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Written and Photographed by Richard Barrow
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Chinese Chicken on Rice (khao man gai)
ข้าวมันไก่
We have been doing the Friday Lunchtime Thai Menu
for just over three months now. Normally we buy three or so dishes and
then share these among us. This time we have opted for a couple of one
person dishes as there was only two of us today. The first is an old
favourite called khao man gai or Chinese Chicken on Rice. It is
not quite as simple as chopping up some boiled chicken and placing it
on some cooked rice. What makes it unique is the way the rice is
cooked. You first fry some garlic in hot oil until it is golden brown.
Then add the uncooked rice for about three minutes making sure that you
stir well. Then transfer this to a standard rice cooker where you add
chicken stock instead of plain water. The stock comes from boiling the
chicken earlier. You can buy two versions. Boiled chicken or fried
chicken. For this one, you use a brown soybean sauce. This contains hot
chili, ginger, fermented soybean, vinegar and dark soy sauce. The
standard dish costs 20 baht though this one cost us 25 baht as we asked
for extra chicken.
Chicken on Yellow Curry Rice (khao mok gai)
ข้าวหมกไก่
As an alternative, I sometimes like eating this yellow curry version
which we can buy from the same shop for the same price. This is "khao
mok gai" or Chicken and Yellow Rice. A local muslim family run this
very popular shop. They are usually sold out by two in the afternoon.
The yellow comes from turmeric powder. To cook "khao mok gai", you fry
some garlic in a pan until golden brown. You then stir in the rice,
turmeric curry powder, salt and chicken pieces. You then transfer this
mixture to an electric rice cooker. You add the chicken stock and cook
for about 20 minutes. This one is fried chicken so you use the sweet
red chili dip which is made from sugar, red chili, garlic, vinegar and
salt. Both dishes come with a bowl of chicken broth.
Khanom Tuay Foo
ขนมถ้วยฟู
Today's dessert looks quite appetizing though I found it a bit dry.
There are two versions of this Thai dry cake. They look much the same.
They are Tuay Foo and Pui Fai. The difference is that the one we had
today has shredded coconut and the other one has duck eggs instead.
Other ingredients include wheat flour, sugar and condensed milk. The
mixture is spooned into aluminum molds and then steamed for about 15
minutes. Visit thai-blogs.com next week to see what we will choose to eat on Friday.
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