The Philippine Star

Bangkok food adventure

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around everything and slide the dome onto a plate, and there you have it, Thailand’s national noodle, pad thai.

This domed one is the modern take, with the noodles yellow-orange from shrimp fat. Whether modern or classic, pad thai is served with lime. On the typical Thai table are fish sauce, shrimp paste, sugar, fresh or sun-dried chilies, perhaps holy basil and cilantro. Those who associate Thai food with everything hot can ask for a side dish of chili. There are various types of Thai chili peppers with different degrees of spicy heat on the Scoville scale.

Thailand doesn’t have the world’s hottest peppers, which are found mostly in the Americas and India. But during a visit this month to Bangkok, I accidental­ly bit into Thai chili that instantly cleared my sinus, and it felt like steam was blowing out of my ears. It wasn’t the Carolina Reaper (2.2 million Scoville heat units) or the Trinidad Moruga Scorpion (2 million SHU) and not even close to India’s Ghost Pepper or Bhut Jolokia (1 million SHU).

Compare those numbers with our siling labuyo or bird’s eye chili – from 80,000 to 100,000 SHU – and you get the idea. Philippine bird’s eye chili is said to be hotter than its Thai counterpar­t. But I’m pretty sure the Thai chili that I accidental­ly ingested was of a variety that would merit pride of place on the Scoville scale.

I bit into the chili while scarfing dinner at a holein-the wall in Bangkok, described as a “secret place” in the food tour package that my kid brother and his family booked online. The tour in open tuk-tuks – the sleeker Thai version of our tricycle – is better taken at night, when Bangkok is cooler and there are fewer vehicles on the streets that rival Manila in traffic jams.

Fresh lime juice took out the sting of the chili, but the best antidote to high SHU intoleranc­e, we were told, is milk.

As in many other Asian countries, however, the Thais aren’t big on milk, except in their coffee, prepared in a similar way to the Vietnamese – strong brewed, and sweetened with warmed condensed milk.

Use your coconut

Taking the place of cattle milk in many Thai dishes is coconut milk. Thick in its first pressing or diluted with water, used in curries and soups or ladled over savory dishes and desserts, or boiled into hard coco sugar similar to Pinoy panocha, coconut milk is a key ingredient in Thai cuisine.

All over Bangkok we kept running into mobile food carts selling sticky rice with the Thai “barracuda” mango – longer and narrower than our “carabao” mango, with the pointed tip slightly curved like a shark’s snout. It’s a richer and justifiabl­y pricier version of our

mangga at suman. The mango is expertly scooped out in front of you. One “cheek” is arranged on top of the sticky rice and sliced. Thick coconut cream is ladled as sauce and the dish is served in an easy-to-eat package. Prices per serving range from 50 to 90 baht (about P78 to P140) depending on the location, but the delectable taste is almost invariably the same.

Its distinctiv­e cuisine is one of Thailand’s top tourism draws, and the country makes sure its visitors are not disappoint­ed. The country has an Evaluation Board for Standard Thai Cooks, which helps preserve the quality of its world-renowned dishes.

If you order tom yum goong, you can expect the hot and sour prawn soup to taste generally the same in different establishm­ents except in the degree of spicy heat, with the distinct flavors of lime juice,

galangal, kaffir lime leaves, lemongrass and nam prik pao or Thai roasted chili paste.

Even with standardiz­ation, however, some restaurant­s still manage to shine, and they are not five-star establishm­ents.

National noodle

For pad thai, our tour took us to Thipsamai, reputed to be the country’s most famous restaurant for the noodle dish. On its walls are displayed the raves the restaurant has received over the years for its

pad thai from mass media, including foreign organizati­ons such as Britain’s The Guardian and CNN Internatio­nal.

On the sidewalk outside the restaurant on a Sunday night, there was an endless queue of mostly foreign visitors watching the cooks expertly flipping the egg crepes to encase the noodles, creating delicate yellow domes that were quickly slid onto plates for the modern rendition of the national noodle.

Pad thai’s status as a “na- tional noodle” is no joke. As locals tell foreign visitors, their military dictator in the late 1930s, Plaek Phibunsong­khram, wanted to wean Thais from Chinese influence, including in their cuisine.

Field marshal “Phibun” held a contest to develop a “national noodle” proudly made in Thailand. Instead of the typical wheatbased Chinese noodle, the winning entry was made of rice. Other countries such as Vietnam have made rice noodles for ages, and really, how many variations can you make with long, thin noodles? But the combinatio­n of ingredient­s and flavors in the winning entry was unmistakab­ly Thai.

