Soup made with chicken cooked in coconut milk with galangal, lemon grass, mushrooms, spring onions (US: scallions, salad onions), coriander (US: cilantro) and tomatoes and hotted up with chillis.
Soup made with chicken, galangal, lemon grass, mushrooms, spring onions (US: scallions, salad onions), coriander (US: cilantro) and tomatoes.
Soup made with prawns, galangal, lemon grass, mushrooms, spring onions (US: scallions, salad onions), coriander (US: cilantro) and tomatoes cooked in coconut milk with chillis.
Bael fruit; a close relative of the citrus. The fruit is about the size of, and has the appearance of a greyish-yellow orange with a thin woody rind. The floury pulp is pale orange in colour and has numerous seeds. Dried slices are soaked and boiled and the resulting liquid sweetened and drunk. Used for medicinal purposes.
This is a fruit which you either loathe or love. Anthony Burgess described it as being like "eating blancmange in a public lavatory". An acquaintance agrees but says there is an additional whiff of paraffin. Quantas will no longer allow passengers to carry them on flights as the smell is so offensive. However, some foods seem to acquire desirability through difficulty of acquisition or rarity, such as Japanese junsai; through danger, as in fugu, or through general disgustingness, as in raw sea cucumber or durian. It has been said of fugu that, if you are unaware of the risks when eating it, the flavour seems quite bland. I feel that durian is rather the same. I suspect that, if you removed the smell, the taste would seem unremarkable. In Thailand this is the most expensive fruit and the season is from May to August.