More like Pad Thai for Beginners?
I've been in London for nearly two weeks now and have been so busy I haven't got time to blog! Luckily the Pad Thai for Beginners post I put up right before I left has got some staying power. So, that's got me thinking, perhaps I should do more posts like that one. And perhaps we can brainstorm about which ones I should do here while I get my arse in gear to get on with normal posting schedule.
So, what other dishes would you like me to do a 'Pad Thai for Beginners' treatment to? Thai Curries? Another type of stir-fried noodles? You tell me! Leave a comment and I'll see what I can do.
I'll stick with Thai dishes, as there are plenty there to demystify for everyone. But should you be so burden by your craving for a non-Thai dish I might just be able to get a certain 2-Michelin Star chef to do a 'For Beginners' lesson for us. ;-)
















Yes, yes, yes!
I love love love yellow curry (the chicken and potatoes one or vegetarian) or the lemongrass-coconut milk chicken soup (Tom Kha Gai)
Posted by: Sara, Ms. Adventures in Italy | Feb 1, 2007 2:34:07 AM
Loved the instructional post! I would love to see any Thai curry done. Red Curry is my fav but any will do. You were able to explain the Pad Thai better than anyone EVER. Thanks again!
Posted by: Regina | Feb 1, 2007 4:12:52 AM
Hi Pim
loved the Pad Thai instructions though haven't used it yet.
I would love to know how to make thr morthern thai sausages Sai Orh and Nam. I try to bring them back with me but I think they are not allowed through customs into the UK. So if I could make then myself that would solve mny problems.
There is another northern dish of spiced minced pork, I think it is called Lam, that I would like to cook.
The southern curry I like best is yellow curry and I would love to make the paste myself.
Mark
Posted by: Gadget | Feb 1, 2007 4:22:51 AM
What a great idea! I would love to know more about Thai vegetables. I love them in my food but once I get to the supermarket, I don't know what to buy or what to do with them. Here in Amsterdam we have access to some great Asian supermarkets, so anything you can teach would be great! Thanks!
Posted by: Anne-Jet | Feb 1, 2007 4:27:00 AM
Thai soups!
Posted by: Ryan Cox | Feb 1, 2007 5:42:47 AM
Pad see ew? Pad makur? Thanks!
Posted by: MK | Feb 1, 2007 5:48:26 AM
Great idea! Would you please feature Tom Yum Goon Soup and Red Curry Beef. Thanks.
Posted by: hchie | Feb 1, 2007 5:51:52 AM
I am in for Thai curry. A primer on curries and associated techniques would be welcomed. The Pad Thai post was an excellent reference guide. I am going to try it this weekend. Thanks!
Posted by: Eager Eater | Feb 1, 2007 5:54:46 AM
What a splendid, detailed recipe...which I will soon be trying out after a litte mission to the "chinatown" of the 13th arrondissement (my 'hood, by the way). Would love to have your version of a Tom Yum recipe, with vegetarian options if feasible.
Milles bises pour vos paroles sublimes.
Posted by: Marieta | Feb 1, 2007 6:12:52 AM
What a splendid, detailed recipe...which I will soon be trying out after a litte mission to the "chinatown" of the 13th arrondissement (my 'hood, by the way). Would love to have your version of a Tom Yum recipe, with vegetarian options if feasible.
Milles bises pour vos paroles sublimes.
Posted by: Marieta | Feb 1, 2007 6:13:24 AM
I too like chicken yellow curry, and massaman curry, and would love to learn how to make them! Thanks!
Posted by: scott | Feb 1, 2007 6:40:38 AM
I'd love to see curries done. There's a lot to learn there, and it's something many people are familiar with.
Posted by: AR | Feb 1, 2007 7:28:55 AM
Oh yes, there are plenty of things to demystify!
Posted by: bea at La tartine gourmande | Feb 1, 2007 7:37:19 AM
I would love to learn more about Thai curry and soups with vinegar!
Thanks.
Posted by: Karen | Feb 1, 2007 7:55:12 AM
I'd love to learn more about Thai curry and soups with vinegar.
Thanks.
Posted by: Karen | Feb 1, 2007 7:58:29 AM
thai curries would be awesome! one for mango sticky rice would be divine (and easy). :)
oh! how about that guest dish where you wrap up all of the different things in a banana leaf, dip it in a sauce, and eat?
