Friday, May 6, 2011

EAT! (food porn for courtney)

So whenever I wander the world and try writing about it I usually get a message from my dear friend Courtney to post pictures of FOOD.  So this time, my friend, I'm being proactive....

One of the the first people I met in my new town is Note.  He saw me trying to communicate with a guy about buying a moto and came over to help because he speaks English (really well, actually).  Anyway, that first night here in Singburi he gathered his friends and took me out to dinner.  I insisted on paying, but of course he refused...."My country, I welcome you." Here's what we ate:

So that is a crispy fried catfish with dried red pepper, flash fried basil, and fermented egg, which you take tiny pieces at a time and add it to the catfish and basil.  Totally incredibly, by far my new favorite food.  This dish is about 90 Baht, or 3 dollars.

This is pretty standard around here....thai salad with prawns.  It's really common to see this sort of salad, or the papaya salad (which I don't care for too much).  Here you have your veggies and bamboo shoots and cashew nuts and dried peppers and huge shrimps.  It's generally one of the more spicy dishes you will find, and by Thai standards that means for most Americans it's nearly inedible.  For me, I totally loved, and the shrimp were so tender.  This dish was 70 Baht, or just over 2 bucks.  One of my faves...

Morning glory here, or so I was told.  A chinese dish of course but pretty sure it's a common thing around here too.  Couldn't quite figure out what the sauce was though....wasn't quite fish sauce but wasn't quite soy either, and not too salty.  Delicious.  45 Baht, or just over a buck.

The final dish was a crispy fried pork, heavy on the garlic and REALLY heavy on the pepper.  Pretty sure that's about the most common thing to find around here.  Looks like I didn't grab a picture of that....50 Baht, or just under two bucks.

And that would be my new friend Note on the left chowing, and on the right is his friend Maks who I have also come to really enjoy.  He speaks a bit of English too, and one day before I bought my own moto he drove me around for like a billion hours helping me shop for random stuff for me new apartment.  Both really amazing, nice guys....but who isn't in Singburi?

So these two kids joined us for this dinner too but I can't remember their names.  They are 'brothers' of Note, but not actual brothers.  The translation was a bit broken, but from what I understand they were both orphaned and Note has sorta taken them under his wing...hiring them in his shop and having them live in his home.  The one on the left is 13, his parents "ran away" when he was 11.  I couldn't really get more information than that because the English was rough.  The one on the right is 20 and is Laotion.  His father died when searching for metal in the north to sell and was killed by unexploded ordinance.  His mother then moved to Bangkok for work but couldn't support him, so he ended up here in Sinburi working for Note.  They both kind of do a lot of odd jobs around town to support themselves, and Note shelters them and feeds them.  I have started hiring them for small errands and the like as well.  Both are really sweet and seem interested in learning English from me.  We'll see...

This is a realllllly poor quality close up of that 'fermented' egg I mentioned above.  But, I'm not really sure if it is actually fermented.  I tried asking what it was and Note said it's "put in jar with many salt for many months until finish."  It's incredibly salty, and they seem to take tiny pieces of it and put it on a spoonful of that catfish and rice.  Any idea what's goin on hear Courtney?

This is what I'm eating for breakfast pretty much every morning, or a variation of it.  Ground pork stir fried with morning glory and some peppers over rice.  Usually I get a fried egg on top, and everything always comes with that side of fish sauce that apparently you are supposed to just drench everything with (as if fish sauce isn't consumed enough here already).  I usually buy this at the food cart out in front of my apartment for 20-30 baht (just under a dollar) depending on whether I add that egg...and I totally always add that egg.  Cucumbers are always thrown in on the side to cool the palate after all that spicy stuff...but if it's from a street cart I never eat them because I get freaked out about food poisoning ever since my 'incident' in Cambodia.  My rule is....if it isn't cooked, I don't eat it unless it's in a shell, or I washed it myself.  This dish here is usually my standard food throughout the day, those first dishes above are actually kind of expensive so that was more of a 'special' occasion.

My new favorite snack!  I can't remember the name of this fruit but I bet Marissa will.  It's found everywhere here.  You peel off the soft outer skin and inside is a grape-like fruit, but slightly more bitter.   I think it's like ten baht (a quarter) for a bunch of this stuff...they just sorta wrap it up in old newspaper and give it to you.  Oh...and the other little sticks with the plastic ribbons there is NOT food.....you stick money on those and then give it to the temple as merit during hollidays or just when going to give thanks or something.  I can't remember how they ended up there in my bunch of fruit...but there it is.

So there you have it, Court!  Hope you enjoyed....next time I'll take actual video of me slurping curry while moaning or something....I totally know you will love that.

Peace and Food!

10 comments:

Courtney said...

are those fruits lychee?

Courtney said...

KEVIN!! This is all so amazing, I am drooling. I cannot even pick a favorite. I've never had any pickled/salted/fermented eggs before, but it is definitely something that I'm interested in trying. I know in chinese cooking there are these things called soy eggs that are basically hardboiled eggs soaked in soy sauce for a while, and you eat them over rice porridge. sounds pretty similar?

Courtney said...

and that breakfast looks so great, I think I"m gonna start cooking that for myself. so smart, so easy!! I could make a big batch of rice and ground pork on sunday, and then just reheat it every morning. seriously I am starting to lost my mind because this is making me so hungry. I am going to lunch now

kc said...

It's actually NOT lychee, or so I was told! I have had it before but this is a little more bitter. I'm assuming same family though....

kc said...

Seriously....it's the crispy catfish that you would love the most, i just know it. If you ever here about a Thai dish you wanna try making, I totally have people here that can write down the ingredients for me and I can pass it off to you. As for the egg, he only said salt and water, and didn't mention it even being boiled. And that's all the test was really....salt. He kept saying fermented but I really don't know. I'll ask again because you really need to make them.

kc said...

That's pretty much all it is....a big batch of ground pork reheated or steamed whenever.....and u can grind in whatever garlic or onions or basil or peppers or whatever yourself, or just through it all on top of the pork over the rice. and seriously.....ALWAYS add in that fried egg on top, just BARELY uncooked in the middle, and sprinkle it with a tiny bit of fish sauce and a few cut up tiny chili peppers.....

And thanks for leaving comments buddy! I'm just getting started with this new blog and I'm getting so psyched, so much to say and show! Glad someone reads it now and then :)

Courtney said...

yeah, if you can pass along some recipes, please do!!! I am so interested!

Courtney said...

dude, I am reading this amazing book right now called "the windup girl" that you NEED to read. it combines so many things that you will find appealing - it's set ~100 years in the future after peak oil has occured, and it's set in Thailand. food, and the control of genetically-engineered food by fucked up biotech companies, is a major part of the book, and this fruit called (i think) rambutan plays a central part in the story. rambutan are like lychee, but they are red and have these crazy hairs coming out of them (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/83/Rambutan_white_background_alt.jpg). I used to eat them when I lived in Jakarta, they are so good. And they look so crazy!!

Anyway, I think of you every time I sit down to read this book - you should definitely check it out!!!

Lee Bishop said...

Courtney, psyched u r reading that book and like it, it is on my list as well once I get out of my non-fiction phase (never?).

I'll bet putting an egg in hellza salty water for a while would cause it to look hard-boiled like that, wouldn't you courtney? Also doubt any sort of fermenting bug could live in mega salty water, but what do I know about biology....

I'm so hungry!!!

Marissa said...

That fruit is called "Longan" in English and "ลำไย" (lam-yai) in Thai :)
A word to the wise: Do not eat too many, as you will get the raging shits!!!