Wining and dining, Hong Kong style

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Wining and dining, Hong Kong style

tasty October 10, 2018 10:00

By The Nation

Now in its tenth edition, the Hong Kong Wine & Dine Festival will present four days of funpacked events for locals and visitors alike from October 25 to 28 and this year is extending its reach from the Central Harbourfront Event Space to Tamar Park with about 450 booths serving fine wines and exquisite food.

Five Michelinstarred chefs from the Mainland and overseas are coming to Hong Kong to jointly present the “10Michelinstarred Dinner” in the “Tasting Room”. The five visiting master chefs, who have been awarded a total of eight Michelin stars, will collaborate with two renowned Hong Kong chefs from oneMichelinstarred restaurants Man Wah and Mandarin Grill + Bar to concoct a winepairing banquet with eight courses, fusing Chinese, Thai and French elements.

The five visiting celebrity chefs are French chef Pierre Gagnaire of Pierre, a twoMichelinstarred restaurant in the Mandarin Oriental Hotel Hong Kong; chef Bee Satongun of Paste Bangkok, a oneMichelinstarred restaurant in Bangkok; chef Lin Cheng Ching of The Guest House, a twoMichelinstarred restaurant in Taiwan; chef Kentaro Chen of Shisen Hanten, a twoMichelinstarred restaurant in Singapore; and chef George Chen of Wujie, a oneMichelinstarred restaurant in Shanghai.

Wine lovers will be impressed by the “Wine & Dine 10th Edition Specials” and “2009 Vintage”. These two exclusive series are available only this year.

As for dining, two newly introduced zones, “International Street Eats” and “Coffee Fiesta” will bring new sensations to the taste buds. The International Street Eats zone offers the latest gourmet sensations introduced to Hong Kong, including JiuWu Beef Noodle from Taiwan and local delicacies from seven regions, including South Korea, Europe and Latin America, bringing tastes from all over the world to the table.

In the meantime, Coffee Fiesta zone gathers some of the most famous coffee and pastry shops in the city, such as Coco Espresso, Say Hey Bakery, and celebrity dessert shop Alice Wild Luscious, alongside winetasting experiences.

A new “Perfect 10 Passport” will be introduced this year to encourage visitors to experience various wonderful food and wine combinations. In addition to wine tokens, food tokens will be included in the Perfect 10 Passport to inspire guests to explore creative wine pairing options with family and friends. The Perfect 10 Passport will include a welcome drink and a 10th edition limited wine glass, a worthy addition to the collection of every wine connoisseur.

Independent musicians and buskers will perform at the venue, and there will be live music performances each evening on the main stage. There will also be game sessions every day, with prizes including air tickets, wines, gourmet food and wine tokens.

This year’s wine options will be expanded, featuring fine wines from firsttime participating chateaux from countries and regions like Burgundy, Croatia and Russia to capture the hearts and tastes of festivalgoers. To make purchases more convenient for event participants, epayment will be available at the venue.

For details, visit http://www.DiscoverHongKong.com/eng/winedinefestival/.

A noodle tour of Ratchaprasong

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A noodle tour of Ratchaprasong

tasty October 08, 2018 13:08

By The Nation

Bangkok’s Ratchaprasong intersection is packed with dining places serving a diverse range of cuisine, all within easy strolls of one another along the Ratchaprasong Walk, an interconnected skywalk.

This sample culinary journey takes in 10 different noodle dishes.

Sawang (Hua Lampong) at Pratunam has a terrific starter – Egg Noodles with shrimp wontons, barbecued pork and crab claws.

A tempting and quick meal, it has noodles made fresh the same day and duck eggs. The wontons are stuffed with shrimp and steamed to perfection. The Chinese-style barbecued pork is marinated in coconut sugar and grilled in a way unlike any other noodle stall. The crab claws are fresh from Yaowarat.

Price: Bt150-Bt300

Location: Between Phetchaburi Sois 30 and 32, opposite the Palladium World Shopping

Open: Daily from 9.30am to 11.30pm.

Call (02) 056 0663

Ah Yat Abalone Restaurant at the Arnoma Grand Hotel Bangkok serves wonderful Braised Noodles with goose web in abalone sauce.

Anyone looking for original Guangdong food should visit Ah Yat for its famous Braised Noodles, cooked in a process that takes days to enrich and tenderise the goose legs. The steamed legs are then roasted with egg noodles and shiitake mushroom. The dish is generally sweet and slightly salty.

Price: Bt980-plus

Location: Second floor of Arnoma Grand

Open: Daily from 11am to 3pm and 6 to 11.

Call (02) 255 0356.

