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Search Result for “Fed”

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LIFE

The reverent relationship of man and beast

Life, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 17/08/2020

» In the old days, farmers considered buffaloes their best friends and they were deeply bonded. The animals were not just powerful, but were also very reliable helpers in rice fields. Nowadays, we rarely see the beasts working in the fields because they have been replaced by machines.

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LIFE

Hazards that lie within

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 19/08/2018

» Although Thailand has multiple kinds of delicious food and snacks to choose from, consumers must bear in mind that they are also easily exposed to unsafe diets, which could subsequently land them with health problems.

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LIFE

A healthy spoonful

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 17/06/2018

» Once again, I find myself writing about health and food choices -- a topic I could never bore of. We all survive off food so it's important to know how to maintain a healthy diet that keeps our bodies in balance.

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LIFE

The rise of venison

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 26/11/2017

» Beef used to be the most commonly consumed meat in Thailand. Its popularity faded away due to the changing preferences of modern consumers. Some would simply say that beef is getting more expensive, so they switched to pork and chicken instead.

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LIFE

The fish that makes a great catch

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 12/03/2017

» I'm sure that there are many people who have the same relationship with catfish dishes that I do. When they think of a particular favourite -- grilled catfish with boiled neem flowers and the sweet-spicy sauce called nam plaa waan, or the fish deep-fried with spicy seasonings and crisp-fried basil leaves scattered on top -- they crave to eat some right then and there.

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LIFE

A taste of the past

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 01/01/2017

» When we take our first steps into a new year, starting on the path can be more reassuring if we look back on the year that just ended and put some of the things we experienced in it in one place. Over the past year, the Cornucopia column looked at many things -- among them, the old riverside neighbourhood along the Chanthaburi River, the Pathumwan area as it used to be; the informal markets known as talaad nat; traditional folk medicines; smoked fish; pesticides in vegetables; local dishes you can only enjoy by doing some travelling, and much more. Today I would like to review some of these subjects and gather them together into a kind of culinary and cultural tour.

LIFE

Having enough on your plate

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 14/08/2016

» By the term "one-dish meal", most people mean a meal where a single plateful will fill them up. But using satiety as the basis if the definition doesn't really work, because people have different capacities. Some eat very little, while others prefer a big meal. For example, some food shop customers might not feel full after finishing off a plate of pork fried rice and order a plate of kui tiao sen yai raad naa (broad rice noodles with meat in gravy) as a follow up, or start off with pork noodles and then move on to a bowl of yen ta fo. Both examples show that it takes a combination of these dishes to fill up some members of the clientele, and that both cooked-to-order food shops and noodles shops will offer a variety of dishes.

LIFE

A small fish with a long history

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 30/08/2015

» Pla salit (gourami) is a freshwater fish that Thais have relished for centuries. It is not very big, but its great virtue as a food fish far outstrips its modest size.

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LIFE

Duck in for tasty treats

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 16/08/2015

» Which is to be preferred, a hen’s egg or a duck egg? Few people would take a stand on this, even though hens’ eggs are cheaper. When making many different kinds and food, including most sweets that call for eggs, only the duck egg will do. It has qualities that the hen’s egg lacks, and justifies the extra cost.

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LIFE

The pick of the bunch

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 05/07/2015

» Think of the qualities that make the banana such a useful fruit. It is available everywhere all year round, it can be eaten in a great number of ways, and it’s cheap. Thailand has many different kinds of bananas. The kluay nam waa is probably the most familiar of them, but there is also the kluay hawm, the little kluay khai, the kluay hak mook and the recurved and fragrant kluay lep mue nang, to name just some of the commonest ones.