Thai
Food
Eating
ranks high on the Thai scale of pleasures, and meals are informal affairs. The
staple is rice, either ordinary or glutinous, accompanied by a variety of dishes
that can be eaten in almost any order, and seasoned to individual taste with
several condiments such as fish sauce and chilli peppers. Most often there will
be a soup of some kind, a curry, a steamed or fried dish, a salad, and one or
more basic sauces. Desserts may consist of fresh fruit or one of the many traditional
Thai sweets.
Much
of what is known about Thai cuisine evolved in the Central region. Rice, fish,
and vegetables, flavoured with garlic, black pepper, and nam pla (fish sauce),
along with an abundance of fresh fruit, comprised the basic diet of Sukhothai.
With the rise of Ayutthaya, other elements were added. That now essential ingredient
the fiery chilli pepper - was introduced at this time, along with the equally
popular coriander, lime and tomato. These may have been brought from their native
South America by the Portuguese, who also left a lasting imprint in the form
of popular Thai sweets based on egg yolk and sugar. Other influences came from
India, Japan, Persia, and especially China.
A
century ago, meals were eaten by hand, pressing the rice into the little balls;
today a spoon and fork are used for eating rice, while chopsticks are used for
Chinese-type noodles.
Thai
food differs from region to region. Unlike the North and Northeast, where glutinous
rice is popular, Central Thais like the fragrant plain variety, most commonly
steamed. In addition to fresh-water fish, there is seafood from the Gulf of
Thailand, as well as a wide range of fresh vegetables. Chinese-Thai food is
popular in cities like Bangkok, particularly in the form of numerous noodle
dishes.
The
Central region also has what is called the Royal cuisine, a more sophisticated
version of the regional cuisine. Influenced by the kitchens of the Royal Court,
the dishes are elaborately put together, making it as much of an art form as
a culinary masterpiece.
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