Mae Sri Ruen at CentralWorld offers delightful Chicken Noodles, the most popular dish at the 57-year-old noodle bar. In soup of chicken and pig bones and daikon radish, all the ingredients – – limes, mung bean sprouts, dried chillies and peanuts – are boiled and steamed for hours. Both noodles and chicken are also seasoned, so no extra condiments are needed.

Price: Bt50++

Location: Third floor of CentralWorld

Open: Daily from 10 to 10.

Call (02) 646 1821.

Provence Restaurant at Gaysorn Village tempts with Khao Soi with Crispy Duck Leg, a fusion of northern curries noodles with thick, mildly spicy soup and a chunky, French-style duck leg. It’s recommended by Thais and foreigners alike.

Price: Bt420-plus

Location: L floor of Gaysorn Village

Open: Daily 10.30am to 8pm.

Call (02) 656 1438.

Utaandon at Isetan, CentralWorld, serves a marvellous Nabeyaki Udon, a sweet, aromatic soup that’s simmered for five hours using a base of dried Northern Bluefin Tuna imported from Japan and sheets of kombu seaweed. The soba and udon noodles are made in-house and their quality shows in their firmness.

Price: Bt280-plus

Location: Sixth floor of Isetan

Open: Daily 11am to 10pm.

Call (02) 255 9800.

Pad Thai with Prawns by Pad Thai Mae Yai Singburi at The Cook Food Centre, Amarin Plaza

Serving Pad Thai – a famous Thai comfort food for more than 70 years, the secret of deliciousness without needing any extra condiment of Pad Thai Mae Yai Singburi is in a combination of noodles, eggs, tofu, mung bean sprouts, rice bran oil and a special sauce upon frying. Sourness is enhanced right after frying by ripe tamarind without the use of MSG. Fresh lemons and vegetables are staple so customers can add them as they wish.

Price: Bt70

Location: fourth floor of The Cook Food Centre, Amarin Plaza

It is opened daily from 10am to 7pm. Call (094) 646 2442.

Chashu Itto Tsukemen by Menya Itto at Erawan Bangkok

Ranked as Tokyo’s best ramen shop by Tabelog – Japan’s trusted restaurant review website – Menya Itto now opens its door at Erawan Bangkok. The ramen is cooked with only premium ingredients, especially its homemade Tsukemen ramen noodles imported from Japan. This noodle is generally firm so it can suck soup when being contacted and it contains rice germs so it releases aromatic scents and nutritious substances when being cooked. Inside a soup pot, the soup is composed of chickens, fishes, sakura shrimps and scallops. For alluring taste, everything is boiled and steamed for 18 continuous hours.

Price: Bt270-plus

Location: LG floor of Erawan Bangkok

It is opened on weekdays for lunch from 11.30am to 3.30pm and dinner from 6 to 9 and weekends from 11.30am to 9pm. Call (02) 250 7669.

Shindangdong Tteokbokki Premium by Tudari at CentralWorld

This best-selling menu has a Korean root all the way and customers can add topping to suit their likings, such as chicken, beef, pork, fatty pork, crab stick, shrimp, squid, fish cake, fish tofu, fried wonton, Tteok bokki, egg, clear noodles, Shinramen or Korean noodles. Toppings are best of their ranges and most of them are imported from Korea. The dish is bold in taste and loved by people of all ages as the soup is naturally sweet while a special spicy sauce and freshly cut chilies are put atop the noodle for a punch.

Price: Bt450-plus

Location: seventh floor of CentralWorld

It is opened daily from 10 to 10. Call (02) 252 6696.

Rice Noodle with Southern Crab Meat Curry and Deep-Fried Soft-Shell Crab with Vegetables by Kub Kao Kub Pla at Gaysorn Tower

Made with ingredients from verifiable local sources, the dish strikes food lovers with soft rice noodle and coconut soup served with crabmeat with punchy spiciness – a nod to Southern Thai cuisine. The soup is complemented by Crispy Soft-Shell Crabs with assorted fresh vegetables served on the side.

Price: Bt490-plus

Location: third floor of Gaysorn Tower

It is opened daily from 10.30am to 10pm. Call (02) 075 2661.

Tagliatelle con Aragosta by Theo Mio: Italian Kitchen by Theo Randall at InterContinental Bangkok Hotel

Al dente, homemade pasta, sweet lobster meat and rich chorizo pork sausage are tossed in a pan with a sour ketchup sauce specially created by Theo Randall, a British celebrity chef. It is then topped with a spicy kick from an Italian variety of Thai basil. It has an open kitchen to arouse diners with dreamlike scents upon cooking and allow them to see each dish when it is being actualised.

Price: Bt725-plus

Location: G floor of InterContinental Hotel Bangkok.

It is opened daily from 11.30 to 11.30. Call (02) 656 0444 extension 6273.

