Title: | How to Make them Goodies |
Notice: | Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.* |
Moderator: | FUTURE::DDESMAISONS ec.com::winalski |
Created: | Tue Feb 18 1986 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 4127 |
Total number of notes: | 31160 |
I mentioned in the Spring Roll note that Madhur Jaffrey has just produced another cookery book, this time entitled "Far Eastern Cookery" It is ISBN 0 563 21364 7 (paperback) and 0 563 21365 5 (hardback), and is published in England by BBC publications. You may be able to find it in the US... It covers the cuisine of 8 areas in the Far East: Hong Kong, Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Korea, and Japan. There is an eight episode TV series to go with it that may show up on PBS TV in the states I guess. So far my wife and I have tried about a quarter of the non-Thai dishes in the book, with mixed feelings. By and large looking at the Thai recipes, Ann feels that the spice content has been toned down somewhat to cater for blander western palates. Also a few of the recipes include expensive ingredients that had my wife remarking that the recipes were 'gedat' (literally 'show off') - this may have some substantial basis since the TV series shows Madhur Jaffrey eating the food the book describes in some very upper-class homes (eg in Thailand she visited a university professor and a Royal Prince...) That said the book makes interesting reading. The following are some of the Thai recipes that I have not already entered a variant of... Now if you'd like a couple of these entered to give you an idea of whether you should make the effort to find the book, then please reply here saying which one[s] you'd like to see, and I'll try to find the time to enter them (slow transatlantic links not-withstanding). Chicken, Prawn and fruit salad Yam Polamai Thai Pork Curry in a Burmese (*) style Kaeng Hanglay Easy Beef curry Kaeng Phet Nua Chicken with garlic & black pepper Kai Tod Kratium Priktai Squid Salad Tam Pla Muk poached fish Kaeng Som Fish steamed with lemon grass Tom Som Pla stir fried pork, chillies & beans Moo Pad Prik Sai Tua Fak Yao 'Flying greens' Pak Bung Loy Fa Spinach with garlic Pad Pak Bung Coconut milk custard Sankhaya If you want one of these, please reply here and I'll try to find time to enter it... /. Ian .\
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1682.2 | More Far eastern recipies too! | MDA::NEWSTED | Wed Mar 22 1989 12:56 | 15 | |
If you've never tried Far eastern cookery (like me) and would like to experiment, in addition to Ian's recipies from the book, FOOD & WINE magazine just happens to feature Vietnamese cookery in it's April issue. It has illustrsted recipies for such things as Spring rolls, Gingered cucumber, stuffed chicken wings to name a few. You can get it from most magazine racks. I will be looking forward to some of the requested postings, though I admit I've never done much Far Eastern cooking -- some of the photographs of the dishes look not only nutritional but really exquisite! Thanks Ian Nancy N | |||||
1682.12 | Tom Kha Kai | HAMPS::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Thu Apr 20 1989 04:01 | 47 |
OK: first the soup... The taste of lime is provided by bai ma-gkroot (kaffir lime leaves) and lemon grass, these may be obtained either fresh or dried from Indo-Chinese grocers (try either Phnom Penh, or South-East Asian Import-Export both in the center of Lowell). If you can't get them then use lime zest. The quantity of liquid (chicken stock plus coconut milk) should be 2 cups in total, but feel free to adjust the balance to make the soup thicker or thinner to suit your taste. Galanga is a relative of ginger. If you can't get galanga then use about half the amount of ginger. The chili is optional, and the amount should be to taste :-) Ingredients 1 cup coconut milk 1 cup chicken stock (or water) 1 cup sliced chicken meat (or shrimps) lemon grass 1"-2" fresh Galanga 2 bai ma-gkroot (kaffir lime leaves) 1 T fish sauce 1 T lime juice pinch sugar 1 t msg (highly optional) 1 T thinly sliced red and green chilis Method Bring stock to boil and stir in coconut milk. Simmer. (if you want the msg add it now). Add lemon grass (take about 12" of lemon grass, trimming off and discarding the straw like ends first, then chop into pieces about 2" long), bai ma-gkroot, galanga (sliced very thin if fresh galanga is used). Bring back to a simmer, and stir occasionally for ~5 minutes. Add chicken (or shrimp). When chicken is cooked through add remaining ingredients and stir for ~2 minutes. Serves 1-2 people /. Ian and Ann .\ |