Posted by: Stephanie | Feb 1, 2007 9:01:10 AM
mmm... how about Pad Kee Mow (spelling??). I love that dish, but mine NEVER comes out as good as that of my favorite Thai take-out shack (Noi's in Los Osos, CA)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/emdot/776401/in/set-29253/
Posted by: Jenna | Feb 1, 2007 9:08:01 AM
chez...
green and red chicken curry please!!! with possible substitutes like if i can't find thai red chillies is there anything else i can use... or thai basil!! i love your blog... it's made me fall in love with food all over again!
Posted by: mehrunnisa | Feb 1, 2007 9:16:16 AM
I would love to see how to cook two my favorite Thai dishes.Thai curry with shrimps and soup with shrimps "à la citronelle" . I could eat them every day :) Thanks!
Posted by: Aiste | Feb 1, 2007 9:18:03 AM
Great idea! Thanks for doing it.
I am looking forward tp this, since I have been reading and re-reading your Thai recipes. You have done excellent posts on Gang Som, Green Curry, Panang Curry, so Red Curry might perhaps be a great choice.
Posted by: Victoria | Feb 1, 2007 9:21:06 AM
How about Pad See Ew and Tom Kha Gai?
Posted by: Diana | Feb 1, 2007 10:19:58 AM
It is slightly sad for those of us that have been reading your blog for so long, to no longer have the inside track on your travels and eats. Gee, in London for almost TWO WEEKS with nary a note on who you are seeing and what you are eating... miss the old Pim! Don't turn this into a cooking blog - we can go anywhere for that! Folks like me just like living vicariously through you and now that is practically gone.
Posted by: Julian Cavanaugh | Feb 1, 2007 12:18:54 PM
A green shrimp curry recipe, a green shrimp curry recipe, a kingdom for a green shrimp curry recipe!!! PRETTY PLEASE!!!
Posted by: Srdjan | Feb 1, 2007 12:45:33 PM
I second (or third) the pad kee mow. I would say khao soi but you've already covered that. How about papaya salad? Larb?
Posted by: The Guilty Carnivore | Feb 1, 2007 1:13:13 PM
I'd be interested in recipes for what your favourite dishes – in fact, what are your top ten Thai dishes?. Thisis to get me into some new Thai dishes that I don't usually choose. Curries would be great as well.
Posted by: Ed | Feb 1, 2007 2:50:57 PM
While you're in London it would be nice to see you come for lunch at the Escoffier Room, where I'm cooking at present. You can find details at http://www.westking.ac.uk/vincent/vincent.asp
Posted by: Trig | Feb 1, 2007 2:59:34 PM
I'd love to see a photo post about Thai staple ingredients (sauces, veg, fungi, cuts of meat, spices and the like) with quick explanations of how they're used and their flavor profiles. A list of acceptable substitutions for the harder to find ones would also be great.
Posted by: Nick | Feb 1, 2007 3:53:12 PM
How about sticky rice and mango and roti?
Posted by: Alex B | Feb 1, 2007 5:00:52 PM
Pim, I think we're on the right track with this Curry thingy!!!!!! lol!
Posted by: AOng | Feb 1, 2007 6:05:43 PM
I'm going to add to the Pad Kee Maow (fourth it?) request.
I love Drunken Noodles but am weary of trying it without some instruction. Rice noodles are a pain to use. I need technique advice.
I found an old post on eGullet, might've even been yours Pim, that is building my enthusiasm.
Posted by: Joe | Feb 1, 2007 6:07:54 PM
Pim, your blog is so delightful! 1) I loved that you accounted for both vegetarian and non-veg preparations of the Pad Thai. That was so nice for that kind of detailed post. 2) At my favorite Thai place they organize the menu into sections like beef, chicken, veg/tofu, and most of the dishes are the same but with a different meat component. The one that I love is with red curry I think, prig pao, and I'd love to see this dish deconstructed in that way.
Posted by: Darcy | Feb 1, 2007 8:38:10 PM
I would absolutely love you doing a red curry for beginners!!!
Posted by: b. cheng | Feb 1, 2007 10:41:18 PM
i am collecting vegetarian menus. how about a complete thai vegetarian menu?
Posted by: faustianbargain | Feb 1, 2007 11:13:15 PM
What about Larb Gai? I love, love, love it. I know its easy, but I never get it quite right.
Posted by: Melissa | Feb 2, 2007 6:43:53 AM
Dearest Pim,
Your aunt's famous Nam-prik Pao.
Posted by: carla | Feb 2, 2007 8:11:35 AM
Here's my vote for larb!