Healthy dining, vegetarian style

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Healthy dining, vegetarian style

tasty October 08, 2018 12:57

By The Nation

The Vegetarian Festival, which kicks off today and runs until October 17, is being celebrated at leading hotels around Bangkok.

Dynasty, the Chinese restaurant of Centara Grand at Central Plaza Lat Phrao, has a menu during created by Chef Kam that’s available from October 12 to 21.

It features varied selection of vegetarian dim sum and special dishes such as steamed Chinese bun filled with mixed vegetables (Bt55-plus); wrapped seaweed and Chinese bean curd with lotus root and vegetables steamed in corn soup (Bt75-plus); pan-fried vegetarian Chinese dumpling (Bt75-plus); sauteed vegetarian prawns with ginkgo nuts, red jujubes and cashew nuts (Bt400-plus); braised vegetarian bean curd and shitake mushrooms in a casserole (Bt290-plus); stir-fried vegetarian Chinese noodles (Bt240-plus); and stir-fried Chinese broccoli with vegetarian abalone in brown sauce (Bt600-plus).

For reservations, call (02) 541 1234 extension 4151.

Fook Yuan of Golden Tulip of Sovereign Hotel Bangkok is featuring a selection of vegetarian dishes that includes steamed Vegetarian Dumpling, Ha Gao, steamed Vegetarian Bun, Deep fried Vegetarian Spring Rolls, Wok-Fried Egg Noodle with Sesame Oil, Baked Bean Curd with Condiment in Clay pot, Bamboo Pith Soup with black mushroom priced from Bt90-plus along with a set menu for 10 f Bt7,900-plus. 92 Cafe adds a vegetarian buffet corner priced at Bt400-plus for both lunch and dinner.

Call (02) 641 4777.

The Mulberry Chinese Cuisine and The Berkeley Dining Room of The Berkeley Hotel Pratunam have such veggie delights as Bamboo Fungous and shiitake in brown soup, Tofu and vegetables in oyster sauce, Fried rice with cereal grain and Stir-fried Eggplant with Vegetarian sauce in Casserole.

Make bookings at (02) 309 9999 extension 3134.

Over at the Ambassador Hotel, Hong Teh Chinese Restaurant has a veggie set menu priced Bt900-plus and from Bt4,888-plus to Bt8,888-plus for a table of 10. Am Cafe adds a vegetarian corner to its international buffet lunch for Bt499-plus per person. The Bloom presents a vegetarian a la carte menu priced at Bt140-plus per portion.

Reserve a table at (02) 254 0444.

Meanwhile, the World restaurant Centara Grand at CentralWorld offers some Thai-inspired dishes to enjoy – minus the meat! Their creations include Tom Yum Hed Ruam (spicy Thai-style tom yum soup with mushrooms); Gaeng Jued Tao Hoo Sarai (tofu with seaweed soup); Tao Hoo Thod (deep-fried tofu; Gaeng Kiew Wan Pak (green curry vegetable in coconut milk); and Pad Thai Je (a vegetable version of Thailand’s classic Pad Thai).

Find out more at (02) 100 6255.

Moveable feasts on Kathmandu’s streets

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Moveable feasts on Kathmandu’s streets

tasty October 06, 2018 14:35

By Marissa Taylor
The Kathmandu Post
Asia News Network
Kathmandu

Street food vendors add colour and life to Kathmandu’s streets, yet the authorities see them as nothing more than a nuisance

Anil Jaiswal, 35, makes egg rolls for a living, which he sells for Rs 100 a piece in Thamel, on a cart no larger than an ice cream trolley. On this cart is an old, greasy stove, a chopping board, a few egg cartons, some dough in a container, and a large plastic bag with vegetables—tomatoes, cabbage, green chillies, onions, carrots. This small cart is Jaiswal’s only means of income, with which he feeds his family of four.

Jaiswal, who has never been to school, migrated to Kathmandu from Rautahat some 13 years ago. He came to the Capital, like thousands others, to make a living. His father too had worked on Kathmandu’s streets all his life—selling and fixing kitchenware, which helped him scrape together a meagre income that was just enough to feed his family. Jaiswal had hoped that the city would be kinder to him than it was to his father. But he learned quickly that surviving in Kathmandu is not easy, especially for street vendors like Jaiswal, who have to tackle a host of challenges every day: inflated grocery prices, competition from neighbouring brick-and-mortar restaurants, and periodic, unwelcome visits by the Kathmandu Metropolitan City (KMC) officials.

“Only a few weeks ago, a group of KMC officials came in and seized seven carts at around 8:30 pm,” says Jaiswal. Such seized carts are transported and dumped at the Kathmandu Metro Police’s field office in Teku, where they are later auctioned off to the highest bidder.

