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Scallop-Orange-Cucumber Salad (ยำหอยเชลล์กับส้มและแตงกวา)

 

If you have made green mango salad with grilled shrimp and cashew or Chinese sausage (kun chiang) and cucumber salad, you already know how to make most Thai salads, including this one. In fact, I bet by this time you’re already a pro when it comes to seasoning your yam instinctively without having to rely on exact measurements. Some lime juice, some fish sauce, some sugar if desired. Want it hot, add chilies. Want it smoky and hot, add dried chilies. If you deal with ingredients that are intrinsically sweet, sour, or salty, then adjust your seasoning accordingly.

The secret of Thai cuisine is that there are no secrets. Bummer.

To make this — and let’s just pretend we’re making a portion big enough to serve 4 — simply sear up enough scallops for 4 people until you get a nice crust on the outside of them without overcooking the inside. Then you set the scallops aside while cutting up half an English cucumber into matchsticks, slicing up thinly 1/2 a medium red onion (or 2 medium shallots), and sectioning 2 oranges. Toss everything together in a bowl. Add some lime juice and fish sauce to taste. Throw in some chopped up chilies and cilantro or mint leaves. Done.

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Thai Fish Sauce Taste Test


I have recently done a taste test on seven Thai brands of fish sauce that, according to a private poll, are the easiest to find in the United States. Though there are many other brands in the US market, we’re going to focus on these Thai brands. This is because they are made specifically for Thai food, and Thai food is what this blog covers — well, most of the time. I’ll write about the non-Thai brands, which are intentionally excluded, in the sequel to this post.

Here’s the result. Continue Reading →

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Khanom Badin: Thai-Muslim Butter Cake (ขนมบดิน)


Here’s the plan: I’m going to shamelessly romanticize a cake in this post. I’m going to say that a cake is not always just a cake – as in the culmination of flour, butter, eggs, and sugar – but that a cake can be more than just a cake. I’m going to tell you about one particular cake and how it’s not just a cake but something meaningful enough to change someone’s direction in life. Then I’m going to turn around and tell you that this is a cake that, after all is said and done, is a delicious cake.

Please let me take you to a lesser known corner of Bangkok whence this cake comes while you’re trying to grasp the gibberish profundity that is the previous paragraph. Here, gimme your hand. You look a little discombobulated. Continue Reading →

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