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Thailand: Cooking Class

Cat | Photos,Thailand | Sunday, March 11th, 2012

I really like to cook and was excited to see tons of cooking schools all over Chiang Mai. We took an all day class where shopped at the market, learned to cook five courses, and ate everything we made. It was rather hectic with everyone given lots of choices and instruction at the same time, but was great fun!


Most of the class was lots of collecting, chopping, slicing, and dicing the right foods, mixing the sauces, etc.


The cooking itself was done on a super hot wok and went super quick!


Chicken with basil


Tom kha gai soup


Thai beef salad was so refreshing – lots of raw veggies, tiny slivers of beef, and lots of lime juice!


Thai Beef Salad (Yam Neua)


David made the curry paste for his Khao Soi


Cooking and eating all day can tire a boy out


I’ve made curries before, but never made my own curry paste from scratch… requires lots of arm strength to pound the chilies and spices with the mortar and pestle.


Pleased with my green curry!


You probably don’t want to know how much sugar and coconut milk goes into sticky rice!

Thai Beef Salad Recipe (from templeofthai.com)
1 lb. decent quality steak, sirloin or other
10 (or more) fresh hot Thai chili peppers (prik kee noo), sliced crosswise very thin
2 large cloves garlic, sliced crosswise very thin
1 tbsp sugar
5 tbsp Thai fish sauce (Golden Boy brand is recommended)
5 tbsp fresh squeezed lime juice (1 medium size lime)
12 sprigs fresh mint (optional), remove the leaves and discard the stems
1 small cucumber (seeds removed), peeled and sliced thin
2 to 3 shallots, sliced crosswise very thin or 1 small red onion, sliced very thin
3 or 4 sprigs cilantro, stems removed

Preparation
1. Grill or broil the steak until medium-rare. Trim off any fat. Cool and slice thin, into pieces approx. 2 inches across and 1/8 inch thick.
2. Mix garlic, chiles, fish sauce, lime juice, and sugar in a small bowl. Add the sliced meat and toss with the cucumbers and shallots. Taste and add more fish sauce if desired.
3. Garnish with cilantro. Serves 2 to 3 as an appetizer or as part of a meal.

Khao Soi Recipe (from food.com)
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 tablespoon finely chopped garlic
2 tablespoons red curry paste or 2 tablespoons panang curry paste
¾ lb boneless chicken, cut in big bite-sized chunks
2 cups unsweetened coconut milk
1 ¾ cups chicken broth
2 teaspoons ground turmeric or 2 teaspoons curry powder
2 tablespoons dark soy sauce or 2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lime juice
1 lb fresh Chinese noodles or ½ lb spaghetti
1⁄3 cup coarsely chopped shallot
1⁄3 cup coarsely chopped fresh cilantro
1⁄3 cup thinly sliced green onion

Directions:
1 Heat the vegetable oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat, and then add the garlic. Toss well and add the red curry paste, mashing and stirring to soften it in the oil, about 1 minute. Add the chicken and cook 1 to 2 minutes, tossing now and then to brown it evenly and mix it with the curry paste.
2 Add the coconut milk, chicken broth, turmeric, soy sauce, sugar and salt and stir well. Bring to a gentle boil and adjust heat to maintain a lively simmer. Cook about 10 minutes until meat is cooked through.
3 Stir in lime juice, remove from heat and cover to keep curry warm while you prepare the noodles.
4 Cook the noodles in a large pot of rapidly boiling water until tender but still firm, as little as 2 minutes for fresh noodles and 7 minutes or more for dried. Drain, rinse well in cold water, drain again and divide the noodles among individual serving bowls. Ladle on hot curry, and sprinkle each serving with the shallots, cilantro and green onions. Serve hot and garnish with crunchy noodle nests as noted in description if using.

Best part of Thailand: the food!

Cat | Photos,Thailand | Sunday, March 11th, 2012

We had a great time in Thailand… wonderful people, wonderful history and sites, lots of bike riding, gorgeous temples, super easy public transit on the Sky Train, railways, and metro. The best part of the whole thing might have been the delicious food we ate from street vendors every day!


Pretty dragon fruit!


And it tastes good too!


Spicy beef salad (which I learned to cook in our cooking class in Chiang Mai)


Sweets for sale in the Sunday Walking Market, Chiang Mai


Everyone loves bugs!


