Chicken Curry (gaeng gari gai)
มัสมั่นไก่
Despite the increase in food prices, we somehow managed to stay within budget for our weekly Friday Thai Lunch
in the Paknam Web offices. The curry today is one of my favourites and
is easy to cook as long as you can buy the curry paste ready made. In
Thai it is called "gaeng ga-ri gai". The word "ga-ri" comes from the
same language root as our own "curry". If you are wondering, "curry"
comes from a Tamil word and so therefore suggests that this aromatic
curry has an Indian origin. The curry paste has more spices than the
average Thai curry. Ingredients include dried chillies, shallots,
garlic, galangal, lemon grass, ginger, coriander seeds, comin seeds,
curry powder, salt and shrimp paste. You can cook this dish with either
chicken or beef. The other main ingredient is the potato. I like eating
this dish with what the Thai call a "roti" rather than with rice. The
side dish is traditionally cucumber relish. We bought this one for only
20 baht, though at the shopping mall, this curry with roti is about
40-50 baht.
Prawns and Mung Bean Noodles (kung ob wunsen)
กุ้งอบวุ้นเส้น
This is a good dish that uses the transparent wunsen noodles. It
seems easy to cook and I will try one day. What you have to do is fry
some coriander roots, ginger, peppercorns and onion in a wok until
fragrant. Remove these and then add the mung bean noodles to the wok
together with a seasoning of salt, sugar, light soy sauce and oyster
sauce. Add the shrimp and keep tossing so that it doesn't burn. Now
place all the ingredients into a clay pot. Cover and cook for about 30
minutes. This dish cost us 25 baht.
Stuffed Bitter Gourds in Pork
แกงจืดมะระยัดไส้หมู
I wouldn't eat this dish by itself but it is a good accompaniment
with something else. The Chinese bitter melon is a bit like a light
green cucumber though larger and it has knobbly skin. To prepare, you
need to cut open and remove all of the seeds. This one is stuffed with
ground pork, but you sometimes see a vegetarian version with a mushroom
mixture. This dish was 20 baht.
Thai Custard with Pumpkin (fakthong sang kaya)
ฟักทองสังขยา
This Thai custard with pumpkin is very delicious but I will have to
be careful not to eat too often. That is the problem with many Thai
desserts as you will put on weight if you are not careful. The way they
cook this is very clever. They first clean the outside of a pumkin and
then cut a trapdoor in the top. The seeds inside the pumpkin are then
scooped out. The Thai custard is made up of a mixture of eggs, sugar
and coconut cream. You then stir this mixture together with some
pandanus leaves. Once the sugar has dissolved, it is strained through
cheesecloth. The pumpkin is then placed in a bowl and the mixture is
poured in. The trap door is then put back and it is all then steamed
for about 40 minutes. Once it is ready, the mixture should have
hardened. It is now cut into wedges about three inches thick. Each
wedge costs about 20 baht. Make sure you try this the next time you are
in Thailand.
More Thai food on our menu at thai-blogs.com next week.
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