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Thai

2 New Cookbooks You Need to Read Now

One will take you to the night markets of Asia without leaving your kitchen, the other will put a little bit of Spring in your cooking.

Thai Coconut, Broccoli and Coriander Soup

Feel-good greens and creamy comforting coconut come together in less than half an hour for a weeknight dinner you can really get behind.

The International Ingredients You Need in Your Freezer Right Now

With these ingredients always on hand, there's no Thai (or Indian) (or Chinese) recipe you can't try.

Epi's Newest Recipes: #WeeknightPasta Edition

It's kind of been our best dinner week ever.

How to Make Pad Thai at Home in Just 22 Minutes

Takeout is convenient and all. But in the time it takes to wait for delivery, you can make pad Thai at home.

22-Minute Pad Thai

Tamarind juice concentrate helps gives this riff on the popular Thai stir-fry its tangy flavor.

The Easiest Way to Cook Real Thai Food at Home

The master of authentic Thai food didn't mean to teach me these easy flavor tricks. But he did anyway.

Thai Grilled Chicken Wings

The tangy dipping sauce is great with pretty much any grilled meat. Keep it on heavy rotation this summer.

Curry-and-Coconut-Milk-Grilled Pork Skewers

The little bits of fatback add an extra layer of deliciousness.

No Noodle Pad Thai

This popular Thai dish has been cooked regularly in our kitchen ever since we first tried it in Bangkok. The first time we made it at home, we stayed true to the original recipe by stir-frying rice noodles in a sweet and a slightly spicy sauce, but through the years, it has slowly transformed into something new. Instead of stir-frying rice noodles, we now simply peel a daikon radish (courgette/zucchini also works fine) into thin strips that we toss with carrot strands, tofu and fresh herbs and cover with a peanut butter and lime dressing. Even though we have changed both cooking method and ingredients, it still has that wonderful flavor combination of sweet, nutty, tangy and a little spicy and the experience is light, fresh and, in our opinion, even tastier.

Thai Celery Salad with Peanuts

"Celery is the perfect vehicle for a salty, assertive dressing like this one. Chiles and peanuts make it that much more addictive." —Alison Roman, senior associate food editor

Thai Salad with Whole Grain Brown Rice and Chicken

Peanut butter, ginger and fresh basil bring out the Thai character of this tasty rice-and-chicken salad

Green Mango Salad

Done well, this should be crunchy, fresh, spicy, sour, and a little bit funky. Taste as you go and adjust as needed.

Massaman Chicken

Prepared curry paste speeds up this nuanced dish.

Red Curry of Lobster and Pineapple

This curry is doubly rich from the coconut milk and the deep red curry, but the pineapple keeps it from being too heavy and gives a beautiful freshness to the dish. I like to cook the lobster in the shell because it makes for a more flavorful sauce, and I like to serve it that way too. You can be as refined as you like or, like me, pick up the shell and make an animal of yourself. If lobster is going to blow the budget, you can still have a delicious curry by substituting shrimp or monkfish.

Thai Beef Stew With Rice Noodles

Spoon gingery, slow-cooked beef and vegetables over wide rice noodles for a warming, soul-satisfying dinner.

Phrik Phon Khua (Toasted-Chile Powder)

Editor's Note: Use this broth to make Andy Ricker's Het Paa Naam Tok (Isaan-style Forest Mushroom Salad) . Flavor Profile: Spicy, slightly bitter and smoky Slowly toasted dried chiles—seeds and all—become a smoky, spicy ingredient that's essential to many recipes in [Pok Pok]. The key is to toast them over low heat until they're thoroughly dry and very dark, coaxing out a deep, tobacco-like flavor that has a bitter edge, but stopping before the pleasant bitterness turns acrid.

Het Paa Naam Tok (Isaan-style Forest Mushroom Salad)

Flavor Profile: Spicy, tart, aromatic, salty, umami-rich Try it with: Any Som Tam (Papaya salad and family) and/or Phat Khanaeng (Stir-fried Brussels sprouts). Needs Khao Niaw (Sticky rice). The recipe for steak salad is a classic, but naam tok made with mushrooms is less common. Yet mushrooms are everywhere in Thailand and echo the texture and even the umami-rich flavor of animal flesh. Thailand has a long history of vegetarian food, for strict Buddhists and those celebrating Buddhist holidays. And while I rarely spend time considering the needs of vegetarians, I figured that if I swapped out the fish sauce in the original for thin soy sauce, then they'd have something to eat at Pok Pok.

Khao Niaw (Sticky Rice)

Often the last thing people in the North and Northeast of Thailand do before bed is put raw grains of sticky rice in a pot, cover them with water, and leave them to soak. This is sticky rice country, and a day without sticky rice is almost unthinkable. Also called glutinous rice, it has a different starch composition than varieties like jasmine. I'm not qualified to explain the world of amylopectin and amylose starches, so suffice it to say that the glossy cooked grains of sticky rice are particularly chewy and stick to one another in clumps, yet still remain distinct. It's a magical thing. Served in baskets, either one per person or as a mountainous mound to be passed around, the grains of sticky rice form moldable masses. Practiced diners snatch off a gumball-size piece, reflexively fashion it into a sort of spoon shape, and use it to grab a taste of whatever else is on the table. In these baskets or in bamboo tubes, workers carry this rice with them into the fields and forests, a portable, edible eating implement. While you could argue that so-called "steamed jasmine rice" isn't steamed at all but rather boiled, sticky rice is actually steamed. In the Northeast, it typically goes into a bamboo basket; in the North, it's traditionally prepared in a clay pot with a perforated bottom, though today the pot is often aluminum. The basket or pot is set over a pot-bellied vessel filled with boiling water and the steam cooks the grains, already swollen from soaking, in just 15 minutes or so. The process is easy enough for uninitiated cooks. It just takes a little practice to get right.