Philippine Daily Inquirer

SOLAR CHICKEN A HOT HIT IN THAILAND

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PHETCHABUR­I, THAILAND —Sixty-year-old roadside vendor Sila Sutharat has a sizzling way to cook chicken—right under the intense heat of the sun. In Phetchabur­i, Thailand, two hours south of Bangkok, he harnesses the power of sun that matches the intense heat of an oven to produce sunshine-baked chicken in just 12 minutes. With meat more tender and evenly cooked, who needs charcoal grill?

PHETCHABUR­I, THAILAND —Sila Sutharat got out of the kitchen but not because he couldn’t stand the heat.

The 60-year-old roadside vendor just prefers cooking his chicken sunny-side up.

Two hours south of Bangkok, Sutharat has found an ingenious way to offer his customers something a little different by harnessing the power of the sun.

Using a large wall of nearly 1,000 moveable mirrors—a device he designed and built himself—he focuses the sun’s rays onto a row of marinated chickens, sizzling away under the intense heat.

His unusual culinary methods raised a few eyebrows when he first hit upon the idea.

“They said that I’d gone mad, that cooking chicken like this was impossible,” he told Agence France-Presse (AFP) next to his stall, the row of sun-drenched chickens behind him too bright to look at for any length of time.

“After a long time passed by, they’d say: ‘Actually, you could do it,’” he said.

That’s because the solar reflector generates intense heat, easily enough to match an oven, with a sunshine-baked chicken taking just 12 minutes to cook through.

For much of the last 20 years, Sila grilled in relative obscurity for a fairly local crowd.

But after videos of his solar-cooker went viral online, people from across Thailand have flocked to his stall in Phetchabur­i province.

Feel the heat

Sila said the idea came to him in 1997 when he was struck by the heat reflecting off a passing bus.

“I thought, with this heat reflecting from the window from the sun, I could possibly change it into energy,” he said.

Sila said that compared to a traditiona­l charcoal grill—which he used before his solar epiphany—his meat is more tender and evenly cooked.

And given Thailand’s sweltering tropical climate, the sun is a free, clean and totally sustainabl­e energy source.

“At the time, energy such as petrol and gas was becoming more expensive and suppliers were also running out of wood to sell,” he said.

“I thought if I used solar energy, I could save a lot. And it also decreases pollution.”

Sila and his wife Pansri now cook around 40 chickens—as well as several sides of pork—each day.

“We’ve been eating here for a long time,” said regular patron Thanyarat Kaewpaleuk, who was tucking into lunch with her husband.

“It’s delicious. His chicken is fatty, it’s not burned and doesn’t smell like a charcoal grill, which you can smell on the meat.”

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