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Thai Food Festival in Doha 0

Posted on June 25, 2009 by admin

A fourteen-day Thai Food Festival in Doha was inaugurated by the Thai Ambassador, His Excellency Mr. Suvat Chirapant and the Vice Chairman & Chief Operations Officer of Venture Gulf Group, Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz Al-Nasser at the Doha Marriott Hotel on Saturday, November 29th, 2008.The Thai Food Festival in Doha is supported by the Thailand Embassy and the Venture Gulf Group and FAL Travelmart as the co-sponsors. Mr. John S. Louie, Director of Operations, expressed gratitude on behalf of Doha Marriot Hotel to the Thai Embassy, Venture Gulf Group and FAL Travel Mart and commented that without their generous sponsorship the hotel would not have been able to offer the guest with distinctive rates and nice decorations.

Restaurant Asia Live at the Marriot Hotel in Doha offers the guest to part with delicious multi- culinary experience and discover an exciting lineup of exotic Thai dishes for gastronomic indulgence from November 29th to December 12th 2008. A whole rainbow of dishes that highlight the great and diverse cuisines of Thailand was prepared by the Thai Chef Seri. Specialty Chef Seri Alkkhason who is originally from Thailand, joined the Doha Marriott Family a couple of months ago and carries a great experiences to Doha Marriott’s Culinary Team. He took his primary cooking lessons of traditional Thai food from Thailand. Chef Seri follows a unique style by preparing traditional Thai food items and incorporates international cooking methods to offer his guests with a variety of tastes achieved through these innovative methods.

To add the dedication, he is a Thai food lover and hence makes no point to compromise with the authentic taste. ‘Thai Rice Noodles with prawn, chicken and vegetables’ is his most favourite dish and Chef Seri vows to offer exquisite Thai dishes in this fourteen day long food festival in Asia Live restaurant, Doha Marriot Hotel.  Thailand’s rich culinary heritage was one of its best-kept secrets until very recently with the tourism coming on to the Kingdom of Thailand. Later, Thai restaurants opened in Los Angelas and London, Sydney and Tokyo following the wide spread demand for Thai food globally. A visitor stepping in to taste the authentic Thai cuisine for the first time is very likely to have some previous experience of the subtle blend of tastes and textures that makes a Thai meal an unforgettable dish – Asias Live! Read the rest of this entry →

An Introduction to Thai Food 0

Posted on June 25, 2009 by admin

A Guide for the Gastronomically Timid British Newbie

A surprising number of us Brits are still very wary of “foreign food”. Despite claims that curry is now as much an English national dish as roast beef or fish and chips, there are still many people who are missing out on flavours they never dreamed existed. Whether we like it or not, the British palate is not renowned for its sense of adventure. Our indigenous cuisine is universally regarded as bland and, apart from the odd dash of mustard or horseradish sauce, hot and spicy are not qualities easily found in a traditional British meal.

Indian and Chinese foods have gained wide acceptance as recent generations have grown up with their presence. Other spicy foods that have long been popular in the USA, such as Mexican and Thai, have taken longer to become established in the UK. Mexican cuisine is still something of a novelty, but Thai food has enjoyed a veritable explosion of popularity in the last decade.

It is, perhaps, the universal presence of rice that misleads the uninitiated Brit into assuming that all South East Asian food is much the same. This misconception, although typical of the British indifference to, and ignorance of, exotic cultures, could not be further from the truth. The four regional styles that comprise Thai cuisine contain a range of unique and spectacular dishes. While the influence of Thailand’s Asian neighbours, particularly China, is present in some recipes, the richly structured native Thai cuisine evolved from a fusion of many influences. Trade routes brought input from Europe as well as other pats of Asia.

Thai cuisine has elements in common with both Indian and Chinese food, but offers advantages over both. The aromatic flavours are more prominent and varied than in Chinese food, and the majority of dishes are lighter and less fatty than Indian foods.

Rice, vegetables, fish and fresh herbs and spices are essential elements. Some common Thai ingredients, such as turmeric, which has anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, are often included in lists of so-called “super foods”. When one also considers the relatively small amount of red meat used in Thai recipes, it is not surprising that it is regarded as one of the healthiest cuisines in the world. Read the rest of this entry →



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