Luckily, Jaiswal had already left for home that day. “The police come whenever they want,” he says. “Sometimes these big restaurants call them to disrupt our business. Whenever they come, they take away everything we have. Nowadays, only a courageous few stay after eight. We work in fear every day. But we come nonetheless; we have no alternative.”

Food vendors like Jaiswal are a fixture on Kathmandu’s streets. Over time, they have become vital to the culture of the city. The pani puri/chatpate dais and the momo and sekuwa carts are what make Kathmandu’s streets come alive. But to the government, particularly the KMC, they are seen as nothing more than an inconvenience.

For this reason, KMC authorities have tried to ‘purge’ the streets of these vendors, claiming that they are taking over the streets and creating chaos. What the authorities forget in their attempt to impose ‘order’ on the streets of Kathmandu is that these people are much like everyone else, trying to find a means to survive. But the Nepal government’s negligence in creating provisions that are amenable to its poorest makes us question whether its attitude towards its underprivileged is rooted in goodwill, or in dismissal and negligence.

Operating in the grey

KMC’s rules keep the vendors away from the streets during the day, but it has agreed in principle, with the Nepal Street Vendor’s Union (NEST), an organisation that advocates for the rights of street vendors, to let them set up shop after 7pm, after rush hour. This agreement has come into shape after the organisation held multiple dialogues with various government officials; however, nothing is on paper, say NEST officials. This gives the KMC leeway to swoop in whenever it pleases.

“These street vendors cannot just put up their carts on public property; it is against the law. We are just doing our duty by picking up their carts,” says KMC Chief Police Bishnu Prasad Joshi dismissively.

NEST, which was formed in 2003, has been working incessantly since its inception to organise and safeguard the occupational interests of street vendors, an issue the Nepali government has long avoided addressing. “We have been working to uplift the socio-economic status of street vendors for the past 15 years,” says Kumar Sapkota, president of NEST. “We have been pushing for the implementation of policies, for vendors to get licences, but to no avail.”

A decade ago, back in 2008, the association had submitted a memorandum to the Home Ministry through the District Administration Office, pressing their demands for the issuing of permits that would allow vendors to sell their wares after 5 pm; for the formation of a policy for vendors; and for the setting up of a social-security scheme. However, nothing has come of it as of yet.

“Just holding dialogues with government officials is not enough to protect vendors’ interests. To implement long-term contingency plans, there needs to be a unionised representation of street vendors from all over Nepal that will put the pressure on the government,” says Sapkota.

There is an estimated 100,000 street vendors (this number includes street vendors of all types) in 45 districts around the country, and around 30,000-40,000 in the valley, according to NEST. Only 20,000 are registered with NEST. “Most vendors are unaware that an organisation such as ours even exists. They don’t understand the legality of things; all they want is a means to fill their hungry stomachs,” he says.

Problems and resolutions

Back in 2014, during the tenure of Home Minister Bam Dev Gautam, after a series of agitated protests, the government did try to provide a temporary solution to the plight of street vendors: it designated temporary vending zones around Kathmandu, like Khulamanch, Tinkune ground, Kalanki and Balaju, where vendors could sell their services/products. However, the solution quickly fell apart, with the government blaming vendors for misusing the services available to them.

However, all these problems can easily be solved, only if the government chooses to. The benefits of legitimising these micro-enterprises are numerous. Take popular South Asian cities like Saigon, Delhi, Bali, among others. All these cities have a thriving—and legal—street food culture, which adds significantly to the economy of the place. In these cities, vendors are given permits and they are required to pay permit fees and taxes.

A model of this sort could easily be replicated in Nepal. This would not only add to the economy of the country, but also give the public quick, easy access to inexpensive food that is regulated by the government, under the Food Act. In India, for example, street food vendors need to be FSSAI registered and pay a certain monthly fee depending on their turnover or capacity. This guarantees safety for consumers.

Such measures would ultimately ensure an economically empowered population. Take, for example, Govinda Bhattarai, who runs a food truck in PepsiCola, earns roughly Rs 15,000-20,000 a day, and employs six young men. Bhattarai worked as a guard in Dubai for seven years before calling it quits to return to Nepal and do something on his own. With huge risk, and investment, he opened his food truck. To be on the safe side, he parks his vehicle on private property and pays a monthly rent of Rs 10,000 to the owners. He also pays a certain amount of money to the local community as part of an initiative to keep the vicinity clean. But because he does not have any paperwork that determines that his business is legitimate, he also has a constant fear of the police. If the police suddenly come to seize his livelihood, he has no one to turn to.

So, what is to be done?

