Thai
Thai-Style Crab Salad in Papaya
Look for Gold or Strawberry papayas. Their sweet flavor complements this tangy crab salad beautifully.
Coconut Chicken Soup
Green onions make all the difference in this new take on a popular Thai soup.
Spiced Shrimp Soup
Thai food lovers will recognize this soup as the classic tom yaam goong. In its homeland the dish would have far more hot chilies. We've toned down the heat for newcomers to this cuisine, but veterans can add more chilies to make this soup as incendiary as they wish.
Spicy Chicken and Vegetable Bundles
Based on the classic Thai dish called larb, this pretty appetizer is easy to put together.
Mussels with Sausage, Coconut Milk and Lime
Salamander's chef, Stan Frankenthaler, combines mussels with spicy sausage and Thai flavorings, such as coconut milk and lime juice.
Fiery Thai Salsa
You can control the heat by adjusting the amount of chili oil used. Serve with swordfish, tuna or fried wonton chips.
Herb Salad Spring Rolls with Spicy Peanut Sauce
Although several varieties of basil are used in Southeast Asia, the most common-called rau que in Vietnam and bai gaprow in Thailand-is generally referred to as Thai basil in Asian markets on this side of the Pacific. The leaves are slightly darker and narrower than the more familiar Italian basil and have purple stems and flowers. Rau que has a distinctively pungent anise flavor, but Italian basil is a perfectly acceptable substitute.
Yam Makeua Yang
(Thai Eggplant Salad)
Thai dishes known as yams are often translated into English as "salads", perhaps for lack of a better word. Like salads, yams are often served at room temperature and include fresh herbs and raw vegetables. Unlike salads, however, which Westerners often eat to refresh their palates, yams are anything but shy in flavor. In Thailand they are often served when people get together for a glass of beer and want something to nibble on.
In this yam, Asian eggplants - long and narrow and ranging from deep purple to pale violet - are broiled and tossed with shallots, Vietnamese coriander, and a dressing that is at once salty, sour, spicy, and slightly sweet. After you have made the salad once, you may want to experiment with the balance of seasonings, perhaps increasing the chili heat.
Vietnamese coriander is known in Vietnam as rau ram and in Thailand as pak chi wietnam. It is usually sold in open bunches or in cellophane and can be found at Vietnamese and Thai markets.
Thai Chicken Pasta
Curry dishes are usually served over rice, but pasta is a delicious change.
Thai Grilled Beef Salad
Grilled rib eyes are sliced and tossed with mint, lemongrass, chili, and lime juice, then served atop a marinated cabbage mixture in this main-course salad.
Bow Thai Pasta with Shrimp
Bow tie-shaped pasta is mixed with Thai-flavored pesto sauce and tossed with cooked shrimp for a fast, colorful entrée.
Broiled Red Snapper with Tamarind Sauce
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Thai cooking frequently makes use of the roots of cilantro; their flavor is more pronounced than that of the leaves.
Thai Ground-Pork Salad with Mint and Cilantro
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Grilled Shrimp Salad with Lemongrass and Chiles
For a milder dish, use fewer Thai chiles and seed the serranos before mincing them.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 30 min
Khao Plow
(Thai Jasmine Rice)
In Thailand, jasmine rice is nearly always cooked with just enough water to first boil and then steam the rice, and without salt or oil. Jasmine rice from Thailand is preferable, but you can substitute long-grain aromatic rice grown in the U.S.. As the rice cooks, it fills the house with its scent and the promise of good food to come.
Those who have a rice cooker should measure the rice, wash it well, and cook it according to the manufacturer's instructions. If there are no water-to-rice proportions marked on your rice cooker, use the measurements set out in the recipe.
This recipe was created to accompany Grilled Beef Salad , Thai Eggplant Salad and Chicken Stir-Fry with Holy Basil .
Stir-Fried Chinese Broccoli
Pad Pak Khana
This vegetable is more about leaves and stalks than its namesake cousin. It also has a sweeter flavor and juicier stems. All those green buds eventually blossom into white flowers, so when you're at the market, be sure to look for those with only a few open flowers — and the thinner the stalk, the better.
Active time: 15 min Start to finish: 15 min
Thai-Style Chicken and Vegetable Stir-Fry
Spoon this over rice noodles or linguine, and have a crisp coleslaw of bean sprouts, shredded cabbage and slivered red bell pepper alongside. To finish, drizzle white rum over fresh pineapple and banana chunks.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Paad Thai
(Stir-Fried Rice Noodles with Shrimp)
Paad Thai, with its signature fettuccine-width rice noodles, is available in myriad variations throughout Thailand. In its country of origin the dish is often made with dried shrimp; for a milder flavor fresh shrimp is specified here.