The basics of making great Thai food

Originally from Bangkok, Marni Xuto moved to Yorkshire in 2003. A keen cook, she worked to replicate the dishes she knew and loved from back home with ingredients that she could find locally. This took a lot of experimenting.

Fast-forward 20 years and Xuto has grown a significant following on social media and gives demonstrations at food festivals, sharing recipes and championing Thai food, showing how easy it can be to cook.

Here’s her advice on how to make traditional Thai food without having to hunt down or spend a fortune on specialist ingredients.

The key flavour notes

“In Thai cooking we try to make sure we have all five flavour notes in our meals – sweet, salty, spicy, sour and bitterness. As long as you include this core flavour profile you can cook Thai food at home,” says Xuto.

“That doesn’t mean you need to have all the flavours in one dish, but across a meal. Thai food has such a vast array of flavours and when Thai people eat food, we eat a few dishes in order to counterbalance the flavours.”

“One of my favourite memories from childhood is when me and my family would sit down to eat with so many dishes in front of us that we had to get up and walk around to serve ourselves.”

One myth about Thai food that Xuto is keen to dispel is that all the food is very hot and spicy.

“That’s not true. Even if you do have a spicy dish, you can add something to it to lessen the impact. For example, there’s a street food in Thailand – a spicy stir-fry dish – called pad-kra-pao. From an early age, we knew when we ordered it to ask for a crispy fried egg on top, then you mix the two together and the creamy yolk mellows the whole dish.”

Preparation is key

Cooking Thai food isn’t tricky, says Xuto. “It’s all about preparation. For Thai food, we prepare a lot of ingredients, but the cooking method itself is very quick.”

Xuto advises you have all your ingredients measured and prepped before you start to cook. This is especially true when you’re making a stir-fry.

“By the time you’re cooking you’re going to be dealing with a hot, hot pan and hot oil and you’re going to really want to be able to concentrate on what’s in front of you. It will be cooked in a matter of minutes, so have everything ready to go.”

Not only does prepping ahead ease cooking stress, but it also delivers better results for ingredients like typically Thai rice noodles. “Rather than boiling my noodles at the last minute, I soak them in room-temperature water for about an hour until they’re slightly softened. Then I add them to the frying pan and continue wize guyz pizza to cook with a little bit of water. By doing this you won’t risk your noodles becoming gloopy and they won’t stick together.”

Cheap and easy substitutions

Xuto has spent the last 20 years finding readily available UK ingredients that make ideal replacements for hard-to-come-by Thai items. Although, she says, it’s becoming easier and easier to find those traditional Thai ingredients on these shores now.

“When I first moved, there were barely any Thai ingredients in Yorkshire, but over the last five years, my city of Leeds has become a lot more cosmopolitan and there’s a lot more Thai ingredients now available.”

Still, there are some substitutions that are so successful that she continues to use them regardless. So, if you live in a part of the country where it’s still hard to access imported ingredients, you can still whip up a Thai feast.

Basil

“I use regular basil instead of Thai sweet or holy basil (both of which have a darker colour, narrower leaves, and a slightly peppery flavour with an aniseed-like aroma). The rounder, lighter leaves of Italian-style basil give dishes a bit more sweetness which isn’t a bad thing, as then you don’t have to use quite so much sugar.”

Banana shallots

“In Thailand we use red shallots a lot but these are easy to replace with banana shallots. They work perfectly and don’t change the flavour.”

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