“Kathmandu’s unstructured urbanisation and poor land-use zone designation is partly to be blamed for the haphazard way this issue of street vendors has been handled till date. But there are alternatives that the government can use,” says Sapkota.

For instance, the government could re-start the process of allocating special spaces to street vendors. It can assign certain spaces—small clearings not on the thoroughfares but on the quieter corners of streets—designated to street vendors to conduct their businesses.

For long-term, more sustainable measures, the government has to formulate policies that include the registration of street vendors as legal micro-business entities. “The vendors are ready to pay taxes to the government as well, if they are acknowledged as viable micro-businesses,” says Sapkota.

But unless the government acknowledges these issues and comes up with provisions that address the needs of the poor, vendors will continue to work in this grey area. And this atmosphere of constant fear will not only strip away the charm of Kathmandu’s streets, but also create a culture that allows malpractices to take place, and makes the poorest more susceptible to exploitation. For vendors like Jaiswal, whose egg rolls are his only livelihood, there are few alternatives to working on the streets.

Chicken with a Korean flavour

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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  • Spicy BBQ Roasted Chicken (half)
  • South Korean chain Chir Chir Fusion Chicken Factory opens its first outlet in Thailand at Bangkok’s CentralWorld, offering chicken dishes in different flavoured combinations.
  • Garlicky Chicken Tenders with a mug of Cream Beer
  • Nest Snow

Chicken with a Korean flavour

tasty October 06, 2018 01:00

By Khetsirin Pholdhampalit
The Nation Weekend

2,131 Viewed

Chimaek comes to Bangkok courtesy of popular chain Chir Chir

SOUTH KOREA’S drinking culture of chimaek, the pairing of fried chicken and beer, is often portrayed through its popular drama series as the favourite comfort food of their leading characters. Given the love for all things Korean, it comes as no surprise that the trend has swept through many Southeast Asian countries and Thailand is certainly no exception.

The South Korean chain Chir Chir Fusion Chicken Factory known for its fusion take on the culture of chimaek recently opened its first outlet in Bangkok on the sixth floor of CentralWorld and offers more then 30 chicken dishes in different flavoured combinations.

You can have fried chicken with a variety of sauces like garlicky, sour and sweet, spicy, cream cheese and even whipped cream or have it cooked with pasta, Korean noodles, fried rice and tteok-bokki (stir-fried rice cake). A whole roasted chicken seasoned with BBQ sauce, rosemary or garlic is also offered for those preferring to lay off the fried dishes.

“I think Thai people like to eat chicken more than pork, beef and duck. We bring fried chicken in a variety of choices from the traditional way to fusion style. We don’t only offer chicken in different cuts, but also as half the bird and a whole one to share among friends and family members. We use only fresh, not frozen chicken and marinate it in the brand’s special sauces imported from South Korea to ensure consistency in flavour,” says Darren Tan, managing director of Chir Chir (Thailand).

In the eight years since it was launched, Chir Chir has opened 80 outlets in South Korea and 20 in China and has expanded to Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia. Thailand is its most recent outlet.

Chir Chir – pronounced “chi-ruh chi-ruh” – gets its name from the sound of bubbling oil when the chicken hits a deep-fryer and embodies the dining culture of |chimaek that is a combination of “chi” for chicken and “maek” from maekju for beer.

Opened three months ago, the casual 175-sqm Bangkok outlet is decked out with comfy sofas – some in a semi-circular shape – with funky wall illustrations of chicken, faux eggshells, egg cartons, and chicken figurines adding a playful touch. It can accommodate about 100 diners.

“We use local chicken and each bird weighs 1.1 to 1.3 kilograms. This size is good for both deep frying and roasting as the meat will retain its juicy texture. The chicken is cooked to order and customers can expect to wait about 10 minutes to be served,” adds Tan, a Singaporean entrepreneur who holds the master franchise of the brand in Thailand.

Crispy Fried Wingettes

Chir Chir’s signature fried chicken is available in three varieties – crispy, garlicky and spicy and can be enjoyed in a choice of cuts ranging from drumette, wingette and boneless tender (Bt129-Bt149 for six pieces), half (Bt240-Bt260) and whole (Bt460-Bt490).

 Garlicky Chicken Tenders with a mug of Cream Beer

The chicken is marinated with house seasonings before being lightly battered and deep-fried. The outer layer is crispy but the inside remains soft and juicy. The original Crispy

Fried Chicken is served with salsa and honey mustard sauces while the Spicy Chicken is seasoned with a sticky sweet-and-spicy chilli sauce. The Garlicky Chicken is tossed with crispy garlic flakes and chopped spring onions.

 Kkan Pung King

The best-seller among Thai customers, according to Tan, is “Kkan Pung” (Bt260 for half, Bt490 whole), a dish of crispy fried boneless chicken and tteok-bokki in a spicy-and-sweet sauce served with a dipping of fondue cream.