Posted by: nikkipolani | Feb 2, 2007 8:31:16 AM
Anything Southeast Asian would benefit. I'm so stuck in a rut I'm easily impressed.
Posted by: Michelle | Feb 2, 2007 9:39:26 AM
Wow, such fabulous detailed instructions for Thai cooking. We are lucky readers, indeed!
I'll absolutely try any recipe you share, but I do have a special request. I may be a lone voice here, but Som Tum (green papaya salad) is my single favorite Thai dish and it is always the first thing I order at any new Thai restaurant I visit. I like it spicy and served with sticky rice and I'm fond, too, of the versions with raw blue crab. I have looked in vain for a good recipe in several Thai cookbooks. But if you were ever in the mood to demystify it for us ...
Posted by: keaton | Feb 2, 2007 10:21:44 AM
A red or green thai curry!!! Or maybe a Laksa?
Posted by: Alexandra | Feb 2, 2007 10:24:14 AM
Thai green curry please! Especially an easy way to make the green curry paste. I just read about your blog and am absolutely HOOKED. I want to be you! :)
Posted by: Lynn | Feb 2, 2007 10:36:44 AM
Pim,
I loved that you included vegetarian alternatives for pad thai. You are so sweet. I'd love to learn about red and green Thai curries. Also, is coconut oil the answer to the rich flavor? Thanks so much.
Posted by: Amanda | Feb 2, 2007 1:06:16 PM
ooo how about some mussaman!?
I can't wait to try out the pad thai this weekend, thanks
Posted by: yahaira | Feb 2, 2007 1:13:12 PM
You read my mind with that last paragraph. Maybe a certain egg perpetration or something for the home cook to impress guests at their next dinner party?
Posted by: snekse | Feb 2, 2007 2:09:20 PM
how about a spicy beef salad and some sticky rice for dipping. or spicy pork salad would also be good. thanks again for the excellent pad thai.
Posted by: andre | Feb 3, 2007 8:04:21 AM
Pad See Ew would be great, it is my favorite noodle dish.
Posted by: mdp | Feb 3, 2007 2:42:39 PM
Pad Kee Maow please!
If not that, then a Tom Yum soup
Posted by: Basic A | Feb 3, 2007 4:53:06 PM
Hi Pim, I just tagged you on "Five Things Most People Don't Know About Me." Hopefully we will get to know you better. Have fun in London and looking forward to learn more about Thai cooking from you. :)
Posted by: Rasa Malaysia | Feb 3, 2007 6:09:03 PM
hey pim, have you ever thought about taking a trip to Italy? I've heard the food is really good over there.
Bob
Posted by: bob | Feb 4, 2007 8:49:31 AM
Well, you know... if you want to show us how to make your aunt's Nam-prik Pao, that would be awesome! :)
Posted by: Zee | Feb 4, 2007 11:54:03 AM
Banana fritters like from the moving carts in the streets of Bangkok.
My favorite snack!
This would be the bomb.
Posted by: Juli | Feb 4, 2007 1:36:30 PM
I second (or twentieth?) the vote for curry, especially panang. I'm ok at dry curries and can make a mean green thai curry, but the magic of panang eludes me.
Posted by: Sara | Feb 4, 2007 2:31:57 PM
Ooh, recipes by request, so exciting?
What about the recipe for one of my newest southern Thai favs? Squash with shallots and scramled eggs. Seems simple enough, but I can't seem to get it quite right. Makes a wonderful compliment to spicy curries.
Posted by: SR | Feb 5, 2007 8:11:45 AM
When I visited Thailand this summer, I had these potsticker-like snacks filled with garlicky greens and served with a spicy dipping sauce . . . I have no idea what they were called (I got them from a street vendor), but they were sooooooo good! Anyway, I'd love to read something about Thai dumplings.
Posted by: Ania | Feb 5, 2007 11:20:41 AM
PAD SEE EWW! :)
Posted by: Michelle | Feb 5, 2007 11:59:50 AM
HO w about a recipe for Spicy Thai fried rice and the deep fried banana with ice cream dessert??? BTW/ since I am vegetarian, could you also mention veg substitutes in your recipes? Thanks.
Posted by: ash | Feb 5, 2007 12:08:25 PM
shrimp and pineapple curry. and also mango sticky rice!
Posted by: jenn | Feb 5, 2007 3:06:20 PM
Kar Moo( hog leg) or Moo Ping ( BBQ pork on stick)Or how to make curry paste rather than the can.