Fried bugs aren’t too bad (way better than mushy-inside grubs, IMHO)


Local markets bundle veggies and spices needed for popular soups like Tom Yum or Tom Kha


Durian fruit – giant and stinky


Many find durian’s scent so vile that it’s banned on public transit, subways, and many hotels. Doesn’t taste too bad though.


My first time seeing and tasting mangosteen… yum!


Thanks go to Laura and Tanya for telling me to seek out these goodies! Luckily, they were everywhere so I didn’t actually have to search. They’re baked/fried rice and coconut balls, often with sweet corn or spring onions inside. Delicious, and gluten free like so much Thai food. We ate them often!


Pad Ga-prao / Pork with basil – perhaps my favorite new Thai dish! I don’t see this in restaurants around Seattle, but loved it everywhere in Thailand… including for breakfast! Simple and delicious.


Fresh sliced mango with chili and sugar… also simple and delicious!


I think Thais must have a big sweet tooth just like me!


The dried squid-mobile! We saw similar bikes peddling racks of dried squids when we biked Vietnam in 2008. Must be a best practice!

Consider this Thai food, part 1! We have many more food to rave about once I go through more of my pictures!

Thailand and Cambodia, now sick

Cat | Thailand | Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Had a great time, but somehow got sick upon the return. I’ve had fever, headache, eye pain, joint and muscle pain, bruising, diarrhea, nausea, and loss of appetite. I (thankfully!) haven’t had any vomiting, rashes, or bleeding (the three remaining symptoms of Dengue Fever). I feel like I can rule out malaria as I’ve had that multiple times and this feels bad but not as terrible as malaria. Such fun. I’ll feel much better once healthy again and once I can get a full night’s sleep after jet lag is done.

Also, Thailand and Cambodia were great! Makes me want to do a longer trip again sometime soon!

Now in Thailand!

Cat | Thailand | Monday, January 9th, 2012

David and I are now in Thailand and the trip is off to a great start! We just missed our flight to Cambodia, so we’re now killing time at the airport before our rescheduled flight. :) We spent our first day eating lots of street food, visiting temples (Wat Pho and Wat Arun are beautiful!), booking travel, wandering the market, walking around town, and even managed to fit in a night of Muay Thai (Thai boxing, the national sport). Money in Thailand is currently 30 bhat = $1US.

Bangkok Hotel: We stayed at the Shanti Lodge, near the river, at the recommendation of friends. Double room with fan 750 bhat. Nice rooms with fan, balcony, en suite bathroom, good cafe downstairs, free WIFI, kid-friendly (lots of couples with kids age 0-4), etc.

Muay Thai: Tickets to the nightly matches were 1600 bhat per person for ringside. Rather expensive, but seemed like a cultural must see. (We were content to do second class, but they kept steering us away and even gave us the discount for ringside so price was comparable. Can’t argue with that). I’ve never watched any boxing or fights before and it was surprisingly engaging. Definitely entertaining, though I’d probably recommend checking the program to see what weight of fighters was happening if you have the flexibility in your schedule. (We had the light weights, and the heavier fighters of the evening definitely packed more of a punch and much stronger kicks). There was one total knock out where one of the guys almost had to be carried out on a stretcher, but aside from that scary moment it was totally fun.

Street food so far has been lovely, plentiful, and cheap! Egg and banana crepes 10bt, grilled squid with chilies 10 bt, pork meatball skewers 10 bt, mango with chili 10 bt, grilled meat (pork?) 10 bt, fresh ground and brewed coffee 25 bt, etc. Not sure if we’re going to find many veggies from street food vendors… might need to hit a sit down place if we want to add some balance to our diet.

Wat Pho was awesome and home of a really enormous reclining Buddha. He was so huge that I could only get part of his head in a single shot, standing as far back in the temple building as possible. Ditto for his pretty toes… so huge they filled the entire frame of the camera. :) We caught sunset over the Wat Arun… hard to imagine anything more scenic than that!

Next up: Flight to Siam Reap, Cambodia so we can visit the temples at Angkor Wat for a few days. The flight is are rather expensive, but Angkor Wat comes highly recommended by good people like Mez so we’re making the trip! The grounds cover 25 sq km of space… huge! Looking forward to it!

Heading to Thailand!

Cat | Thailand | Tuesday, December 27th, 2011

After years of talking about visiting Thailand, I finally booked tickets this week for a trip leaving next week! For now, David and I have a rough itinerary of flying Korean Air to Bangkok, visiting Cambodia for Angkor Wat, then returning to Thailand to visit Chiang Mai and maybe one of the islands off the southern coast. More details coming soon!

© 2007 Traveling Cat