We started off with Pad Thai, of course. We used rice noodles collected from the market around the corner. We were able to obtain all of the ingredients that we needed from different merchants all found only two blocks from the house. We used two different types of tofu. The first, was what you'd generally be able to find in The States … just your regular, run of the mill, firm tofu. We cut this into little rectangles. The second type was cured with turmeric for a yellow color on the outside. This variety, we diced finely.
Moving on to my absolute favorite Tai dish: Green Papaya Salad. We learned a fancy way to use a huge knife in order to shred the papaya which is actually only green because it's harvested early … which is what I suspected. (It's one of the many questions that I asked. I seemed to be the only one engaged enough to ask lots of questions.) Since the knife trick was a bit scary, we were also provided with a zig-zag vegetable peeler if we preferred to stay on the safe side. There were only two cooking injuries for the evening: a burned finger and chili peper-oiled eyeball. Neither of those incidents involved me though. We used a big, wooden mortar to pound and "cement" (as they call it,) garlic, chiles, and long beans. Knowing that this dish is raw, I chose to use only three chiles as opposed to the six that I used in the soup. After pounding in some lime juice, soy sauce, and tomatoes, we created a bit of a dressing in which we could dissolve the palm sugar which is not related to the cane plant at all but rather extracted from the flower of a palm tree. (That is another tidbit that I learned which was spawned from one of my questions.) It's a very dense, sticky paste which has a much fuller body than the refined sugar with which I'm familiar. We added the papaya and some carrots then pestled away. Watching the people on the streets, you can tell that it takes some practice to master the pestle-and-spoon combo technique. When five or six people join in together, it makes for a bit of a meditative musical jam session. Finally, we topped it with peanuts. All done. The whole Papaya Salad process was much simpler than I had expected it to be. It's so rewarding that I now know how to make my favorite dish. It's a good thing that there were tissues at the table 'cause this one was a-spice-aaaaayyyy.And onto the main event with the Panaeng Curry. We started by making our own red curry paste: soaked red chiles, shallots, garlic, galangal, lemongrass, ginger, kaffir lime leaves, coriander root, and turmeric. The stuff that we avoided eating in the soup (kaffir lime leaves, lemongrass, and galangal,) went right in 'cause we pounded the hell out of 'em with the mortar and pestle. (I've got to get myself one of these.)
I met some great people and learned some priceless skills. So … when are y'all comin' over to my place for curry, huh?
asap when your back and the recette still fresh in your head!
ReplyDeleteright now. i'm waiting at your door for curry. where are you?
ReplyDeleteI just discovered that importation of the Pea Eggplant (featured in my Panang Curry,) is prohibited in the US. Lame.
ReplyDelete