Thai Food

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Menu thai food today - Tom Kha Kai



Tom Kha Kai
(Chicken Coconut Soup)

Combine half the coconut milk with the galangal, lemon grass, and lime leaves in a large saucepan and heat till boiled. Add the chicken, fish sauce, and sugar. Simmer for about 4 minutes, or until the chicken is cooked, and then add the remaining coconut milk. Heat just to boiling. Place the lime juice and chilli paste in a serving bowl and pour the soup over them. Garnish with cilantro leaves and crushed chilli peppers.



Tom Kha Kai : Ingredients


2 cup (16 fl oz/500ml) coconut milk
6 thin slices young galangal (kha on)
2 stalks lemon grass (ta-khrai), lower portion, cut into 1 inch (2.5-cm.) lengths and crushed
5 leaves fresh kaffir lime leaves(bai-ma-krut), torn in half
8 oz.(250 g) boned chicken breast, sliced
5 tblsp. fish sauce (nam pla)
2 tblsp. sugar
1/2 cup (4 fl oz/125 ml) lime juice
1 teaspoon black chilli paste(nam phrik pao)
1/4 cup cilantro / coriander leaves (bai phak chi)
5 green thai chilli peppers (phrik khi nu), crushed

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Mi Krop (Crispy Noodles)


Mi Krop
(Crispy Noodles)
In a wok or deep fryer, heat the oil to 375 F (190C) and fry the rice vermicelli until puffed. Remove and set aside. Combine the sauce ingredients in a large skillet and cook over medium heat for 4 minutes until of a syrupy consistency. If desired, fry the beaten eggs in a small pan. When cooked, remove and slice into strips. Set aside. Add the noodles to the sauce and mix quickly so that they are evenly coated. Place on a serving dish, sprinkle with garnish, and lay the egg strips on the top. Serve immediately.

Mi Krop : Ingredients

oil Garnish
6 oz (200g) rice vermicelli
2 eggs, beaten (optional)
Sauce
1/4 cup chopped green onions
1/2 cup (125 ml) vinegar
1/4 cup chopped red bell pepper
1/2 cup (125 ml) sugar
1/8 cup chopped chives
1 teaspoon salt
4 oz (125g) fried tofu, diced
1 teaspoon tomato paste
1 tablespoon chopped cilantro/coriander leaves ( bai phak chi)
3 tablespoons garlic pickle (krathiam dong)

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Sangkhaya Fakthong


Sangkhaya Fakthong

(Custard Pumpkin)

Cut a slice off the top of the pumpkin, remove the seeds and most of the soft pulp. In a mixing bowl, light whisk the eggs, add the sugar, salt and coconut cream and stir until well blended. Pour the mixture into the pumpkin and cook in a steamer (for approximately 20 minutes) until the custard is set. Make 4 serving

Sangkhaya Fakthong : Ingredients
1 small pumpkin
5 chicken eggs
1/3 cup palm sugar
1 pinch of salt
1 cup coconut cream

Bua Loi Phuak

Bua Loi Phuak
(Taro Balls in Coconut Cream)
Put the glutinous-rice and flour and the corn flour in a bowl. Add the mashed taro and knead to a soft dough. Add the mashed taro and knead well. Roll into tiny balls and set aside. Dissolve the palm sugar and salt in the coconut milk over a low heat, stirring constantly. Bring to the boil and add the taro balls. When they are cooked, remove from the heat. Serve hot. Make 4-6 servings.
Bua Loi Phuak : Ingredients

1 cup cooked taro, masked
2 cups glutinous-rice flour
1 cup corn flour
4 cups coconut milk
1 cup palm sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
6-8 teaspoon water

Kluai Buat Chi

Kluai Buat Chi
(Banana Cooked in Coconut Milk)


Slice the bananas lengthways, then in haft. Pour the coconut milk into a pan, add the sugar and salt. Bring to the boil, add the bananas, bring back to the boil for minutes and then remove from heat. Serve hot or cold, Make servings.
Kluai Buat Chi : Ingredients

2-3 small, slight green bananas
4 cups/ 900 ml thin coconut milk
1cup / 175 g sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt

Thai Desserts




Recipes included herein feature some of the most popular Thai dishes that grace the menus of any Thai restaurant.