Rose Cheese Chiqueen

Prepared tableside on a tabletop stove is Rose Cheese Chiqueen (Bt310 for half, Bt570 whole) featuring crispy fried chicken tenders in rosy mozzarella cream cheese, together with potato wedges and cherry tomatoes. The waiter pours the fondue over the chicken just as the cheese melts, making this a perfect dish for all cheese lovers.

Nest Snow

Another cheesy dish is Nest Snow (Bt310 for half, Bt570 whole) with spicy Cajun chicken tenders on a bed of rich cream cheese, sweet potato mash and broccoli and topped with freshly whipped cream and grated cheese.

Spicy BBQ Roasted Chicken (half)

The popular roasted choice comes with a spicy BBQ sauce (Bt310 for half, Bt570 whole) that is marinated for over 10 hours before oven roasting. It is served with soft-boiled egg, baked potato with sour cream and salsa sauce.

 Spicy Seafood Soup

Also well with trying is the Spicy Seafood Soup (Bt299), which boasts mussels, prawns, crayfish, and squid in a spicy clam-based broth.

 Honey Grape Salad

Dessert comes in the form of fruit salad. Honey Grape Salad (Bt259) offers chilled, sweet and seedless green grapes with walnuts, pine nuts and almonds dressed with ricotta and whipped cream. A baked tortilla drizzled with honey and garlic adds a crunchy touch.

To complement the chicken, Chir Chir offers a mug of Cream Beer (350ml/Bt169 and 650ml/Bt269), local draught beer crowned with freshly whipped cream for a bittersweet aftertaste. Drinkers love to make a moustache with the cream and post the results on their social media sites.

Mocktail of Passion Yellow Tok! Tok! 

Perfect to overcome the oiliness is a jug of Tok! Tok! available in both non-alcoholic (Bt239) and alcoholic (Bt339) servings in four flavours – passion fruit, berries, green grape and blue lemonade. A soda charger to fizz the drink is placed tableside when the order is placed.

Sparkling Blueberry

Other drink choices to wash down the meal are Sparkling Soda (Bt159) – a tall glass of fizzy soda water infused with either blueberry or passion fruit concentrate topped with lemon slices and sweet basil leaves.

CLUCKING CRAZY

Chir Chir Fusion Chicken Factory on the sixth floor of CentralWorld, Bangkok is open daily from 10.30am to 10pm.

Call (02) 252 2204 or visit http://www.Facebook.com/ChirChirThailand.

Salmon makes its benefits felt

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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Gigantic pens allow Norwegian salmon to live and swim freely, resulting in fresh, sumptuously delicious salmon with layers of fat, safe for consumption
Gigantic pens allow Norwegian salmon to live and swim freely, resulting in fresh, sumptuously delicious salmon with layers of fat, safe for consumption

Salmon makes its benefits felt

tasty October 05, 2018 01:00

By THE NATION

World Heart Day falls on September 29 and the World Heart Federation is calling on people to mark it by being more awareness of their health.

One of the best foods to pamper the heart is salmon.

Salmon is a fatty fish, full of omega3 fatty acids, and unless always eaten with a dollop of cream and instant mashed potatoes, is very unlikely to make you fat.

Studies have shown that those who indulge in fatty fish a few times a week have a significantly lower risk – by almost one half, compared to those who do not – of fatal heart disease. Aside from helping to keep the heart attack at bay, the omega3 fatty acids in salmon also play a vital part in lowering blood pressure and increasing “good” cholesterol or HDL.

Salmon has been enjoying a growing popularity in Thailand, although the fish is not caught or farmed here because the hot climate is not friendly to the fish.

Instead, every day, planes full of salmon fly in directly from Norway, the world’s leading expert in salmon production. The cold, clear waters of Norway make the fish plump and delicious, and in as little as 48 hours, the swimming fish will have found their way onto a sashimi platter at any high-street Japanese restaurants.

Salmon can also make you happy, as it is high in tryptophan, an amino acid that helps the body produce serotonin – a compound directly linked to happiness.

It’s good for the skin too, an important factor for the  selfie generation. And it promotes vision health, preventing dryeye conditions while packing B vitamins that helps repair DNA and vitamin D, which promotes skin cells growth and regeneration, creating a younger look.

And it’s not even hard to find: Thailand is the biggest importer of Norwegian Salmon in Southeast Asia, making this highquality beauty food readily available all around.

Dean & Deluca pops up in Khao Yai

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Dean & Deluca pops up in Khao Yai

tasty October 05, 2018 01:00

By THE NATION

Dean & Deluca, the gourmet food and beverage brand from New York, brings back its popular “kitchen on wheels” with a fully-equipped food truck popping up at AKAS Khao Yai every Friday to Sunday and long weekends from 9am to 6pm, from today.

