Thursday, February 13, 2020

Chiang Mai Thai Cookery School, 2: Food Porn

So we pass here from Day 1 to Day 3, my 3rd, 4th, and 5th days. 18 more dishes. I'm hoping for a few more pix from Garnet, especially one of Vicki and me together, and will add them in due course.
Flavorings for Tom Yum Goong, personal favorite; Kaffir lime leaf..."two for
the price of one" as Pon said

My Tom Yum...best ever!


Fish cakes

Mine, slightly less decorated

Pon with student assisting in the demo; coconut milk and coconut cream

Green curry with chicken; the little slivers around the edge
are impossibly-thin sliced Kaffir lime leaves

Thai fried noodles and green curry with chicken

More mis en place, this time for making a curry paste (note
pestle); note also the Thai cooking knife, part knife, part
cleaver; gotta have one of these

Panaeng curry with pork

Sweet and sour vegetables and spicy glass noodle salad

Part of the school's garden

Chiang Mai curry with chicken

Sweet and sour vegetables and panaeng curry with pork

Red curry with fish

How to identify your banana leaf steamer from others' (mine had two notches)

Fried mushrooms with baby corn














































































































































































































































































































More to come!

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Chiang Mai Thai Cookery School, 1

The routine was generally this: pick up at hotel around 9:30, arrival at the market or the school around 10 to 10:30, brief introductions, then demonstration/cooking/eating until 3 or 3:30, and then return to hotel. Six dishes per day. In every case, first a demonstration in the classroom, then individual cooking in the student cooking areas, then eating (or, as in my case, sampling). Rinse, repeat. For a person like myself, who enjoys Thai food, it was an economical way to sample 30 classic Thai dishes, intelligently, insightfully, with all meals included. Plus, with Chefs Garnet and Pon, it was the most fun I've ever had cooking or learning about cooking. I'd recommend it without hesitation.

Classes in my case ranged from 5 to 12 students, mostly Europeans, a few Chinese and Korean, one other American over the five days. Well, two, including Vicki, who attended one day. Most, I'd guess, had no more than casual experience in the kitchen (like me), although a few seemed a bit more experienced. Classes were conducted entirely in English, although both Pon and Garnet were multi-lingual...Thai, English, French, Chinese. And entirely conversant about cooking and cuisines in other cultures. Earlier in her career, Garnet had been a chef at the Raffles Fairmont in Singapore, doing mostly Continental cuisine. Go to www.thaicookeryschool.com for more information.

The dishes included in the five day course were:

Day 1: Hot and sour prawn soup (Tom Yum Goong; my personal favorite), green curry with chicken, fish cakes, fried noodles, minced pork northern style, water chestnuts with sugar syrup and coconut milk
Day 2: Panaeng curry with pork, Chiang Mai curry with chicken, fried fish with chili and basil, sweet and sour vegetables, spicy glass noodle salad, black sticky rice pudding
Day 3: Chicken in coconut milk soup (Tom Kha Gai, another favorite), red curry with fish, fried mixed mushrooms with baby corn, fried big noodles with thick sauce and pork, papaya salad, steamed banana cake
Day 4: Yellow curry with chicken, steamed fish in banana leaves, chicken with cashew nuts, fried big noodles with sweet soy sauce, spicy prawn salad northeastern style, bananas in coconut milk
Day 5: Clear soup with minced pork, spring rolls, red curry with roast duck, chicken with ginger, chicken in pandan leaves, mango with sticky rice

I started with Day 4, and Vicki came in for Day 5. Oh yes, at the conclusion of each day, students received a copy of the glossy school cookbook, with all the recipes, plus much other information on sauces, curries, ingredients, utensils, techniques, and more.

For the blog, I'll just include some more representative or favorite pix...
Every dish/lesson demonstration began with a mis en place...and
explanation; and sometimes tasting of more exotic items

My fried big noodles

Part of one of the two student cooking areas

How to wrap banana leaves for steamed fish

With my own chicken in yellow curry creation

In addition to the six dishes, there was much instruction on
the little extras that go into fine cooking

My spicy prawn salad; a considerable upgrade from my previous so-called
Bangkok shrimp cocktail

How to cut a tomato rose (sculptured fruit and vegetables
are a hallmark of Thai cooking)

Vicki's beautiful tomato rose

My disaster of a carrot tree

Pandan leaves, grown everywhere, unexceptional in taste and aroma until they
are bruised or torn...then...vanilla!

How to wrap a spring roll

How the dish is supposed to look

How mine looked

Vicki watching the demonstration

Me assisting the demonstration (as if...)

Sculpting a mango

The finished mango with sticky rice

Friday (Day 5) lunch: chicken with ginger, red curry with roast duck, and mango
with sticky rice; washed down with a Singha

Sam Yaek Market

On a couple occasions, the cooking classes began with a visit to the Sam Yaek market, out in the Chiang Mai burbs where the cookery school is (it's actually in a gated community), in order to introduce both some of the ingredients but also the experience of shopping in a Thai market. I've seen a few markets now, and this was one of the most ample and enjoyable yet.

One of the Cookery School's interns begins our lesson in basic Thai flavorings

"Three kinds of Thai basil...sweet, lemon, and Holy" [expletive deleted, I added]

Galangal root

Long bean

Chef Garnet arrives to tell us about Thai noodles

And Thai rices (short grain for sticky; prefer Jasmine for long grain: more moist)

And coconut

Coconut cream- and milk-making machine (not the old-
fashioned way)



Ingredients for various dishes bundled for your convenience

Thai sushi

Celebratory goodies

Shrine offering goodies

Yes, Thai cigarets wrapped in banana, with matches, etc.;
"what? the Buddha doesn't smoke filtered?" I asked

Thai Easter eggs, Chef Pon told us one day; he cracked one open, and, sure
enough, the interior appeared to be chocolate, with a dark chocolate core...
they're pickled eggs, of course

Sausage

Largest strawberries I've seen outside of Norway 

Dragon fruit

Coconut pancakes, for which I have developed quite a taste