Sunday 25 September 2011

Thai Cooking Class at i Love Kitchen, K11 Mall, B104, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon

Chef Napa in cooperation with i LOVE Kitchen is pleased to invite you to participate in cooking classes at the brand new premises of i LOVE Kitchen in Tsim Sha Tsui.

To celebrate The October HK Wine & Dine Festival, Chef Napa will be dedicating this day to provide you with her special Thai recipes!
         
The class theme will be a demonstration of Thailand cuisine, a four courses cooking class (*):

Sunday 30th October 2011 at (11.00am – 13.00pm)

  • Starter: Lanna Clouds (Honey tofu wrapped in vermicelli noodles served with sweet and sour dipping sauce)
  • Soup: Thai Sour Coconut Soup (Baby coconut  in lemongrass, kaffir leaves, galangal and lime clear soup)
  • Main course: Phra-ram Chicken (Chicken marinated in satay syrup and wrapped in pandanus leaves served with shallot-tamarind dipping sauce)
  • Dessert: Sweet Summer Mango (Sticky rice and sliced mango pieces served with coconut milk syrup)


Fee:                 HKD300 per person

Enrolment:     Advance booking is required due to limited number of seats. Bookings are on first-in-first served basis. Please remit your payments 3 days prior to the class day in cash or credit card at any i love Kitchen store (please go to http://www.ilovekitchen.com/ for informations). The attending fee is not refundable but may be forwarded to another date.

Venue:            K11 Mall, B104, Hanoi Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Tsim Sha Tsui MTR (Exit N3)

Tel:                 (852) 9104 5590 or 3122 4131

You may also consult us at:

Email:  thaicookingclassathome@gmail.com;  info@ilovekitchen.com
      Website: www.thaicookingclassathome.webs.com; www.ilovekitchen.com

* Class will be mainly conducted in English but Chef Napa also speaks some Cantonese

Thursday 11 August 2011

EWGA Thai Cooking Class & Dinner 28-Aug-2011


EWGA (English Professional Women Golf Association)

      


Thai cooking class & Dinner night (28th July 2011)

Despite a brief downpour on 28th July night, 15 lives of EWGA members were having fun of observing my Thai cooking demonstration class. That night I was introducing 6 different Thai dishes which include:

1. Thai style papaya salad
2. Red Paneng Chicken
3. Yellow curry pork
4. Fish nuggets with sweet & sour chili sauce
5. Chiangmai sweet sausage salad
6. We closed our menu course with mixed Thai fruits salad in mild coconut syrup

Some of the members were at first afraid of the spiciness but later found that each dish was actually combined various tastes a bit like an orchestra of flavors playing in their mouths-- spicy was part but not really outstanding the other tastes such sweet, sour, salty and it played some legendary scores that all members can't stop serving themselves for more. I was really happy to see my students enjoyed the cooking course and tasted and finished all dishes that we cooked! Thank you all


Sunday 15 May 2011

Thursday 5 May 2011

4th May 2011 Hiroko & Friends

Yesterday we cooked:  Tom Yum Goong, Chicken with bamboo soup, Miced chicken salad and Fried chicken wrapped in pandanus leaves! 

The wrapping pandanus leaves part was a real challenging task for my Japanese pupils but in the end everyone was so happy about their wrapping achievement!!!

Monday 2 May 2011

Thai Cooking Classes for Mother’s Day Gift!

Flowers, chocolate cakes or cookies that are wonderful gift, but you can also offer your dear 
mother something different… how about a Thai cooking class?

It is special and exotic gift idea! Especially if your mother enjoys Thai food…

She will discover the experience of a one–on-one hands-on cooking class with Chef Napa 
and a great meal at home. Subscribe now and receive your Gift Voucher, then, please browse 
my website www.thaicookingclassathome.webs.com to choose your favorite dishes, 
set the date and time booking online.

A special promotion package of HKD800 for a choice of 3 dishes is available 
at Thai Cooking Class at Home. Your mom can also invite 2 guests to her first 
home cooked Thai dinner/lunch.

If your mom is too far away… why not treat yourself instead?

If you wish to offer this very special present to your dear Mother, then do not miss this opportunity. 
Reserve a date for her! or for yourself by using our online Appointment Book.

Monday 25 April 2011

Thai Culture Corner

Do you know much about Thai cuisine & culture? Can you name a few things that are related to Thai cuisine & culture? If you are not too savvy about it, then let me tell you a little story about my home country...

Thai cuisine is famous for the subtle blending of four basic tastes: sweet, sour, spicy and salty. These four basic tastes represent the corner stone of a large proportion of dishes. Such tastes prevail more or less depending on the many provinces cooking styles and availability of ingredients. There is a myriad of such ingredients that may help to achieve these four basic tastes. Among those, the most common are either a combination of herbs or spices namely chili, galangal, lemongrass, kaffir leaves, basil(s) and fruits such as lime, lemon and papaya. More information about each herb and spice see "Ingredients Corner" please!

Thai people normally eat their meals with steamed plain rice. The best variety of steamed rice in the world is called "Jasmin Rice". It is a long grain rice that was originally cultivated in the province of Chachoengsao that is situated 150km to the East of Bangkok. Another rice specialty is the famous  steamed sticky or glutinous rice. Most of the northerners and northeasterners eat their food with sticky rice. Thailand as you know is famous as a land of Jasmin Rice and it is also the world number 1 Jasmin Rice exporter.

