As noted previously, Thai food has a fairly small basic ingredient set. Perhaps the most important of these is basil.
The basic stir fry with basil, peppers, onion and meat is called a kra pao, or on English-speaker-friendly menus, ‘Thai basil.’ I always order it because it's my favorite, but because it's a good dish with which to gauge the quality of a Thai restaurant. It allows me to focus on how well it is prepared, rather than wondering what's in it.
Really, I'm doing them a favor. Thai basil should be foolproof.
Thai Herbs (Downtown), a hole in the wall catering to the office worker demographic, manages to get it wrong. On a recent visit I ordered the beef version of Thai basil. What the cook came up with was acceptable lunch fare, but should more properly be labeled 'beef stir fry.'
It contained only 3 or 4 tiny slivers of basil. I've had more basil in dishes that weren't supposed to have basil in them.
A cheap cut of beef is fine, but it has to be sliced thin -- otherwise it takes too long to cook, and comes out tough.
The vegetables were cooked perfectly, sauteed onion and bell pepper, and green beans still crisp. But because they were not overcooked, it doesn't explain the origin of the extra water in the too-thin sauce. I suspect sauce prepared in advance, instead of created in the wok with the rest of the dish.
There are plenty of Thai restaurants in Seattle charging what Thai Herbs charges, yet they deliver a far superior product.
Monday, July 28, 2008
I think they forgot something
Labels:
Fast Food,
Foam or Plastic Containers,
Ingredients,
Lunch,
Thai
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