in the middle of the noodles and place the egg yolk in the middle (photo below)
  8. Turn the heat to medium and, in the wok add the remaining vegetable oil (1 Tab)
  9. Add garlic to the wok and keep moving until it becomes fragrant
  10. Add beef to wok and keep moving. Cook to 30% (still very pink)
  11. Add brown onion and combine
  12. Turn the heat to a low heat and add stock, soy sauce, oyster sauce, sugar and curry powder and stir. taste and adjust. If the mix gets too dry add more stock
  13. Add the corn flour mix gradually string in after each addition until the desired sauce thickness is obtained
  14. Place meat over the egg and noodles and serve
Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version
Categories
Thailand

Day 30 – Stir fry noodle with prawn curry

Stir fry noodle with prawn curry

Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version
3 Large prawns, ‘de-pooed’ and shelled
1/4 Brown onion
1/2 Red spur chilli, coursley sliced
3 Chinese celery stalks, roots removed, remainder finely chopped
2 Spring onions
1/2 Tab Curry powder
2 Cloves garlic
4 1/2 Tab Evaporated milk
2 Tab Thai chilli paste oil
1 Chicken egg
1/2 Tab Sugar
1 Tab Soy sauce
1/2 Tab Oyster sauce
2 Tab Chicken stock, more if required at end
  1. In a small bowl mix evaporated milk, egg, sugar, soy sauce, 1 Tab (half) chilli oil and oyster sauce and put to one side
  2. In a wok on a medium heat add vegetable oil to the wok
  3. Add garlic to the wok and keep moving until it becomes fragrant
  4. Add prawns and onion to wok and cook until the prawns start to become pink
  5. Add curry powder and stock, toss in with prawns
  6. Add evaporated milk mix from above and boil
  7. Add remaining vegetables and chilli oil, briefly cook.  Add extra stock if too dry
  8. Add 1 splash of vegetable oil to give the meat a shine and serve
Categories
Thailand

Day 30 – Eastern style pork soup

Eastern style pork soup

Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version
Pork Preparation
130g Meaty pork ribs
Chicken stock to cover pork in pot
1 Lemongrass stalk, bashed with the back of a knife
1 Galangal root (the part you don’t use in cooking)
3 Kaffir lime ‘branches’
1 Brown onion, cut into quarters
1 Tsp Salt
Preparation
1 Lemongrass, white only, finely chopped
6 Bird’s eye chillies, smashed (optional)
4 Cherry tomatoes
2 Whole dried chillies, lightly fried
1/4 Red onion
4 Kaffir lime leaves
2 Thai ‘saw’ coriander
1 Tab Galangal ginger, finely sliced
Boiled pork (above)
2 Cups Stock (from boiling pork)
1/2 Cup Tamarind water
1 Tab Fish sauce
1/2 Tsp Chilli Powder
  1. On a high heat bring to the boil the stock and add the pork, lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime, onion and salt. Reduce the heat to a simmer
  2. Reduce the heat to a simmer and scoop off any scum that forms on the surface. Allow to simmer for at least 1 hour
  3. On a medium heat remove pork from the stock and place in another pot with 2 cups stock and tamarind water and bring tot he boil
  4. Add fish sauce, tomatoes, galangal, onion, and lemongrass and bring to the boil
  5. Add chilli powder and bring to the boil. Taste and adjust
  6. If you want the soup to be more spicy add the smashed bird’s eye chillies.  Add kaffir lime and saw coriander and serve
Categories
Thailand

Day 27 – Out and about – People doing their stuff – Food….

OK… there are no food standards here

Click on image to see full size version
Click on image to see full size version

If you own a  wok and some basic tools you can go and setup anywhere and start selling green curry (or anything else you want really).  I should have used flash on this guy but he was having too much fun when I pointed the camera at him and I didn’t want to delay the shot.  He is making a (and click to get the full size to see) squid curry, nose to tail.  You not only take your life into your own hands with these guys but you could well be being served anything.  I doubt it includes rats.  I will try to get a shot of the rats, they are the smallest most pathetic looking vermin I have seen.  I can’t see anyone trying to use them as food.

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Thailand

Day 27 – Out and about – People doing their stuff – Road side seamstress

All over Sukhumvit (where the course is and I tend to hang out) there are these ladies making the modifications to your finery that you require.  No changing rooms, no niceties, just a tape measure, some pins and a sewing machine.  This one’s electric but (and I will try to get a photo) I have seen one of the old singer foot powered one on the side of the road.  Really it doesn’t require a shop front in a major shopping centre filling Westfield’s pockets (not the shop keepers’ pockets).  In this respect the Thai’s have it nailed.

Click on image for full size copy
Click on image for full size copy
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Thailand

Day 27 – Out and about – People doing their stuff – Selling dried fish

Everywhere you look in Bangkok there’s a photo of someone trying to make a living.  I think I am going to try to put entries for every weekend on people in Bangkok doing their stuff.

Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version

This lady can be found selling dried fish to locals on the main drag between the tourist ferry and Wat Poh (reclining Buddha).  Everywhere else in the world there would be hundreds of dodgy guys trying to sell you any number of tourist trinkets but this is a living city, it has people doing ‘city’ jobs and needing their daily necessities.  Below is the fish she was selling, I have no idea how to use them but I guess they are delicious:-)

Click on image for full size version
Click on image for full size version
Categories
Thailand

Day 29 – Menu

Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version

The duck curry today was delicious. It is more or less a red curry with duck as the base but it has the sweetness of a massaman curry. The best place to get the roast duck is from a Chinese restaurant. If you really don’t want to do that, use roast pork with the fat trimmed and crackling removed.

Today’s dessert was nice but only in small amounts. It has a sweetness with the crunch of the corn and the water chestnut and then the saltiness of the coconut cream topping (snow). For me 2 squares were enough but still very nice.

Roast duck red curry
Stir fry vegetables, Northern Thai style
Pork fried bread
Snow on the grass

 

Categories
Thailand

Day 29 – Snow on the grass

Snow on the grass

Click on image for a full size version
Click on image for a full size version
Green water
6 Padanas Leaves, coursley chopped
1 1/2 Cup Water
Sugar syrup
1 Cup Water
1 Cup Sugar
3 Padanas Leaves
Preparation (6 serves)
1/2 Cup Water chestnut, chopped into small cubes (the size of a corn kernel)
1/2 Cup Corn kernels, cut from cooked sweet corn. Al dente
1 Cup Mung bean flour
1 Cup Green water (above)
1 Cup Syrup (above)
1 1/2 Cup Coconut Cream
1/2 Cup Water
1/4 Tab Salt
1/4 Cup Corn flour
  1. Put the syrup water, sugar and padanas leaves to boil and thicken on a high heat.  Stir occasionally
  2. Make the green water by combining the green water padanas leaves and water in a blender. Blend until the leaves are the size of tea
  3. Filter the water through a strainer to remove the large pieces of padanas leaves
  4. It helps to filter the water through muslin or a coffee filter however small pieces of padanas leaves do not impact the dish significantly. Put to one side
  5. In a pot mix together the green water and the mung bean flour
  6. In a heavy bottom pot on a high heat mix together water chestnut, corn kernels, and syrup. Gradually add the green water mix and stir until the mix thickens significantly. Quickly fill your molds (in our case padanas leaves made into 3cm squares and stapled
  7. In a heave bottomed pot WITHOUT heat mix together the corn flour, salt, water and coconut cream
  8. Put the mix on a medium heat and keep moving
  9. Once the mix resembles a white icing mix take off the heat and quickly top up the molds to make the ‘snow’ on the grass. Refrigerate
  10. Once the mix is chilled remove from the molds to expose the snow and the grass and serve
Categories
Thailand

Day 29 – Pork fried bread

Pork fried bread

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Click on image for a full size version
Paste
1 1/2 Tab Garlic, finely chopped
2 Tsp White pepper corns
3 Coriander root
Preparation, 4 serves
200g Pork mince
4 Chicken eggs
8 Slices stale white bread (dry out in the fridge), remove crusts & cut into quarters
1 Tab Paste above
1/2 Tab White sugar
1 1/2 Tab Soy sauce
Vegetable for deep frying
  1. Make the paste by pounding in a mortar the white pepper corns until powder
  2. In a bowl massage 1 egg, 1 tab paste, white sugar and soy sauce into the pork
  3. Spread the pork mix onto the white bread to a thickness of about 2mm ensuring you go all the way to the sides. Prepare all the bread and put to one side
  4. Break the remaining eggs into a bowl and beat until combined
  5. Heat the deep frying oil on a high heat to a high temperature and then reduce to medium
  6. Place the top (pork side) of each piece of bread (only egging the top) in the egg mix and then top down into the deep fryer
  7. Fry until the top is golden brown and then turn over and fry until golder brown
  8. turn the heat to high and fry for an additional 30seconds on high and remove quickly.  Serve

This can be served with a  dipping sauce of finely chopped baby cucumber, red spur chillies and red onion immersed in sugar syrup.  Offsets the oil nicely and makes this dish more ‘adult’.

Categories
Thailand

Day 29 – Stir fry vegetables, Northern Thai style

Stir fry vegetables, Northern Thai style

Click on image to see full size copy
Click on image to see full size copy

This dish you can use any vegetables you like.  It is made quickly to maintain the colour and texture of the vegetables.  Below is a suggestion of vegetables only.

8 Sweet peas, ‘deboned’ and top & tailed
3 Broccoli flowers
1/4 Large carrot, peeled and coursley chopped
3 Baby corn, halved
4 Fresh shitake mushrooms
3 Garlic cloves
2 Tab Vegetable oil
1 Tab Soy sauce
1 Tab Oyster Sauce
1/2 Tsp White sugar
2 Tab Chicken Stock
  1. Quickly blanch all the vegetables and put to one side to drain
  2. Quickly, in a wok put vegetable oil on a high heat
  3. Add garlic, and cook until it starts to turn golden brown
  4. Throw in all the vegetables and toss quickly to combine with oil and garlic
  5. Add soy, oyster and sugar. Toss until the sugar is dissolved, if the sauce is too dry add more stock. Taste and adjust
  6. If you want to thicken up the sauce (Chinese style) add a few drops from a 1 Tab corn flour/2 Tab cold water mix and mix in.  Ad more if the sauce require to be more thick
  7. Serve