Thai Food Recipes : Cuisine , Dessert Thai Food Recipes , Thai Food , Thai Cuisine , Thai Herbs , Menu Thai , Thai Ingredients , Thai Desserts
  • Dec
    29

    This is classic rich coconut ice-cream, served in a Thai style. Thai ice-cream isn’t really iced cream, it’s often made from non dairy products. This recipe contains taro, a root vegetable whose starchiness gives the ice-cream a soft smooth texture. You can also use sweet potato if you cannot obtain taro.
    This recipe is much easier if you have a hand blender, during the preparation you will need to blend the ice-cream repeatedly as it freezes, this is done to break up the ice crystals that form. It is much easier to do that with a handheld blender or egg beater. Finally, the decoration is made from a gummy coloured mixture of cooked sticky rice flour, this is also very typical Thai, but you can use whatever toppings you like, although not strictly Thai, rum soaked raisins are popular in my house among the adults.

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  • Dec
    29

    I might add this to a fake food category, since we like fake food in Thailand. These are spring rolls, filled with rice and crab sticks to look like sushi. (If you speak Thai, visit kruaklaibaan.com where the original idea for this recipe is).

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  • Dec
    29

    In our house we eat this as a ‘gop-gam’ dish (a snack dish to eat at the end of the day with beer or whiskey), but usually they’re made smaller and eaten as an appetizer. The pastry is a basic shortcrust pastry that is baked separately into cup shapes. The fillings are made later with Thai flavours, curries and spicy fish etc.. In the photograph above you can see two sizes, in the 3 flavours we made, but feel free to experiment.

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  • Dec
    29

    Everyone in the world loves fried chicken and Thailand is no different. This recipe is how the Thais eat fried chicken, its slightly different from the KFC fast food you get worldwide, the flavour comes from the chicken not the coating! For healthy eating, it’s better to mix this with one of the healthier Thai dishes, but its fine as a treat. For best results use a good quality corn fed chicken.

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  • Dec
    29

    I have a small confession: this recipe was invented by MacDonalds in Thailand for their Thai customers. Thailand people eat mainly rice rather than bread and a burger with a bread bun isn’t like their normal food. So MacDonalds invented the sticky rice burger, where the bun is replaced by as glutinous (sticky) rice patty. This recipe uses the same trick, if you are not familar with sticky rice, read the ingredients section of this site – you cannot use regular rice, and it must be prepared by steaming.

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  • Dec
    29

    During Halloween, if you kill a chicken, it will rise from the dead and the chicken claws will try to take back it’s flesh from your plate. BOO! Well that’s what I tell small children anyway, we celebrate Halloween as a bit of western fun even in Thailand, this dish is chicken dumplings with fried chicken feet. You can eat it all, if it doesn’t eat you first.

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  • Dec
    29

    Satay Burger

    Filed under: Pork, Thai Cuisine; Tagged as: , ,

    Satay sauce is normally served as a side sauce to chicken or pork. It is however a lot more versatile! This is one use for this sauce, I’ve stuffed in inside pork meat and made a satay burger. Another part of pork satay is the cucumber and chillies in a sweet sauce, I’ve used that as the topping, together with onions. For the photograph, I squeezed the burger to show you some sauce!

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  • Dec
    29

    This is a signature Chinese dish rather than Thai, but save some of the duck, we will need it for two Thai recipes in the following days. Ideally the duck should be prepared a day ahead, in Chinese kitchens then tie the duck skin and blow it up with air to separate the skin from the duck to make the skin more crispy, but this step it not practical at home.

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  • Dec
    29

    I really enjoyed the yellow curry Turkish style sandwich I made the other week, and so I wanted to try something in the same vain. Here I made a Thai red pork curry, scooped out the centre of a large french loaf and fill it with the curry.

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  • Dec
    29

    To you this is a variation of an eastern Turkish dish, to me this is a western dish! Inside the turkish bread is a typical Thai soft yellow curry for a Thai flavour with a western twist.

    Ingredients
    Turkish Bread
    250 gms Pork Steak Meat
    220 ml Coconut Milk
    50 ml Evaporated Milk
    1 Teaspoon Yellow Curry Paste
    1/2 Teaspoon Salt
    1 Teaspoon Sugar
    20 gms Chopped Onion
    4 Garlic Cloves Chopped
    2 Tablespoons Oil

    Preparation
    1. Chop the pork into cubes, fry in oil until the pork is half cooked and a little browned.
    2. Add the chopped garlic, chopped onion and fry for another 30 seconds.
    3. Add the sugar, salt, yellow curry paste, evaporated milk and coconut milk and simmer until the sauce has reduced to half.
    4. Slice open the turkish bread and spoon inside

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