Next Stop: Bangkok š¹š
To truly appreciate the flavors and work that goes into Thai cuisine, I join the Siamese Cookery House for a little Bangkok cooking class.
Few places are as brutally overwhelming for the uninitiated as Bangkok. The heat is otherworldly if youāre not from around hereāāa humid 95 (or 35 degrees here) with air as thick as gravy. Oppressive and demoralizing donāt even begin to cut it.
I thought diving into Hanoi was a cold shock to the system. But thisā¦ This is a whole ānother ball game. And Iāve actually been here before.
Fifteen years ago, Bangkok was the first place I visited outside of North America. I was just a shaggy-haired younginā on a study abroad trip heading for India.Ā
All I remember is seeing the usualāāThe Reclining Buddha, Wat Arun. The rest is a foggy patchwork of vague memories.
But I must confess, I do remember committing a crime.
You see, I didnāt care about food back then the same way I do now. So Iām afraid I didnāt appreciate it the way I shouldāve. Now, like any rational human with a functioning palate, Thai cuisine is one of my favoritesāāa go-to on a busy day when I want something reliably delicious.
So to truly appreciate the flavors and the work that goes into Thai cuisine, I join the Siamese Cookery House for a little cooking class that begins with a morning stroll through the Huai Khwang Market.
Goong is our guide, interpreter, teacher, and host. Sheās here at the Huai Khwang Market at least twice a day, prepping for three cooking courses sheāll give before the day is over.
Weāre following her lead as she collects the ingredients for four dishes weāll be making: Tom Yum Soup, Pad Thai, Massaman Curry, and Mango with Sticky Rice. Huai Khwang Market likely has more in the way of ingredients than your local corner store. Chicken feet, frogs, eels. Goong explains the plethora of options succinctly:
āThatās what we eat,ā said Goong. āNothing to waste.ā
In other words: āIn Thailand, we eat everything.ā
After the market, we tuk-tuk over to the cookery house and get right to work on making the coconut milk. Though we merely scratch the surface of Thai cuisine, thereās no other way to put it:
Best. Class. Ever. Maybe more math wouldāve stuck with me if they ended class with some Thai food.
Hunting down pad see ew
Itās our last day in Bangkokāāin Southeast Asia, for that matterāāand Iām on the hunt for pad see ew, a comforting necessity I took for granted with Clevelandās Banana Blossom around the corner from my former Ohio City abode.
I find it here in Chinatownās Soi Nanaāāan alley with a long history of illicit nightlife, gangs, and now, hipsters.
Thereās something about watching a cook at work on the street that feels a bit like watching an incognito violinist virtuoso playing in the park. Theyāve left the orchestra and are honing in on the individuality of the craftāāthe pressure and praise that comes with it all. (violin music)
In the waning hours of the day, Iām lucky enough to observe.
And there it isāāpad see ewāāthose gloriously glistening glassy noodles that in my mind, just canāt be beaten. Itās an opus on a plate.
Iām loathed to attempt a flowery wrap-up of our time in Southeast Asia, from the illustrious low plastic stools of Hanoi street food fame and the glimpse of a pre-historic time in Ninh Binh to maybe almost dying in otherwise tranquil Luang Prabang and hearing about the threat mass tourism poses to Vang Vieng, youāll just have to go back and watch those videos to get a taste of whatās there.
Even then, itās just that. A taste, or better still, a small, delicate sip from a bowl of soup full of spices and flavors I havenāt even gotten toā¦ yet.
Vang Vieng
Vang Vieng. Despite its reputation as a backpacker party hub, itās a sleepy, dusty town during our short stay. The kind of place where the heat turns up a notch and time slows to a savory standstill. So itās only sensible that you order another Beer Lao.
Hanoi Street Food
Hanoi Street food. Whatās it like? Where can you find it? And whatās the best way to experience it? Iām going to answer all of those questions and share a bit of what I learned about Vietnamese cuisine (or more specifically, Haonian cuisine) from my new friend, Ngoc at Hanoi Street Food Tour.
Damn, this made me miss Hanoi. Iām pumped I found your YouTube channel thanks to your SubStack.