Jasmin Rice Harvesting

You might have seen Jasmin rice grains look like, but do you know how they're cultivated, harvested and finally ended up in your plate and at last eaten by you?...Lets see hah?


                   
          (stage 1: Preparing rice field)            
              (stage 2: Pouling rice trees) 

        

         (stage 3: Baby rice trees)                                  (stage 4: Matured rice trees
  
        
        (stage 5: Planting matured rice trees)                      (stage 6: Growing stage)
                 

               (stage 7: Harvesting)                                    (stage 8: Currying to the hitting field) 
 
             
    
           (stage 9: Threshing)                                            (stage 10: Hulling)    
        
               (stage 11: Cleaning)                                     (stage 12: Complete cleaning)
      

                     (stage 13: cooking)                                     (stage 14: In your plate!!)





Monday 28 March 2011

Thai cuisine ingredients corner

Bird's Eye Chili plant is a perennial with small, tapering fruits, often 2-3, at a node. The fruits of most varieties are red, some are yellow, purple or black. The fruits are very pungent. The flowers are greenish white or yellowish white. The bird's eye chili is small but packs quite a lot of heat. At one time it was even listed as the hottest chili in the Guiness Book World Records hotter varieties of chili have since been identified. It measures around 50,000-100,000 Scoville Units. Chili as you know is a main ingredient in Thai food and other Asian cuisines. Based on many researches, eating chilis can help you reducing the fat. If you like to have a slim and healthy shape.. then eat more chilis!

Thai Sweet Basil (Thai name, bai horapa), also known as Oriental basil or Asian basil, is a cultivar of sweet basil commonly used in the cuisines of Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. Thai basil has a more pronounced licorice or anise flavor.

The leaves of Thai basil are deep green, smaller than those of Western basil, and arranged on purple-hued stems. The flowers, which are edible as well, are red-purple and licorice flavored. The flowers of Thai basil form in a cluster, not on a spike, unlike those of common basil. The flowers make an attractive plate garnish or colorful addition to green salads and green curry dish.

Thai Holy Basil lends a distinctive flavor to many Thai dishes. It is called “holy” due to its use over the centuries by Thai monks as a herb for calming the mind and body, thereby enhancing meditative practices. Thai holy basil can be distinguished from sweet basil by its purple coloring and pointed leaves. Its flowers are also purple.  Thai  holy basil leaves are used in Thai food stir fried dishes such as "Stir fried holy basil with chicken".    


Thai Lemon Basil is an herb grown primarily in northeastern Africa and southern Asia, for its strong fragrant lemon scent is used in cooking. Lemon basil has stems that can grow to 20-40 cm tall. It has white flowers in late summer to early fall. The leaves are similar to basil leaves, but tend to be narrower. In Thailand, lemon basil is called "Maenglak" and it is one of several types of basil that you can see from above pictures used in Thai cuisine. We often use lemon basil in soups.

 
Galangal, called Kah in Thai and known variously as "galangal" and "laos root," is an immensely pungent and fiery rhizome related to the common ginger but with a personality distinctly its own. Its abundant usage in Thai cooking, almost to the exclusion of ginger, has earned it the title of Siamese or Thai ginger. In short, it is to Thai cooking what common ginger is to Chinese cooking.

There are two different varieties, one known as "greater galanga" and the other, " Lesser galanga". The first, which is larger in size, lighter in color and subtler in aroma, is the kind most used in Thai cooking.

Ginger, Fresh ginger is essential to Asian and oriental cookery. Ginger has fiery and pungnent flavours. In Asian cooking ginger is almost always used fresh, either minced, crushed or sliced. In Thai cuisine we use dried ginger roots to make curry pastes. The tender and younger ginger can be sliced and eaten as a salad or added into stir fried dishes. 
Ginger is also most known for its effectiveness as a digestive aid. By increasing the production of digestive fluids and saliva, Ginger helps relieve indigestion, gas pains, diarrhea and stomach cramping. 

Lemongrass is a stalky plant with a lemony scent that grows in many tropical climates, most notably in Southeast-Asia. A common ingredient in Thai cooking, lemongrass provides a zesty lemon flavor and aroma to many Thai dishes.

Lemongrass is also known to have numerous health benefits, especially when used in combination with other Thai spices such as garlic, fresh chillies, and coriander. Tom Yum Koong for example, which contains all of these herbs and spices, with lemongrass as the key player. Tom Yum Goong is thought to be capable of combatting colds and flus.


Kaffir leaves can be added whole to Thai curries, soups, and stir-fried dishes - think of them as the Asian equivalent of bay leaves. Unlike lime, the kaffir lime is a rough, warty green fruit that grows on thorny bush with aromatic and distinctively shaped "double" leaves. It is well suited to container growing. The green lime fruit is distinguished by its bumpy exterior and its small size.


Garlic is a species in the onion family Allianceae. Its close relatives include the onion, shallot, leak, chive and rakkyo. The edible bulb or head of garlic is composed of smaller cloves. It is a root crop, with the bulb growing underground.

Garlic is one of the main key ingredients in Thai cuisine. In Thailand we use garlic almost in very dish including stir fries, soups, deep fries and even in curry pastes. Garlic has long been considered a medicinal food. garlic can reduce LDLs or  cholesterol and is a good blood-thinning agent to avoid blood clots which could potentially lead to heart attack or stroke.