Thai
Coconut Milk Sticky Rice with Mangoes
Khao Neeo Mamuang — Thailand
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from Hot Sour Salty Sweet by Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid and are part of our story on Lunar New Year.
You need sticky rice (also called sweet rice or glutinous rice) for this classic Thai-Lao sweet. The recipe for making it at home is very simple.
As with most of the sweets in Southeast Asia, you can eat Coconut Milk Sticky Rice as a snack or serve it as dessert.
Tashi's Favorite Black Rice Pudding
Khao Neeo See Dam — Thailand
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from Hot Sour Salty Sweet by Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid and are part of our story on Lunar New Year.
Since black rice is a big favorite of Tashi's, over time we've developed a quick version of black rice pudding, aromatic, sweet, and satisfying. You can prepare it and have it in bowls for impatient rice pudding fans in under an hour, with no presoaking of the rice. Serve it for dessert or as a snack, or even for breakfast. The rice is moist, almost soupy, when first made, but if it's left to stand in a cool place, it firms up into a pudding-cake texture and can be eaten in slices (see Note below). Eat it on its own or topped with sesame seeds, coriander leaves, or fried shallots, or a combination.
Vegetable and Tofu Red Curry
Bottled red-curry paste heats up this flavorful, vegetable-rich Thai-style curry.
Green Curry Shrimp with Noodles
This quick dish has all the deep, exciting flavors of Southeast Asia. The curry paste already has lemongrass in it, so don't worry if you can't find fresh: It will still be delicious without it.
Thai-Curried Game Hens
The delicious sauce has the complex, aromatic flavors of a Thai curry, but is very easy to prepare, thanks to purchased curry paste (now sold in many supermarkets). Look for fresh or frozen kaffir lime leaves—whose beautiful fragrance is the signature of many Thai dishes—at Asian markets. If unavailable, don't use dried ones; substitute grated lime peel instead. Goes great with: Long-grain rice cooked with a few cardamom pods and grated lemon peel and sautéed spinach. What to drink: Spätlese Riesling or Oregon Pinot Noir.
Iced Lemongrass Tea
Nahm Takrai
This lightly sweetened drink, served with both lunch and dinner in Thailand, is very cooling with spicy foods.
Thai-Inspired Shrimp Stir-Fry
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Butternut Squash and Noodles with Coconut, Lime and Cilantro Sauce
This lovely and satisfying main course uses light coconut milk, Thai red curry paste and jalapeño chili for lots of flavor and spice.
Thai Red Curry Paste
If you're short on time, you can substitute bottled red curry paste (we recommend Mae Ploy brand) for homemade, but the flavor will not be as nuanced. There will be some curry paste left over after making the jungle curry and steamed catfish. Simply stir the remainder together with unsweetened coconut milk to give chicken, shrimp, or mussels a Thai spin.
Active time: 1 1/2 hr Start to finish: 1 1/2 hr
Sauteed Vegetables with Chile-Tamarind Sauce
The chile-tamarind sauce is a refined, complex variation on classic satay sauce, which is traditionally thickened with peanuts. This rendition owes its silky texture to mashed kabocha squash. At Arun's, this is served both as an appetizer and as a main course.
Thai-Curry Seafood Stew
Round out this menu with a salad of snow peas, cherry tomatoes, and bean sprouts dressed with a rice-wine vinaigrette. For dessert, sliced kiwis splashed with rum would be good. Look for the curry paste, coconut milk, fish sauce, and jasmine rice in the Asian foods section of your supermarket.
Grilled Chicken Wings with Two Thai Sauces
Though it's not essential to make both sauces for these wings, we think the contrast between the rich peanut sauce and the light-yet-spicy gai yang — a classic Thai sauce for poultry — is a flavor combination that shouldn't be missed.
Thai-Style Tomato and Shrimp Salad
If you can't find Thai anise basil and Thai lemon basil, you can substitute Italian basil and lemon balm (the latter is available at farmers markets and specialty produce stores).
Steamed Mussels in Thai Curry Sauce
"On a trip to the Northwest, I enjoyed dinner at Yarrow Bay Grill in Kirkland, Washington," writes Sue Eltringham of Prescott, Arizona. "I'm a big fan of mussels and was especially fond of their version, with coconut-curry sauce. I'd like to have the recipe so that I can enjoy it again before my next visit."
Rich coconut flavor and just the right amount of heat make this starter special. A trip to an Asian market will likely yield most of the ingredients you need.
Thai-Style Beef and Asparagus Curry
Serve this intensely flavored curry — made with Thai red curry paste and coconut milk from the supermarket's Asian foods section — over steamed jasmine rice. A side salad of bean sprouts drizzled with Asian salad dressing would be a cooling accompaniment; follow it with mango slices.
Cucumber Salad
Yam Taeng Kwa
Dried shrimp are an acquired taste; they have a very strong fish flavor. But this salad is wonderfully refreshing even without the shrimp.
Active time: 20 min Start to finish: 20 min
Khao Neeo
(Thai Sticky Rice)
If you have never tried sticky rice, you are in for a unique treat. Thai sticky rice, sometimes called "sweet rice" or "glutinous rice," is opaque-white when raw, unlike most other rices, and when cooked has a wonderful scent and distinctive texture. Make sure to buy long-grain Thai sticky rice, not the Chinese-style short-grain or the kind grown in the Untied States, which lack the aroma and texture of the Thai variety. On the label look for the words pin kao or gao nep.
There are a few options for steaming sticky rice: If you live near a Thai, Lao, or Vietnamese market, chances are it sells the large, conical baskets used for cooking sticky rice as well as the lightweight pot the basket rests in as the rice steams. Otherwise, use a large sieve lined with cheesecloth or muslin and put it over a large kettle of water
In Thailand and Laos, cooked sticky rice is kept warm and moist during the meal by serving it in small covered baskets, which can also be found in some Southeast Asian markets.
This recipe was created to accompany Grilled Beef Salad , Charred Chili Salsa , Thai Grilled Chicken , Thai Eggplant Salad and Chicken Stir-Fry with Holy Basil .
Nam Jeem Guy Yang
(Hot and Sweet Dipping Sauce)<P> This sauce is also delicious with grilled pork or lamb.<P> This recipe was created to accompany <epi:recipeLink ="14426">Thai Grilled Chicken</epi:recipeLink>.<P> Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.