 |
|
Guess what dish is this? Clue: It's our
dessert |
Chinese food is
widely available in Thailand. As most of the early Chinese immigrants are from
Swatow, there is a huge Teochew flavour in Thai cooking. Braised duck and pork
trotters are some of the chinese flavours commonly found along the streets of
Bangkok.
When
we visit the Chinese restaurants in good hotels, decent Chinese cuisine is not
hard to find, but these are mostly, as expected, Cantonese flavours. Little did
I expect that somewhere just a few kilometres outside Bangkok, in the
neighbouring province of Samut Sakhon, will I enjoy authentic Hakka food in an
eatery which does not even have a signboard. As I told my staff, this is real
China Chinese (客家家乡菜) food, not the typical Thai-influenced Chinese food we get
anywhere else.
I
have decided to list down the dishes I ate on my blog before I completely forget
about them in the future:
 |
|
Claypot bean curd soup. |
 |
|
Deep-fried fish in sweet and sour sauce, I believe the
pineapple was the only local touch in the entire
restaurant. |
 |
Stir-fried bean curd skin, black fungus and
mushrooms.
How they made such humble ingredients taste like heaven
with a spatula and a wok, I will never know. |
 |
|
Deep-fried tofu with a minced-garlic
sauce. |
 |
|
Wok-Hei-filled fried kway
teow |
I
believe that even in Singapore or Malaysia, we will struggle to find ourselves
Hakka flavours as original as this. I would never be able to relocate the eatery
by myself in the future, so I am counting my blessings to have tasted these
delicacies in Thailand, and hope my new customer will bring me back there again
soon.
 |
|
It's yam paste, not too sweet and slightly savoury,
served with a generous sprinkle of sesame and
peanut. |
Không có nhận xét nào: