Texarkana Gazette

‘Bangkok’ cookbook avoids cliches, digs deep into city’s food

- By Nick Kindelsper­ger

“Bangkok” is Leela Punyaratab­andhu’s detailed portrait of the bustling metropolis she grew up in. Though she eventually moved to Chicago for college, the food of her youth always remained important. She started writing the wildly popular blog She Simmers (www. shesimmers.com) about cooking Thai food and now splits her time between Chicago and Bangkok.

As its name suggests, “Bangkok” (10 Speed Press, $35) doesn’t spend any time on other parts of Thailand. “It’s a snapshot of Bangkok,” says Punyaratab­andhu. “There are dishes that are older than the city itself and dishes from my family.” She also mostly avoids the cliched images of street food hawkers and characters milling about Khaosan Road. She focuses on the everyday experience­s, from a turbulent boat ride on the Chao Phraya River to the many family meals at her grandparen­ts’ house that is “big enough for the entire clan should anyone need a place to stay in times of need.”

Though this is her second book after 2014’s “Simple Thai Food,” she’s been thinking about writing it for five years. “This is the book I wanted to write before my first book,” she says. In the end, Punyaratab­andhu and her publisher decided to release the relatively leaner “Simple Thai Food” first. “The goal was to ease people into traditiona­l Thai food,” she says. “The book ended up being just as authentic, but the mission of the book was to pare down the recipes to ones that were easier to make.”

“Bangkok” makes no such concession­s. The hefty book includes recipes with ingredient­s you’d be hard pressed to track down at your local grocery store, unless you regularly can find fermented red tofu, pandan leaves or winged beans. Fortunatel­y, you do have options. You can order most ingredient­s online now.

What finally made the cut differs from what most people might associate with Bangkok. There’s no basic red curry or tom kha gai soup, but you will find recipes for 24-hour chicken matsaman curry and braised chicken in coconut-galangal cream sauce. Pad Thai pops up, albeit wrapped in an omelet and requiring 24 ingredient­s, including fresh shrimp tomalley. No matter what your level of comprehens­ion of Thai cuisine is, you’ll inevitably learn something new.

SPICY BEEF TENDERLOIN STIR-FRY WITH HOLY BASIL Prep: 15 minutes Cook: 6 minutes Makes: 4 servings

1 tablespoon Thai thin soy sauce or thin soy sauce 1 tablespoon oyster sauce 1 teaspoon fish sauce 1/2 cup chicken stock 1 teaspoon grated palm sugar 8 large cloves garlic 8 to 10 fresh bird’s eye chiles or to taste

1 1/2 tablespoon­s lard or vegetable oil

1 1/2 pounds beef tenderloin, sliced against the grain on a 40-degree angle into small pieces, about 2 inches long, 1 inch wide, and 1/2 inch thick

3 or 4 makrut lime leaves, lightly bruised and torn into small pieces

1 1/2 cups fresh holy basil leaves

1. Stir together the soy sauce, oyster sauce, fish sauce, stock and sugar in a small bowl. In a mortar or small chopper, grind together the garlic and chiles into a coarse paste.

2. Put the lard in a large wok or a 14-inch skillet and set over medium-high heat. Add the paste and stir until fragrant, about 1 minute. (Lower the heat a little bit if the garlic turns brown.) Add the beef, and stirfry to separate. With a rubber spatula, scrape every bit of the sauce into the wok and stir-fry until the beef is only barely pink, about 2 minutes. Stir in the lime leaves, and continue to stir-fry until no pink remains on the beef, about 1 minute longer. Remove the wok from the heat, and stir in the basil leaves, which will be wilted by the residual heat. If desired, pick out the lime leaves (which you won’t be eating); transfer to a serving plate and serve with rice.

Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 476 calories, 35 g fat, 14 g saturated fat, 109 mg cholestero­l, 4 g carbohydra­tes, 1 g sugar, 31 g protein, 570 mg sodium, 0 g fiber TRAIN FRIED RICE Prep: 30 minutes Cook: 10 minutes Makes: 4 servings

2 teaspoons Thai thin soy sauce or regular thin soy sauce

1/2 teaspoon ground white pepper, plus more for dusting

1/2 cup liquid from red fermented tofu 1/2 cup ketchup 2 tablespoon­s lard or vegetable oil 1 tablespoon pork cracklings 4 large cloves garlic, minced 3 eggs, lightly beaten 8 ounces yellow or white onions, cut lengthwise into 1/2-inch-wide wedges

1 Roma tomato, cut lengthwise into 1/2-inch-wide wedges

1 pound pork shoulder, sliced thin against the grain into bitesize pieces

3 cups tightly packed cooked Thai jasmine rice, cold SAUCE 2 or 3 fresh bird’s eye chiles, thinly sliced crosswise 1/2 cup fish sauce SIDES 1 small pickling cucumber, peeled and sliced crosswise 1/2inch thick 4 green onions, trimmed 2 limes, halved lengthwise around the core

1. In a small bowl, stir together the soy sauce, pepper, tofu liquid and ketchup. Set it near the stove.

2. Put the lard, cracklings and garlic in a wok or 14-inch frying pan, and set it over high heat. Stir until the garlic is fragrant, 30 to 40 seconds. Add the eggs and scramble until partially set. Add the onions and cook without stirring too much, 2 to 3 minutes. You want them to brown a little and the moisture in the wok to evaporate. Add the tomato wedges and pork, and cook them the same way you cooked the onion until the pork has firmed up with some pink still remaining, about 3 minutes. Use a rubber spatula to scrape every bit of the prepared soy sauce mixture into the wok, then add the rice and stir-fry until well blended and heated through. Turn off heat.

3. To make the sauce, in a small serving bowl, stir together the chiles and fish sauce and set it on the table for anyone who may want this Thai equivalent of salt and pepper shakers.

4. Divide the warm fried rice evenly among four dinner plates. Arrange some cucumber slices, a green onion, and a lime half on each plate. Invite diners to squeeze the lime over their rice and to eat bites of the cucumber and green onion alternatin­g with bites of the rice.

Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 448 calories, 15 g fat, 5 g saturated fat, 188 mg cholestero­l, 52 g carbohydra­tes, 7 g sugar, 24 g protein, 1,875 mg sodium, 2 g fiber

 ?? Tribune News Servie ?? The train fried rice from “Bangkok” is an example of “rail dining (which) was all about luxurious imported items that weren’t available to everyday people,” says the author.
Tribune News Servie The train fried rice from “Bangkok” is an example of “rail dining (which) was all about luxurious imported items that weren’t available to everyday people,” says the author.

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