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Search Result for “bangkok'"”

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LIFE

Diningat the toptable

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 18/12/2016

» Everyone must have heard the term "royal cuisine" and know that it refers to food prepared in the palaces of high-ranking nobility. In the past there were palaces belonging to many branches of the royal family and at each one, in addition to the standard dishes, there were special ones prepared that were particular to that one palace.

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LIFE

The age of perfectionists

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 11/12/2016

» This is the age of data. Making food is easy now because there are cookbooks everywhere and ingredients of all kinds are widely available and easy to buy. Any bookshop will have its cookbook section, offering an array of volumes with clear photographs and precise instructions as to measurements and techniques.

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LIFE

A fish fit for a king

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 04/12/2016

» High on the list of popular fish in Thailand is tilapia, called plaa nin in Thai. It is tasty and meaty, inexpensive and easy to find in the market. Cooks can prepare it in many ways, one of the most popular being to cover the entire fish with salt and then grill it or, if it is small, to salt and sun-dry it to make plaa daed dio.

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LIFE

It takes a village

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 27/11/2016

» His Majesty the King's philosophy of the sufficiency economy, which he always promoted among Thai people, depends on diligent work and the avoidance of greed and cheating or dishonesty. The rewards of this approach to life include a comfortable life and -- importantly -- the avoidance of debt.

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LIFE

Freshly squeezed

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 20/11/2016

» Those cold fruit drinks, called nam ponlamaipan in Thai, in which fruit juice is blended together with ice to form a slushy mixture, are very popular in Thailand. You can order them made with the juice of limes, oranges, watermelon, guava, tender coconut, and other fruits, or in combinations. People go for them because they combine sweetness, coolness and the flavour of a favourite fruit. Most coffee shops offer them for customers who are not in the mood for coffee, tea, or carbonated beverages.

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LIFE

In His Nature

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 13/11/2016

» When we were children, one of the first people who taught us what we needed to know was our father. He taught us how to pour ourselves some water to drink, to tuck in our shirts so they didn't stick out on the side, how to be careful when eating fish so that no bone got stuck in our throat and so much else. Once we had learned these things, he moved on to more advanced matters, and when we had mastered them, it made him proud.

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LIFE

The cream of the royal crop

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 06/11/2016

» Whenever I am at the Or Tor Kor Market, I always try to stop in at Doi Kham, the Royal Project store there. As I wander around browsing the produce and other products, I get the feeling that it is different from supermarkets or other kinds of fresh markets. Every item I pick up has a special significance. Each was grown through the skill of a farmer who was cultivating land that in some way had been damaged or degraded. It may have been used previously to grow opium poppies, or to rotate crops until the soil was depleted and all that remained was bare mountain land without vegetation.

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LIFE

Clean cuisine

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 30/10/2016

» Bad news, and not the first time that we have heard it: Thai-Pan (Thailand Pesticide Alert Network) have announced the results of analyses that they have performed on fresh produce being sold in supermarkets, major supply markets and small neighbourhood markets. It was found that many contain toxic chemical residue that exceed the legal standards.

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LIFE

Homegrown ingredients

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 23/10/2016

» If you like cooking for yourself, why not get serious and try growing your own vegetable right at home? The ones that you really need all the time are chillies (phrik khee nuu), lemon grass, galangal, saw-tooth herb (phak chee farang), and the different types of basil, known in Thai as bai kraphrao, bai horapha and yee raa.

LIFE

A dish's best sidekick

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 16/10/2016

» What is Thailand's national dish? This question could bring many answers: pad Thai, tom yam kung, tom khaa kai, kaeng massaman kai, kaeng pad pet yang, kaeng khio waan luk chin plaa kraai -- the list goes on, depending on who you ask. But one food that could never be left out, and perhaps the one with the greatest claim of all to the title, is nam phrik, the collective name of Thai chilli dipping sauces.