February 18-22
So my site seeing activities in Chiang Mai were very light. I checked out the main wats just as one is supposed to do, but wat fatigue had set in. However, Chiang Mai is not just a place for sightseeing. It is much smaller and calmer than Bangkok and seems even more civilized. Cars actually stop at red lights. Tuk tuk drivers start negotiating at a reasonable price. In short, it is a great place to just be. Which is probably why there are so many hippies hanging out there.
It is also a base for a lot of great activities. Cooking classes, elephant camps, trekking, tours of tribe villages, etc. I did the first two activities. The second two I was less interested in. I learned well in Vietnam that I need to be in better shape before attempting even the lamest trek. And I did my exploitative visits to the nomadic minorities already this trip. Especially since the village visits you do on a 1 day trip tend to be the variety where you and your entire tour bus are all taking pictures of the same three elderly ladies. I was intrigued, though because one of the tribes you see is one where women wear rings around their necks, extending their necks to dangerous links. I support the ill tribes keeping hold of their own culture – militating against me going to visit their villages – but I also think that this particular practice reeks of misogyny and don’t, by my tourist presence, want to support such – also militating against my going. So that was quite settled.
As most of you know, mostly how I entertained myself was by taking 5 days of cooking classes at the Thai Cookery School. Yes, I learned how to make a lot of yummy dishes and, yes, I promise I will make you something if I have fish sauce with me when I see you. The classes were next door to the house of the school’s founder Sompon Nabnian. It was about 15 minutes outside of Chiang Mai and every morning I was picked up at my hotel (the wonder Baan Orapin, if you are looking for a nice, quiet, not expensive b& b) and was driven to the school.
Each morning we began with a cooking related activity: vegetable carving (I can make a mean tomato skin rose), making our own curry paste (way a lot of trouble), touring the market. Then we would head to the little classroom to learn how to make the first meal. About half of these demonstrations were by Sompon himself. Watching him cook was like all the best parts of Food Network rolled up with a lovely Thai-accented English-speaking chef. He would make little jokes, usually the same 7 over and over again. Like: “A good amount of spiciness is 3 small chilies; I’m using 9.” Or: “Make sure you cut the mushrooms exactly like this because they taste better.” The jokes were always charming, even on second or third hearing. When he finished a dish, it was like a revelation, especially when he garnished the dish with some beautiful decoration. His tomato lotus flower was especially nice.
The other dishes were demonstrated by twenty something apprentices who made up in good spirits what they lacked in gravitas. There was often some hilarity involving an ingredient that was accidentally thrown away, or debate over the order ingredients went in the wok.
So after the first demonstration, we would go to our little stations to make the dishes ourselves. And it often happened very fast: Coconut cream, curry paste, meat, coconut milk, vegetables, sauces, sweet basil, chilies, garnish, done. Most of the ingredients were laid out for us, just waiting to be chopped, and I learned it is much easier to cook when you don’t have to do any shopping and the ingredients are all lined up. Then we ate the first dish. We repeated the process for the second dish, yum. Then we prepped the third dish, followed by the fourth, and ate both together for lunch. Then it was back to the class for the fifth dish and sixth dish, which were sometimes slipped because the latter was a desert of some sort that often required extra time. It was a tremendous amount of food and I often was too full by lunch to eat much of anything in the afternoon. In fact, each night I skipped dinner, sometimes just swallowing down a banana before bed.
Here are some food highlights. Note that the pictures don’t necessarily correspond to my favorite dishes, especially since I didn’t have my camera the first day. Nor are the dishes always mine, the especially pretty ones are Sompon’s.
Day 1 wins the award for best all round, and most closely resembles what I made back in NYC after the trip. It is basically pork meatballs cooked in water with tofu and various greens, which are added at the last minute, giving the soup a fresh taste you wouldn’t expect to find in a pork soup. [As with all the dishes, recipe available upon request]. The Spring Rolls were easier than I would have thought, especially since the staff did the deep frying. [Though they were also easy enough at home . . . where, come to think of it, Maura did the frying].
The red duck curry was just as delicious as what we had at Baan Khanita in Bangkok. And easy too. But it would have been much harder to make had I had to prep my own curry paste and roast a duck. When I remarked on the added difficulty inherent in cooking the duck, this very annoying Dutch woman said, “Oh, it’s just sliced very thin so it cooks fast.” Yes, lady, after the bird is roasted for god knows how long. She however, was one of the few people in the class during the week that I didn’t like, or rather the only person that I actively disliked.
Note about my classmates.
Generally, people came for just a day, we chatted or not, and after 4 pm I never saw them again. There was the nice, helpful British couple on the first day. The couple who lived on the UWS with the chatty wife and the quiet husband (the reverse of what we normally encountered). The well-traveled twenty-something girls from Utah. The well-traveled and super peppy twenty-somethings fromSan Fran. The Mexican-American couple from El Paso who were living in Korea. A slew of Australians, Germans, Dutch, Swiss. Lots of friends-for-a-day. I actually ran into the Utahians one night in the market and we watched a very staged Thai dance performance together.
There were also a few multi-dayers. Patrick the Swede was a favorite. Jerome the Swiss. Alex the Spanish chef was nice enough. As was Siimon, the Kiwi chef, though a bit arrogant if you ask me. By way of example, one of the vegetable dishes we made had a heaping tablespoon of ketchup in it. I voiced my skepticism about putting ketchup in any quality dish, save meatloaf. Oh no, he told me, [I won’t attempt the accent], any real chef knows that ketchup is a savior in the kitchen. He uses it in everything, especially in his Bolognese to cut the acidity of the tomatoes. Interesting, I said (Gross, I thought). I use milk in my sauce, I suppose for the same purpose. You would have thought I said I used the blood of virgin babies as salad dressing. He had “nevah” heard of any Italian chef using milk. I’m guessing though that most Italian nonnas aren’t reaching for Heinz in la cocina. I know my Italian host mother never would have (except maybe in those pigs feet). By the by, I thought the ketchuped vegetable dish was too sweet. So there.
For dessert, sticky rice cooking in coconut with mango slices. Delicious! It even made me love mango! As soon as I buy the appropriate steamer (read: when I have space to spare in my kitchen. [read: never.]), I will make it non-stop.
The next day was good too, with traditional Tom Yam Goong (Hot and Sour Prawn Soup), Pad Thai, Green Curry and the fish cakes that some of my MYC peeps got to try. Really a greatest hits of Thai cuisine day. The pad thai was just as we know and love. Though I didn’t put the little dried shrimp in cause that crap is nastay looking. Who needs crunch from their shrimp? The trick I loved was how to get the egg into the dish. After cooking all the main ingredients, move them to the side of the wok. Crack an egg in the empty space, break the yolk and move the egg around the wok until it is totally friend. Then mix the egg with the rest of the ingredients and serve immediately. Don’t forget to garnish with chives and peanuts!
The only thing we made that I did not prefer was a dessert made with water chestnuts. Yes, crispy but flavorless water chestnuts (problem 1). First, you soak the water chestnuts in red food coloring (problem 2) and dredge them in tapioca flour. Boil them for a few minutes until the flour dissolves. The water chestnuts are now a bright magenta and have a gummy exterior and a crisp, still flavorless inside (problems 3, 4 and 5). Serve with coconut milk, ice and simple syrup to taste. It’s just as unremarkable as you would imagine.
As evidenced by my pictures, to Thai chefs, food presentation is almost as important as taste. Another Sompon deadpan was he added a jalapeno flower to curry: “Now you can charge more.”