The Post

Hot stuff with a Thai ninja

Brian Johnston learns to distinguis­h his lemongrass from his lime leaves, and finds out how to cook like a Thai chef, in a lush garden setting.

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Our ingredient baskets are a cornucopia of Thai pungency and pleasure. There are scarlet chillies, green eggplants the size of fat marbles, limes and sticks of lemongrass that, for now, conceal their aromatic beauty.

The garlic is small and delicate, skin tinted with purple and brittle as parchment. It releases a tender aroma as we crush it with our knife blades.

I’ve joined a cooking class at Banyan Tree Phuket Resort, not an activity I’d normally volunteer for on holiday, but my meal the evening before at Saffron Restaurant convinced me.

Saffron here was the first of the signature Thai restaurant­s that are now a feature of all Banyan Tree resorts, and it alone is good reason to stay at this luxury all-villa retreat.

At dinner, each course is, against the odds, better than the last. A delicate roll of fried snapper and rice noodles is outdone by quail egg and squid salad, then by braised-beef short ribs with longan, pickled vegetable and chilli-lime sauce. The slowcooked lamb in creamy curry with coconut milk and peanut is sensationa­l.

When I hear the resort runs a cooking class, joining is a no-brainer. Who wouldn’t want to bring just a touch of this food home to their own kitchen?

And so I find myself under the command of Chef Tonkaw, who has worked at Saffron for six years, and trained at legendary Benjarong Restaurant at the Dusit Thani in Bangkok.

We chip and dice and line up our ingredient­s like profession­als, acquiring useful tips as we go. The chillies shouldn’t just be sliced but crushed to release their oil. The mini eggplants should be leaned upon to split them open, otherwise they won’t cook. We’re shown knife skills too, without much success.

Chef Tonkaw chops as quietly as a ninja, but we pupils bang on our chopping boards as if determined to splinter them.

We have three dishes on our morning’s agenda. The first is kaeng phed goong, a coconut-based red curry with prawns. The chef explains how to adjust the balance of fish sauce and palm sugar, but this is otherwise a dish simple enough to give us confidence.

Our second dish has many more ingredient­s.

 ??  ?? Tom kha gai, chicken in galangalco­conut broth, is packed with fresh and tasty flavours.
Tom kha gai, chicken in galangalco­conut broth, is packed with fresh and tasty flavours.

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