Posted by: G. Mokarakorn | Feb 5, 2007 3:12:09 PM
maitake mushroom ravioli?
Posted by: sam | Feb 5, 2007 8:38:23 PM
I'd love to learn a fool-proof way of making Thai curry (yellow, green, red - any or all)! The store-bought packaged curry pastes never taste very good so it'd be great to learn some authentic fresh curry paste recipes.
Thanks for the Pad Thai tips too! All the times I've made the noodles they have been gooey, so thanks to you I know what I've been doing wrong! It all makes perfect sense now! :)
Posted by: Maria | Feb 6, 2007 2:09:24 AM
I vote for more out-of-the ordinary dishes. With a decent Thai cookbook, we can all learn to make a good red or yellow curry (David Thompson's, for example, for the intrepid, or something a little more accessible for the Thai cooking novice). I would be elated if you were to pick your brain (on our behalf) to find things that are not on your standard Thai restaurant menu. Like you did with the Pla-dook Foo. Now that is something for which we rarely--if ever--see a recipe!
In any case, you never fail to enlighten us!
Posted by: Annapurna | Feb 6, 2007 4:09:45 AM
Lots and lots of good ideas here. Thanks so much everyone. I will get to at least some of these when I get back to California in March.
I might get to do some Thai cooking here in Paris as well, so we'll see, you might see something else sooner than that.
cheers,
Pim
Posted by: Pim | Feb 7, 2007 5:39:35 AM
I say let's get the Chef to do a video (Embed). Soft Shell Crab or whatever is has going on in the kitchen this time of year!!! I'll Digg to that!
Posted by: Hans A. Koch | Feb 7, 2007 8:33:31 PM
How about chilli jam??
Posted by: Grecia | Feb 7, 2007 10:44:18 PM
Veggie Mee Krob.
Posted by: mindy | Feb 8, 2007 3:07:49 PM
PLEASE yellow curry. All the yellow curry on the east coast has summer squash and pineapple and I cannot get it with potatoes and carrots like I could in California.
And perhaps while you're at it you can explain whether potatoes/carrots or summer squash/pineapples is the "authentic" way of making yellow curry?
Posted by: Ellie | Feb 12, 2007 6:34:52 PM
Ooh, i'd love to learn more about ways to successfully use those fat rice stick noodles, and maybe about a dish I had many years ago called evil jungle princess, of course the classic tom yum and tom kha gai, but especially am interested in learning about traditional thai fish dishes like the pomfret fish and or fishcakes! Thank you for sharing your talent with us!
Posted by: gaile | Feb 15, 2007 3:15:02 PM
I'm waving my hand frantically for larb and mee grob...
Posted by: Kt | Feb 28, 2007 2:03:03 AM
Hi Chez, Love your pad thai for beginners. i had cooked pad thai before but had always used pre-packed cooking tamarind, was not as good as making my own tamarind paste! sorted my dried noodles too now. i find the best way is to soak them in warm water for a while, then just before adding them to the wok, pour some boiling water over them for a few seconds, brings them out perfectly!!
as for other recipes, as the guy said above, i would really like to see Pad kee Mao. i have made it a lot but never seems to come out like my favourite restaurant. is is served in a kind of light red oil with a lot of chili. it's not too hot though surprisingly! mine always comes out a bit like pad thai but i use yellow bean sauce with oyster sauce, sesame oil and fish sauce, do you know what the "real" combination is? any help would be much appreciated. I am only a 19 year old university student but i love cooking thai noodles! (and currys and soups!)
email me if you prefer
Many Thanks, Joe x
Posted by: Joe | Jun 15, 2007 10:52:42 AM
I say red or yellow curry-- or any sort of Thai style fried rice.
Posted by: Amber | Sep 5, 2007 5:12:43 PM
Please please please teach me drunken noodles. I have had it at many thai restaurants and they all have a similar flavor that is missing from every recipe I have tried.
Posted by: Jason | Sep 30, 2007 6:06:45 PM
Dear Pim - the pad thai information was AWESOME - but the noodles still get gooey...I would love detailed info on how to cook green curries and thai veggies - could you recommend premade thai green curry pastes? Looking forward to more....
Posted by: Navpreet | Dec 7, 2007 10:57:08 AM
Red, Green or yellow thai curry would be on my definite list. Then dishes that include a ground meat of some kind.
thanks for asking
Posted by: tiffany | Jan 30, 2008 1:14:14 PM