Introduction






Thai food is internationally famous. Whether chilli-hot or comparatively blands, harmony is the guiding principle behind each dish. Thai cuisine is essentially a marriage of centuries-old Eastern and Western influences harmoniously combined into something uniquely Thai. The characteristics of Thai food depend on who cooks it, for whom it is cooked, for what occasion, and where it is cooked to suit all palates. Originally, Thai cooking reflected the characteristics of a waterborne lifestyle. Aquatic animals, plants and herbs were major ingredients. Large chunks of meat were eschewed. Subsequent influences introduced the use of sizeable chunks to Thai cooking.
With their Buddhist background, Thais shunned the use of large animals in big chunks. Big cuts of meat were shredded and laced with herbs and spices. Traditional Thai cooking methods were stewing and baking, or grilling. Chinese influences saw the introduction of frying, stir frying and deep-frying. Culinary influences from the 17th century onwards included Portuguese, Dutch, French and Japanese. Chillies were introduced to Thai cooking during the late 1600s by Portuguese missionaries who had acquired a taste for them while serving in South America.
Thais were very adapt at 'Siamese-ising' foreign cooking methods, and substituting ingredients. The ghee used in Indian cooking was replaced by coconut oil, and coconut milk substituted for other daily products. Overpowering pure spices were toned down and enhanced by fresh herbs such as lemon grass and galanga. Eventually, fewer and less spices were used in Thai curries, while the use of fresh herbs increased. It is generally acknowledged that Thai curries burn intensely, but briefly, whereas other curries, with strong spices, burn for longer periods. Instead of serving dishes in courses, a Thai meal is served all at once, permitting dinners to enjoy complementary combinations of different tastes. A proper Thai meal should consist of a soup, a curry dish with condiments, a dip with accompanying fish and vegetables. A spiced salad may replace the curry dish. The soup can also be spicy, but the curry should be replaced by non spiced items. There must be a harmony of tastes and textures within individual dishes and the entire meal.

Preparing Thai Food

>> Titbits
A simple kind of titbit is fun to make. You need shallots, ginger, lemon or lime, lemon grass, roasted peanuts and red phrik khi nu chillies. Peeled shallots and ginger should be cut into small fingertip sizes. Diced lime and slices of lemon grass should be cut to the same size. Roasted peanut should be left in halves. Chillies should be thinly sliced. Combinations of such ingredients should be wrapped in fresh lettuce leaves and laced with a sweet-salty sauce made from fish sauce, sugar, dried shrimps and lime juice.
>> Dips
Mixing crushed fresh chillies with fish sauce and a dash of lime juice makes a general accompanying sauce for any Thai dish. Adding some crushed garlic and a tiny amount of roasted or raw shrimp paste transforms it into an all-purpose dip (nam phrik). Some pulverised dried shrimp and julienned egg-plant with sugar makes this dip more complete. Serve it with steamed rice, an omelette and some vegetables.
>> Salad Dressings
Salad dressings have similar base ingredients. Add fish sauce, lime juice and sugar to enhance saltiness, sourness and sweetness. Crushed chillies, garlic and shallots add spiciness and herbal fragrance. Lemon grass and galanga can be added for additional flavour. Employ this mix with any boiled, grilled or fried meat. Lettuce leaves, sliced cucumber, cut spring onions and coriander leaves help top off a salad dressing.
>> Soup Stocks
Soups generally need good stock. Add to boiling water crushed peppercorns, salt, garlic, shallots, coriander roots, and the meats or cuts of one's choice. After prolonged boiling and simmering , you have the basic stock of common Thai soups. Additional galanga, lemon grass, kaffir lime leaves, crushed fresh chillies, fish sauce and lime juice create the basic stock for a Tom Yam.
>> Curries
To make a quick curry, fry curry or chilli paste in heated oil or thick coconut milk. Stir and fry until the paste is well cooked and add meats of one's choice. Season with fish sauce or sugar to taste. Add water or thin coconut milk to make curry go a longer way. Add sliced eggplant with a garnish of basil and kaffir lime leaves. Make your own curry paste by blending fresh (preferably dried) chillies, garlic, shallots, galanga, lemon grass, coriander roots, ground pepper, kaffir lime peels and shrimp paste.
>> Single Dish Meals
Heat the cooking oil, fry in a mixture of crushed chillies, minced garlic, ground pepper and chopped chicken meat. When nearly cooked, add vegetables such as cut beans or eggplants. Season with fish sauce and garnish with kefir lime leaves, basil or balsam leaves. Cooked rice or fresh noodles added to the frying would make this a substantial meal.