All over the world people are looking for street food,
except perhaps for the people who grew up eating it. They’re often looking for
more “sophistication” in their dining choices, which range from McDonalds to elegant sous vide joints, depending upon their income levels. They’re replaced by travelers,
whose eagerness to find street food is exceeded only by their ignorance. Where? What?
When? (And sometimes)—Why?
Four years ago, Chawadee Nualkhair (www.bangkokglutton.com) brought light to the darkness for
Bangkok visitors when she wrote Bangkok’s Top 50 Street Food Stalls, which is
now out of print but still relevant if you can find one on alibris or at a used
bookstore. (I suggest Dasa Books and Coffee in Bangkok.) This year she brings
Thailand’s Best Street Food to eaters whose ambition surpasses their local
knowledge—or for Thai residents who are overwhelmed by their culinary choices.
It may seem hubristic to the point of madness to narrow
Thailand’s street food choices to a scant 160 pages, but that isn’t what Ms.
Nualkhair is doing. She has written a sort of eater’s primer, giving a
springboard of information that will launch the reader’s own journey of
discovery—or, with any luck at all, her own series of street food guides to the
regions she introduces in her latest book.
She begins with questions: Is street food dying out? What is
a street food stall? How did she make her selections for this book? The
question and answer that I loved best in her first book is absent here: How do
you determine the hygiene of a particular vendor? Nualkhair’s advice is look
carefully at the jars that hold condiments; if they aren’t clean, walk away.
A visual glossary to different kinds of noodles with
accompanying ingredients and broth, fried noodles, rice dishes, appetizers and
snacks, desserts, and beverages, with names in both English and Thai is almost worth
the price of the book. Don’t want ice in your drink? Point to the Thai script
for it and shake your head vigorously with a dramatic rendition of “Nononono." The only thing missing is the Thai script for “Where is the toilet?” which just might come in handy.
Otherwise the reader is covered, beyond a doubt. There are
maps to each culinary destination; there are names and addresses of the food stalls
both in English and in Thai, there are wonderful and tempting photographs (that
certainly deserve more space than they have been given), and every so often
there is a recipe—Elvis Suki’s Grilled Scallops, anyone? Adventurous eaters are
even told which stalls have restrooms and which do not provide bathroom tissue.
The choices range from north to south, with the greatest
concentration given to Bangkok. But every region is given careful attention—think
quality over quantity, along with information that will help in conducting further
independent study.
Really, what more does anyone need? On my next trip to
Thailand, this book is going along too.
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