Enjoy the panoramic view of Khao Yai whiule feasting on the All American Breakfast Griddle (Bt395), Traditional Egg Benedict (Bt325), Smoked Duck Salad (Bt325), Metaiko Smoked Salmon Tagliolini (Bt325), Khao Yai Cheese Burger (Bt465) and Ham & Cheese Melt (Bt275).

A range of desserts are also available including Khao Yai Tropical Pancake/Waffle (Bt325) and Mixed Berries Pancake/Waffle (Bt295). You can team these sweet options with everything from espresso drinks to refreshing iced teas, New York sodas and smoothies. New on the menu this year and recommended by baristas is Espresso Citrus Tonic (Bt125), a thirst-quenching summer drink featuring Asian Blend espresso shot, a layer of bittersweet tonic, citrus juice and a slice of lemon and Mandarin orange as garnish.

Six hands, one dinner

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/tasty/30355558

Six hands, one dinner

tasty October 02, 2018 09:25

By The Nation

Three top chefs will join up at the Michelin-starred Sra Bua by Kiin Kiin restaurant Siam Kempinski Hotel Bangkok to present a six-course Thai dinner on December 1.

The dinner brings together chef Henrik Yde Andersen of Kiin Kiin restaurant in Copenhagen, Denmark, and chef Ian Kittichai of Issaya Siamese Club restaurant in Bangkok to work with Sra Bua by Kiin Kiin’s head chef Chayawee Sutcharitchan.

“This collaborative dinner will highlight the magnificence of Thai gastronomy in a unique and exceptional way. The chefs will be adapting the popular concept at Sra Bua by Kiin Kiin, where guests witness the theatre-style performances of the chefs and their teams as they prepare each course,” explained Alex Pichel, general manager of Siam Kempinski Hotel Bangkok.

The chefs will each craft two-courses with live cooking demonstrations in front of the guests, as they choreograph different tastes through their dishes and creations with unique Thai flavours.

Menu highlights include raw cod fish with spicy marinated with Thai herbs, cod crackling and cod roe by chef Chayawee; Thai Kobe A5 pon-yang-kham beef, slow-roasted with Siamese cassia leaves and roasted chili-coconut by chef Ian; and coconut Morpf-Mehkong sugar cane – passion fruit “en surprise” with ginger kefir infused pineapple and southern yellow curry ice-cream, salted Amalfi and lemon meringue by chef Andersen.

The dinner is priced at Bt5,800-plus per person inclusive of wine pairing. For details, call (02) 162 9000 or visit http://www.SrabuaByKiinKiin.com.

Thai gourmet food at Spice Market

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/tasty/30355547

Thai gourmet food at Spice Market

tasty October 01, 2018 13:45

By The Nation

Anantara Siam Bangkok’s Spice Market is collaborating with leading chef Chudaree “Tam” Debhakam for an exclusive dining experience that will run from October 18 to 20.

Designed for 40 guests per night, chef Tam, the first winner of Top Chef Thailand reality TV culinary competition, will serve a sixcourse dinner featuring Duck larb terrine and chicken liver mousse with Khao Kum rice grilled flatbread, Thai Mackerel bushi fingerroot broth with cold eggnoodles and Blue swimming crab, white turmeric, and crab curry sauce.

The threenight event will also be joined by awardwining mixologist Vipop “Tor” Jinaphan and head bartender Chanchai “Boyd” Rodbamrung from Thaipioka Bar, who will create a special cocktail menu themed around exotic Thai flavours such as Niam – Kamquat, Phraya Old Fashioned, Tumeric Thai Tea and Ground Toasted Rice – Yogurt to compliment Chef Tam’s creations.

Dinner is priced at Bt3,500plus and is served from 6.30pm.

Make a reservation by calling (02) 126 8866 extension 1232 or visit http://www.SiamBangkok.Anantara.com.

Pizza, meet lobster

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/tasty/30355412

  • Spritzy Spritzy cocktail
  • Mozza by Cocotte offers Italian comfort food and a choice of indoor seating and sofas outside.
  • Lupicante pizza
  • Eight-cheese Latteria pizza
  • Trofie Tartufate

Pizza, meet lobster

tasty September 29, 2018 01:00

By Khetsirin Pholdhampalit
The Nation Weekend

Italian comfort food gets authentically homey at Mozza by Cocotte

THE KITCHEN Group continues its mission to nourish Bangkok diners on la cusina di mamma (Mom’s cooking), having already swaddled tummies in love at its rustic rotisserie Cocotte Farm Roast & Winery and the Mediterranean-inspired Pesca Mar & Terra Bistro.

