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Search Result for “second round”

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LIFE

The other side of Songkran

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 12/04/2020

» When Songkran is approaching, people instinctively bring out colourful shirts to wear as a gesture to celebrate the occasion.

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LIFE

Sweet success

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 21/07/2019

» Sugar is indispensable to Thai cuisine. Granular sugar is widely used in the present day but sugars made from sugar palm or coconut trees or sugarcane are still as suitable for traditional Thai dishes and sweets as ever.

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LIFE

Thailand's traditions endure

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 10/03/2019

» In Thai culture, certain ceremonies are regarded as extremely important because they are carried out once in a lifetime. These ceremonies usually have set patterns to be carried on properly from one generation to the next.

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LIFE

A fruit for all seasons

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 27/05/2018

» The mango may seem at face value like any ordinary fruit. Despite being highly sought after by tourists in Thailand, the cheap, omnipresent fruit is a standard -- even monotonous -- fixture in most Thai homes.

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LIFE

The restos outlasting the past

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 25/12/2016

» If you are someone who has been seriously devoted to food for years, you will probably experience a special feeling when you think back to old-style dishes. They were dishes that would not disappoint, and by now have a kind of immortality to them. If you had a chance to taste food like this again, you wouldn't let such a golden opportunity pass. And if you tracked down a restaurant that has been in business for 80 to 100 years or more, and was still operating in its original location with no change in decor or in the flavour of its food, it would be like stumbling upon an enchanted palace from a fairy tale. You would feel as if you had actually passed through some portal into the past.

LIFE

Gather around Chinese table

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 25/10/2015

» Most people who have enjoyed a to jeen (Chinese table) meal probably think it is a style of eating of Chinese origin that was spread though the world, including to Thailand, by Chinese emigrants. A to jeen meal is eaten at a large, round table that seats 10, with Chinese dishes brought out gradually over time, from appetisers through soup, main dishes of different types based on fish, chicken, duck, pork, then fried rice, and finally dessert. In all, 10 dishes will be served to the 10 people sitting at each table, and afterwards the guests are expected to be so full that they could not manage even one more mouthful.

LIFE

Tap jak of all trades

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 18/10/2015

» In the past, this column has taken a look at many of the plants found in Thailand’s fields and kitchen gardens — the trees that bear coconuts, bananas, tamarind, mangoes and papayas and smaller plants grown close to the house, like lime trees, chillies, kaffir lime, taling pling, galangal, ginger, lemon grass and different kinds of basil.

LIFE

The fishermen hooked on conservation

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 13/09/2015

» Land-bound as we may appear now to anyone living in the city, Thai society of the past had an intimate relationship with water. Thais lived next to water and travelled on it in boats.

LIFE

Inmates show their innate skills

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 09/08/2015

» There is a place that we all know about — and every province has at least one. Few of us have any plans of going inside, but we are curious to know what it is like in there. I am talking about prisons.

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LIFE

Food for all seasons

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 12/10/2014

» Why is it that in the past Thais ate seasonally, cooking different dishes at different times of the year? One reason is that they lived much closer to nature than most of us do now. They understood the natural cycles — what ingredients would be at their best in a given season, and what things were best to eat. The changing possibilities that came with the rotating seasons brought variety to the table.