Thai Cuisine
 Thailand is a
small country in Southeast Asia, sharing a peninsula with Burma,
Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. Like all local and
national cuisines, the food of Thailand reveals a great deal about the country -- it is
a palimpsest of its political history, its trade, and its geography. Thailand sits between the
cultural and political powers of India and China, and its food is clearly influenced by both. Yet
Thailand's food, like her people, has maintained its own distinct identity.
As with meals throughout Southeast Asia, a Thai meal has no courses.
And like most cooking of the region, the Thai meal is built around rice. Southern Thai people eat long-grain rice,
while the northerners favor short-grain or 'sticky' rice. Noodles,
probably introduced from China, also play a role in Thai cooking. Of
course, Americans usually don't realize that rice is
the main course, not the side dish -- curries and other hot dishes are eaten by the Thai more as sauces
than entrees, flavoring the cool rice. Meat is very expensive, and beef- or
pork-based recipes often call for much less meat than would satisfy the
average American carnivore. It is worth noting that the Thai eat with a
spoon, fork and knife. In Southeast Asia, only
the Vietnamese eat with chopsticks, so next time you'll know why your waiter in the
Thai restaurant coughs when you ask for chopsticks.
 Because Thailand
forms a crescent around the Gulf of Thailand and the country is etched with
hundreds of miles of rivers and canals, fish is a staple of the Thai
diet. Fish sauce (nam pla)
and/or shrimp paste (kapee) appear in nearly every recipe. The
other distinct flavors of Thai
cooking come from the indigenous spices and produce: coconut milk, lemon grass, tamarind, ginger, black pepper, galangal, garlic, cilantro,
basil, palm sugar,
turmeric, cumin, shallots, and green onions. Last but not least is the chile, a late influx into Thai cooking, having arrived with Portuguese traders
early in the 16th century. The chile has become a central player and much Thai food is fiery hot.
Thai food is either stir-fried or steamed -- primarily in a wok. Some
foods are grilled, but, as in the rest of the region, a lack of fuel precludes baking. Chiles and
other spices are ground into powder or paste with mortar and pestle or, for the convenience-oriented
cook, with a coffee grinder.
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