Its newest restaurant, Mozza by Cocotte at the EmQuartier, specialises in the two most popular Italian dishes, pizza and pasta. There are in fact 11 different choices in pizza, from simple Neapolitan style with tomato sauce and mozzarella to the fancy lobster and bisque tomato sauce offering – and that’s a whole lobster.

Mozza by Cocotte offers Italian comfort food and a choice of indoor seating and sofas outside.

“The star at Cocotte is big tomahawk steak, while the classic Spanish rice dish paella satisfies the diners at Pesca,” says Julien Jourdan, the Kitchen Group’s marketing director. “At Mozza, it’s pizza, which is beloved by so many because it’s perfect for enjoying on your own or sharing among friends and family.”

The bistro has both indoor and outdoor dining areas, enough to seat about 100 people altogether. The inside has warm lighting, a patterned floor, wood and marble tables and chairs upholstered in deep blue material to evoke the vast Mediterranean.

Jourdan points out that the other two restaurants are standalone operations, whereas Mozza, located in a mall, has a design that “plays on authentic but warm ambience that people feel comfortable with.

“Our signature open kitchen adds a dynamic vibe and the round tables are best for sharing. The brick oven imported from Italy is another prominent structural highlight.”

Diners can browse a cheese station and make their selections from among many different kinds of Italian cheeses and cold cuts (Bt590 for three picks and Bt920 for five).

The chef’s choice goes into the Italian Board (Bt980) – three cheeses and three cold cuts – and another fine option is the Mozza’s Board (Bt1,490), with five of each.

The restaurant’s name of course refers to mozzarella, quite basic in taste yet a crucial ingredient in Italian cuisine. It goes well with anything, from salad to pizza to pasta and in fact is used in almost every dish prepared on the premises.

Burrata with Mango, Bell Pepper and Parma Ham 

If you really love mozzarella, order one of the Burrata dishes in which it forms the outer shell, holding a soft filling of stracciatella and cream.

Burrata with Mango, Bell Pepper and 24-month Parma Ham (Bt620) features diced ripe mango in sweet-and-sour sauce and slightly salty parma ham.

Eight-cheese Latteria pizza 

If you like your pizza cheesy, the Latteria (Bt560) contains eight kinds of cheese – gorgonzola, talegio, scamoza, fontina, asiago, provolone, ricotta and toma.

Familiar to Thais is Mangia Fuoco (Bt680), a slightly spicy and garlicky pizza redolent with chilli, nudja, ventricina and burrata and, yes, garlic. The fanciest pizza is Lupicante (Bt1,390), the one with the whole lobster, plus bisque tomato sauce, mozzarella and green peas.

Lupicante pizza

In addition to the usual pastas like bolognese and ricotta gnocchi, Jourdan suggests trying a non-mainstream dish – Trofie Tartufate (Bt790). It’s rarely found in any Bangkok Italian restaurant.

Trofie Tartufate 

“This authentic dish is made from a family recipe of our chef, Samuele Alvisi, whose hometown is Riolo Terme, near Bologna in northern Italy,” says Jourdan. “It’s cooked with beef cheek in a delicate and time-consuming process, along with sauteed mushrooms, parmesan and truffle shavings. It’s a nice combination.”

Caciucco

Jourdan knows that Thais love seafood, but few are acquainted with Caciucco (Bt1,290), an Italian-style stew of Maine lobster, mussels, clams, octopus and scallops served with home-made toasted garlic ciabatta.

Delizia al Limone 

For dessert, opt for a tangy and creamy Delizia al Limone (Bt290) – a ladyfinger biscuit on a bed of breadcrumbs topped with limoncello and lemon jelly.

Sitting next to the open kitchen is a bar whose proprietor will help pair drinks to your dishes. A great non-alcohol aperitif is Garden Berries, a shake of blackberry, raspberry and strawberry juice mixed with syrup and fresh lime. Another is Green Velvet, combining fresh spinach, celery, kiwi puree and fresh lime – healthy and good for detoxifying. Each costs Bt120.

Garden Berries and Green Velvet 

A nice cocktail aperitif is the Spritzy Spritzy, made with sparkling wine and grapefruit liquor. Presumed to aid digestion after the meal is the Tuscany Breeze, a mix of whisky, peach liquor, lime and raspberry syrup. Each of these costs Bt340.

Eighty per cent of the wines at Mozza are from Italy.

Tuscany Breeze cocktail

MAMA MIA!

Mozza by Cocotte is on the ground floor of the EmQuartier |in Bangkok and open daily |from 10 to 10.

Call (097) 004 0072 or visit http://www.Mozza-Bangkok.com.