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| Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods. |
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The last time I visited Bangkok, I was served a typical fried rice dish
with a side thing in a little round dish filled with some type of oil/liquid/sauce with small round onions and peppers I think. What is this sauce called ? Where can I buy it on-line ? TIA |
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The last time I visited Bangkok, I was served a typical fried rice dish
with a side thing in a little round dish filled with some type of oil/liquid/sauce with small round onions and peppers I think. TIA It may have just been fish sauce with Thai chiles - a condiment commonly served with Thai food. The "onions" may have been rounds of lemongrass. -- - Jeff Lichtman Author, Baseball for Rookies http://baseball-for-rookies.com/ |
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Jeff Lichtman wrote:
The last time I visited Bangkok, I was served a typical fried rice dish with a side thing in a little round dish filled with some type of oil/liquid/sauce with small round onions and peppers I think. TIA It may have just been fish sauce with Thai chiles - a condiment commonly served with Thai food. The "onions" may have been rounds of lemongrass. And if it was indeed that (and I agree it probably was), it would be called nam pla prik (or prik nam pla) in Thai. 'Nam pla' is fish sauce, and 'prik' means 'hot' in the spicy sense. |
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On Sat, 05 Aug 2006 19:10:06 +1000, Ken Berry
wrote: Jeff Lichtman wrote: The last time I visited Bangkok, I was served a typical fried rice dish with a side thing in a little round dish filled with some type of oil/liquid/sauce with small round onions and peppers I think. TIA It may have just been fish sauce with Thai chiles - a condiment commonly served with Thai food. The "onions" may have been rounds of lemongrass. And if it was indeed that (and I agree it probably was), it would be called nam pla prik (or prik nam pla) in Thai. 'Nam pla' is fish sauce, and 'prik' means 'hot' in the spicy sense. and you can make it at home. "i can spell. i just can't type." |
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Hello, barry!
You wrote on Sat, 05 Aug 2006 09:08:08 -0700: ?? Jeff Lichtman wrote: ?? The last time I visited Bangkok, I was served a typical ?? fried rice dish with a side thing in a little round dish ?? filled with some type of oil/liquid/sauce with small ?? round onions and peppers I think. ?? ?? TIA ?? ?? It may have just been fish sauce with Thai chiles - a ?? condiment commonly served with Thai food. The "onions" ?? may have been rounds of lemongrass. ?? ?? And if it was indeed that (and I agree it probably was), ?? it would be called nam pla prik (or prik nam pla) in Thai. ?? 'Nam pla' is fish sauce, and 'prik' means 'hot' in the ?? spicy sense. b and you can make it at home. You got me interested and I managed to find quite a useful site:- http://www.importfood.com/recipes/tablecondiments.html This describes a fair number of interesting Thai condiments including nam pla prik. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.comcast.not |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
On Fri, 04 Aug 2006 20:44:09 -0600, rice wrote: The last time I visited Bangkok, I was served a typical fried rice dish with a side thing in a little round dish filled with some type of oil/liquid/sauce with small round onions and peppers I think. What is this sauce called ? Where can I buy it on-line ?] What did it taste like? Sweet, sour, salty, bitter, pungent/hot? Your description alone isn't much to go on. -sw All I can remember it was HOT (a kinda good hot) and tasted great poured over chicken fried rice - not sure what those little round white (onion looking things) that was in there too, but I sure would like to make some at home. Thanks to all who replied. Now I have a start on what it was. |
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On Sat, 5 Aug 2006 14:07:16 -0400, "James Silverton"
not.jim.silverton.at.comcast.not wrote: Hello, barry! You wrote on Sat, 05 Aug 2006 09:08:08 -0700: ?? Jeff Lichtman wrote: ?? The last time I visited Bangkok, I was served a typical ?? fried rice dish with a side thing in a little round dish ?? filled with some type of oil/liquid/sauce with small ?? round onions and peppers I think. ?? ?? TIA ?? ?? It may have just been fish sauce with Thai chiles - a ?? condiment commonly served with Thai food. The "onions" ?? may have been rounds of lemongrass. ?? ?? And if it was indeed that (and I agree it probably was), ?? it would be called nam pla prik (or prik nam pla) in Thai. ?? 'Nam pla' is fish sauce, and 'prik' means 'hot' in the ?? spicy sense. b and you can make it at home. You got me interested and I managed to find quite a useful site:- http://www.importfood.com/recipes/tablecondiments.html This describes a fair number of interesting Thai condiments including nam pla prik. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.comcast.not being in southern california, it's simple matter to find thai chiles & fish sauce. but sometimes i use other kinds of chiles for variety. "i can spell. i just can't type." |
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On Sat, 05 Aug 2006 12:42:31 -0600, rice wrote:
All I can remember it was HOT (a kinda good hot) and tasted great poured over chicken fried rice - not sure what those little round white (onion looking things) that was in there too, but I sure would like to make some at home. Thanks to all who replied. Now I have a start on what it was. The white things were most likely shallots. SE Asia cuisine uses shallots quite a bit. ------------ There are no atheists in foxholes or in Fenway Park in an extra inning game. ____ Cape Cod Bob Delete the two "spam"s for email |