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  • News & article

    Devilishly delicious detail

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 18/09/2016

    » Doing your own cooking gives you many advantages. For one, you are able to choose and buy the ingredients, selecting them from the array available at the market to ensure that they are clean and safe, and priced to match your budget. Just as important is the ability it gives you to try a recipe and see how it goes over with your family members, and to possibly make adjustments later to bring it into line with their preferences.

  • News & article

    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.

  • News & article

    Feed the world

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 14/06/2020

    » School farming projects have been implemented for a long time. Most projects take place at schools located in provinces, where students plant and cultivate vegetables to be used for school lunches.

  • News & article

    Eating the way it used to be

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 14/07/2019

    » Bangkok is full of places where you can go to eat. There are food streets where diners can select dishes and varieties to suit their preferences. People can have meals at food centres in supermarkets or at restaurants in department stores or shopping malls. Besides that, they can dine at stand-alone food shops and eateries located on every corner of the city. There are no limitations at all when it comes to food and dining in Bangkok.

  • News & article

    Eating pretty

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 10/06/2018

    » Food in the global culinary scene is getting more "stylish". By this, we mean to say that several restaurants have started to dress their dishes up in order to make them more photogenic and thus, one may say, more fashionable.

  • News & article

    A sunshine state of mind

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 25/06/2017

    » There's more than a handful of things that Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Bangkok have in common. For one, both places are hot, humid and rainy. Another thing is that they are both swarmed by mosquitoes, and palm, coconut and banana trees can be seen everywhere. A visit to Fort Lauderdale could very well make you feel right at home, save for the fact that cars drive on the right side of the road and the city boasts much better urban planning.

  • News & article

    Spores to the fore

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 01/11/2015

    » If the weather doesn’t pull any surprises over the next week or so, people who feel a seasonal craving for the mushroom called het khone — the “termite mushroom” — should get some money ready and head off to buy some at a special place they’ve heard of or maybe visited before.

  • News & article

    A small place with big heart

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 30/11/2014

    » Photharam in Ratchaburi province is a small district that might seem unremarkable at first. It has nothing to draw tourists, is not important economically, boasts nothing flashily contemporary, is innocent of hotels and, in short, has nothing to attract the eye or make you take a second look. But if you stay there for a while and look at things slowly and carefully you will be fascinated by Photharam. There are intriguing things to be found beneath its modest surface.

  • News & article

    Ancient neighbourhood with an uncertain future

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 22/06/2014

    » If you want to learn about a community of the past, it isn’t too difficult to track down information. There may be a book or website that at least touches on the subject, and which offers a description of the community in question, and you should be able to build a fairly clear picture of it.

  • News & article

    Pak boong's flying circus

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 06/04/2014

    » People who pay attention to food know that cooking soup and stir-frying vegetables to perfection is a gift that God bestowed specially on Chinese cooks. Stir-frying vegetables would seem to be a simple thing, but in fact, it’s not. Doing it properly requires a store of precise accumulated knowledge. How soft or hard is the vegetable? How does this affect the length of time it should remain on the fire? How hot should the cooking fire be? What seasonings should be used, and at which point during the frying process should they be added?

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