Thai food is internationally famous. Whether chilli-hot or comparatively blands, harmony is the guiding     principle behind each dish. Thai cuisine is essentially a marriage of centuries-old Eastern and Western     influences harmoniously combined into something uniquely Thai. The characteristics of Thai food
depend on who cooks it, for whom it is cooked, for what  occasion, and where it is cooked to suit all palates.        Originally, Thai cooking reflected the characteristics of a  waterborne lifestyle. Aquatic animals, plants and herbs        were major ingredients. Large chunks of meat were eschewed.  Subsequent influences introduced the use of sizeable chunks to Thai  cooking.
With their Buddhist background, Thais shunned the use of large  animals in big chunks. Big cuts of meat were shredded and        laced with herbs and spices. Traditional Thai cooking methods were  stewing and baking, or grilling. Chinese influences saw        the introduction of frying, stir frying and deep-frying. Culinary  influences from the 17th century onwards included Portuguese,        Dutch, French and Japanese. Chillies were introduced to Thai  cooking during the late 1600s by Portuguese missionaries who had        acquired a taste for them while serving in South America.

Thais were very adapt at 'Siamese-icing' foreign cooking  methods, and substituting ingredients. The ghee used in        Indian cooking was replaced by coconut oil, and coconut milk  substituted for other daily products. Overpowering pure        spices were toned down and enhanced by fresh herbs such as lemon  grass and galanga. Eventually, fewer and less spices were        used in Thai curries, while the use of fresh herbs increased. It  is generally acknowledged that Thai curries burn intensely,        but briefly, whereas other curries, with strong spices, burn for  longer periods. Instead of serving dishes in courses,        a Thai meal is served all at once, permitting dinners to enjoy  complementary combinations of different tastes.
A proper Thai meal should consist of a soup, a curry dish with  condiments, a dip with accompanying fish and vegetables.        A spiced salad may replace the curry dish. The soup can also be  spicy, but the curry should be replaced by non spiced items.        There must be a harmony of tastes and textures within individual  dishes and the entire meal.
Thai food is eaten with a fork and spoon. Even single dish meals  such as fried rice with pork, or steamed rice topped with        roasted duck, are served in bite-sized slices or chunks obviating  the need for a knife. The spoon is used to convey food        to the mouth. Ideally, eating Thai food is a communal affair  involving two or more people, principally because the greater        the number of diners the greater the number of dishes ordered.  Generally speaking, two diners order three dishes in addition        to their own individual plates of steamed rice,
three diners four dishes, and so on. Diners choose whatever they require from shared dishes and generally add        it to their own rice. Soups are enjoyed concurrently with rice. Soups are enjoyed concurrently with other dishes, not        independently. Spicy dishes, not independently. Spicy dishes are "balanced" by bland dishes to avoid discomfort.
The ideal Thai meal is a harmonious blend of the spicy, the  subtle, the sweet and sour, and is meant to be equally satisfying to  eye,        nose and palate. A typical meal might include a clear soup  (perhaps bitter melons stuffed with minced pork), a steamed dish        (mussels in curry sauce), a fried dish (fish with ginger), a hot  salad (beef slices on a bed of lettuce, onions, chillies,        mint and lemon juice) and a variety of sauces into which food is  dipped. This would be followed by sweet desserts and/or        fresh fruits such as mangoes, durian, jackfruit, papaya, grapes or  melon.
 
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