Since my last post, I’ve been half lounge lizard and half nomad wandering around
ChiangMai and, of course, I have more pictures of temples. Here are my favorite shots….
I haven't seen this guy with the elephant nose before, and I don't know who he is. I think he must be Indian.
Some pretty fancy windows.
The guard dog/dragon.
I liked this setting and the relative modesty of this temple compared to others.
I thought I was going into a guest house when I opened the door to this.
This was outside an architectural school.
I’ll probably bother you with a few more photos of temples
because I’m visiting a famous one on a tour I’m taking, and I wouldn’t want to
withhold.
I went to another cooking school this week. The instruction was different from the one
last week. They demonstrated the prep and
cooking for all the dishes that were selected by the class before we cooked
them . So we got to taste a lot of dishes. They also did some of the prep
for us—at the other school, we did all our own prep. The recipes were different, too. These had fewer ingredients, so there wasn’t
as much flavor layering. I liked the
ones from last week better. Here are
the dishes I made this week…
A sweet and sour creamy prawn soup
Chicken satay…my favorite of the day..and now you can see my Marilyn Monroe blond hair. Glam, eh?
A yellow curry with chicken on the right….I asked for additional
ingredients on this one to duplicate one of my favorite curries---gang garee,
which has chicken, potato, carrot, and onion in a yellow curry sauce.
And pad thai on the left, which I’ve always wanted to make at home….they
gave us tofu, but no chicken or shrimp, but it was still pretty good.
I also made a delicious banana pancake for dessert, but
forgot to take a picture—you make pancake batter with coconut cream and put
sliced bananas and shredded coconut on top before you flip it, then garnish with a drizzle of
honey or evaporated milk. I was wishing for some warm maple
syrup, which would have been perfect.
I had lunch yesterday at a restaurant called Butter is
Better. A couple I met at last week’s
cooking school recommended it to me, and I was attracted to the name. I heartily agree with the statement (although a good Italian olive oil is also equally supported). I’ve been really hungry for some good Western
food, and the key word here is good. You
can get Western food, but so far, I haven’t found any that tastes the same. I had a pastrami Rueben sandwich, and it
tasted funny. I guess I’ll have to keep
looking. There were three American men
around my age sitting at the next table, and I couldn’t help but hear their
conversation because the tables were very close together. They were talking about their young Thai
girlfriends, and I thought it was pretty funny that this was the topic that
dominated their entire conversation....not sports or business or politics.
I went to the Saturday Night Walking Market. They have markets galore here—the Night
Market, which is open every night, I think, the Saturday Walking Market, and
the Sunday Walking Market. At the
Saturday Walking Market, there were vendors lining one of the main streets for
about a kilometer. And the crowd was
significant. Every so often there would
be a street entertainer working for donations.
That I’m not much of a shopper is a real disadvantage here. It seems to be a major pastime of Thai
people.
I didn’t see any restaurants in the area where the market
was, so I went in search of. I was
looking at the menu of this small Indian restaurant when a Brit who was sitting
at one of the two outside tables offered an unequivocal recommendation. That doesn’t happen often, so I decided to
try it. The food was delicious—the best samosas I’ve
ever had and a really excellent butter chicken curry with warm chapati. The Brit was a regular at the restaurant and
joined me for a beer. The restaurant
owner, Lek, was hilarious—he would stop by the table every so often and tell a
really corny joke. My favorite was "I went to see one of the hill tribes yesterday--they had only one left ear." I was puzzled when I
saw him going to the restaurant next door and leaving it with an open
beer. The Brit, Phil, explained to me
that many of the small restaurants borrow from each other because they can’t
afford to stock everything.
Today I went on a river cruise…..the name of the river is
Ping and it flows from here to Bangkok.
The river was very dirty, but when we got out of the city, there
was some pretty scenery.
You can easily find the luxurious next door to squalor here
in Thailand. This home belongs to a rich
guy who owns some hotels and restaurants.
And this is his next door neighbor. These pictures are a little deceiving on size--this one is much smaller than the one above.
There were several
people fishing with a simple pole, but this fellow was really serious about it with all his fish
traps.
There are billboards of the King and Queen of Thailand all
over the place, including the riverside.
I think our guide said that this was a home belonging to one
of the royal princesses. There was a field of sunflowers on the bank in front.
I really love these elegant canopy trees.
Our end point was a Thai farm, which was definitely not a
typical farm. It was a tourist
attraction designed to show us the variety of plants and animals on farms in
Thailand.
Here's a rice paddy.
And some snoozing boars
There were also bunnies and chickens and all different kinds of fruits, vegetables and herbs.
After the tour, I went to a restaurant that had been
recommended by my travel agent and also had really good reviews on Trip
Advisor. It was an Indian/Thai
restaurant in a very beautiful setting.
I had this absolutely delicious steamed seafood curry. I took out a big spoonful before I took this picture so you
could see how the curry “stands up”. It was steamed in a bowl made of banana leaves and garnished with spiky carrot flowers.
I’ve never had a steamed curry. I was told it was made with red curry paste and
that the dish was partially cooked before it was steamed. There’s a whole egg in it, which is why it
doesn’t have the usual reddish color.
The texture was something like a wet soufflé. There were shrimp, calamari, sea bass, and
mussels in it, and I ate every bite.
For dessert, I had bananas cooked in a syrup of orange and
lime juice, sugar and cinnamon, topped with vanilla ice cream….yummy.
With a bottle of water, this lunch was a whopping 477
baht. It’s the first time I’ve been
charged a 10% service fee and a 7% VAT.
That made it a $16 lunch, but it was worth every baht.
2 comments:
Corny joke. LOL And you need to learn to make that banana dessert. Yum.--Ton
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