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Chao Wang Food And Thai Food Of Each Festival Chao Wang Food:
(Food Prepared for Royal or High-Class Families)
The food which is prepared for Royal family members or of the
high-class people is different from that of the ordinary people. The
Chao Wang food has its own delicate cooking; for example, Khieo Wan Kai
must have only chicken meat without any bones, whereas the ordinary
people’s Khieo Wan Kai contains with chicken both of meat and bones.
The Chao Wang Namprig has beautifully carved vegeytables, side by side,
to take with.
Some Bits about Thai Food:
Thai food is a Thai national symbol. It reveals the characteristics
of the Thai people: their delicate taste, discipline, rules of conduct,
artistic taste and human relationship. Thai food has its unique name
with précis meaning of feature, flavor or the methods of cooking, Tong
Yip and Foi Thong are examples of Thai sweets in this case. To
understand causes and effects of Thai food cooking is to achieve.
To preserve the Thai nationality, the learners of how to cook Thai
food should both keep Thai national values of the past and also accept
any new ones.
Thai Food of Each Festival:
Thai food is cooked in agreement with Thai festivals organized according to Thai religious customs.
The fifth Month (April):
The old Thai New Year is celebrated in this month of April (between
April 13 and April 15). To relieve the hot weather in the summer month,
the dainty Khao Chae, (-a luncheon dish which includes rice served in
scented water with jasmine and rose petals, and with seven or eight
side dishes-), is used to serve monks, relatives and friends in the
merit-making occasion. Kaaraamae (a Thai caramel) is made as well as
Khao Niew Dang (Sweetened red glutinous rice) to give among friends and
relatives.
The Sixth, Seventh, Eighth Months:
The Eighth Month (July) is in the rainy season and the Buddhist
Lent. Fruits are in abundance so they are preserved in many techniques
of cooking: stirring, or cooking as well as soaking in thick syrup.
Durian Guan, Kluai Guan, Kluai Taak, Sabparod Guan are examples. Fully
ripe chillies are sundried for the needed time. Fully ripe and sour
tamarind is pitted, sprinkled with salt, pasted and preserved for the
coming days. Fishes which are also plentiful, are sundried or grilled,
for the next days.
In these months, Thai people do their merit-making at the temple.
They offer foods to the monks in the form called “Salaag Puut”, that
is, the monks are offered foods by drawing slots. The baskets offered
to the monks, contain with both fresh and dried foods. The people,
offering foods to the monks, are very exited to see who is going to get
their basket by drawing lots.
The Eighth Month is also the time for young Thai males to enter the
monkhood. Folks helps bringing foods and sweets to join the occasion.
The foods are of various kinds with ingredients of vegetables, fishes,
coconut or sugar. One example of these is Yam Kamoei cooked with any
food stuff found at hand but delicious with its sauce made with
crunched, red chillies, garlic, vinegar, fish soy, lime and sugar.
Main dishes are often many kinds of curries and lon (a kind of sauce
served with raw vegetables). For the funeral, Plara Lon(a sauce made
with fishes which are fermented by salted and roasted rice) and foods
with noodle-ingredients are avoided because of Thai superstition of
death prolongation.
The Ninth Month (August):
The Ninth Month is the most favorable month for wedding ceremony,
new house merit making, and age meritorious performing. Favorite Thai
sweets, symbolized fortunes and honors, Khanom Chaan (sweetened, light
color pudding with many layers) and Khaaw Niew Kaew (sweetened, glassy
glutinous rice) are favorably cooked.
The Tenth Month (September):
The Tenth Month (September) is the month for Sart Thai Festival.
Krajaa Sart (sweetened, forested, and popped rice mixed with peanuts
and sesames ) and Khaaw Yaa Koo(a cake made of sugar boiled with water
received from crunched young rice grains) are popular sweets.
The Eleventh, Twelfth Monts:
The Eleventh Month (October) and the Twelfth Month (November) are
months of Krathin Ceremony (the offering of Krathin Cloths to the
monks) and Oogpaansaa (the outing of the Buddihist Lent ). Khaaw Tom
Paad (glutinous rice wrapped by banana or bamboo leaves cooked by
steaming ) are offered to the monks in this festival. Other favorite
foods are rice cooked and wrapped in lotus or banana leaves accompanied
by fried food such as Paad Prig Khing, dried curries, Namprig Makaam
Paad, Namprig Makaam Piak and Namprig Taa Dang including salted food as
salted meat and salted eggs, along with vegetables plucked along the
way.
The Fist Lunar Month (Dyan Aaai or January)
The Fist Lunar Month (Dyan Aaai or January) of the old days was full
of shrimps in the canal. Tha main ingredients of food in this month,
then, were shrimps.
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