The national noodle was born, and it was called pad

thai. Locals readily took to their national noodle dish, and pad thai is now featured in restaurant­s all over the planet. Any food tour in Thailand will include background informatio­n and sampling of the national noodle dish.

Secret places

Obviously, there is more to Thai cuisine than pad thai. During our trip, we sampled a wide range of dishes. At the “secret place” – the first stop in our nighttime food tour – I savored what looked like pla-pla or giant tilapia, stuffed with aromatics and grilled with a coating of rock salt that locked in the flavors and kept the fish moist but not salty. The coating was later peeled away.

At the Ann Guay Tiew Kua Gai restaurant, diners can watch the cooks firing up chicken fried noodles in woks along an alley before sitting down to a feast of the dishes topped with eggs in different stages of doneness. The restaurant, air-conditione­d but nothing fancy, is recommende­d by the Michelin guide and is packed with locals and foreigners alike even near midnight.

Thai street food, clean, affordable and presented in attractive servings, never disappoint­ed us. Their barbecues have tender meats bursting with flavors. Near the Reclining Buddha Temple in Bangkok and outside the World Heritage ruins of Ayutthaya, the old capital, we could buy luscious coconut ice cream from carts. It’s the Thai version of our dirty ice cream, except theirs may be topped with bits of pink flavored water chestnuts and decorated with a small orchid.

The Thais make full use of their agricultur­al products in their cuisine and their robust food processing industry. They export snacks flavored not only with barracuda mango but also

rambutan, durian, green tea and, why not, spicy tom yum. The flavor of tom yum is everywhere, including a version of KFC chicken. The Thais are selling canned mangosteen, dried jackfruit and pumpkins to the world. Their chicharon is thin, crunchy and flavorful.

Thai cuisine is renowned for the attractive presentati­on, bursting with colors and food carving. The papaya salad, a favorite starter, is simple but a delight to both the eyes and the palate. Their version of the halo-halo includes a wider array of ingredient­s and combinatio­ns than ours. With a combinatio­n of colors and flavored coconut cream, they have turned even the bland water chestnut into a popular iced dessert.

Mealworms, yum-yum

For the adventurou­s, there are not-so-secret places where you can nosh on fried insects and worms, seasoned with Thai pepper powder and Golden Mountain seasoning sauce, with bits of chili and holy basil tossed into the wok.

In addition to crickets and grasshoppe­rs, which are also eaten in the Philippine­s, mealworms, cockroache­s, coconut tree larvae and scorpions are popular snacks in Thailand. The insects are said to be highly nutritious and rich in protein, and you can bring them back to Manila in sealed packs. Tourists wash them down with beer.

But we weren’t that adventurou­s and we were quite happy to snack on spicy crackers, tiny unripe mangoes dipped in Thai bagoong and small but sweet and crunchy pineapples.

We capped our meals with Thai coffee, which may not appeal to purists who prefer their espresso with the crema. But Pinoys may like the Thai coffee with condensed milk.

It’s a sweet, invigorati­ng ending to a hot food trip.

 ??  ?? Food tripper Otilia Pamintuan explores the Reclining Buddha Temple in downtown Bangkok.
Food tripper Otilia Pamintuan explores the Reclining Buddha Temple in downtown Bangkok.
 ??  ?? Hungry food trippers pose outside Thipsamai restaurant (from left): Lorraine Pascasio and Leah Tadena; Joy, Richard, Jori, Doods, Amy and Otilia Pamintuan.
Hungry food trippers pose outside Thipsamai restaurant (from left): Lorraine Pascasio and Leah Tadena; Joy, Richard, Jori, Doods, Amy and Otilia Pamintuan.
 ??  ?? Halo-halo, Thai style, with a dazzling array of ingredient­s.
Halo-halo, Thai style, with a dazzling array of ingredient­s.
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 ??  ?? Clockwise, from top left: Spicy tom yum goong; a vendor prepares mango with sticky rice at a sidewalk stall; a cook fires up chicken fried noodle at Michelinre­commended Ann Guay Tiew Kua Gai restaurant; steamed fish with lime; coconut ice cream;...
Clockwise, from top left: Spicy tom yum goong; a vendor prepares mango with sticky rice at a sidewalk stall; a cook fires up chicken fried noodle at Michelinre­commended Ann Guay Tiew Kua Gai restaurant; steamed fish with lime; coconut ice cream;...
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