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Thai Cuisine Restaurants Atlanta GA

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Thai Cuisine Restaurants. You will find informative articles about Thai Cuisine Restaurants, including "Thai Cuisine". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Atlanta, GA that can help answer your questions about Thai Cuisine Restaurants.

Mama Fu's Asian House
(404) 350-9999
1935 Peachtree Rd.
Atlanta, GA
Royal Orchid Thai Cuisine
(404) 892-4345
931 Monroe Dr NE Ste C106
Atlanta, GA
How Well Dragon
(404) 351-9216
1782 Howell Mill Rd NW
Atlanta, GA
Tin Drum Asia Cafe Flat Iron
(404) 688-3182
84 Peachtree St Nw
Atlanta, GA
Rice Bowl
(404) 841-2990
2900 Peachtree Rd NW
Atlanta, GA
Mama Fu's
(404) 350-9999
1935 Peachtree Rd NE
Atlanta, GA
Tin Drum Asia Cafe
(404) 846-8689
2561 Piedmont Rd NE
Atlanta, GA
Thai Gourmet
(404) 588-0303
54 Broad St NW
Atlanta, GA
Tin Drum Asia Cafe
(404) 745-3068
265 18th St Nw # 4110
Atlanta, GA
Fried Rice King
(404) 753-4250
1373 Ralph D Abernathy Blvd SW
Atlanta, GA
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Thai Cuisine

Gourmets rank Thai cuisine among the best in the world, for its subtle curries, imaginative use of herbs and spices, textural contrast, and above all harmony in taste. The Thai food is a blend of Asian and European influences adopted through centuries of trade and diplomatic exchanges.

     The people of this enchanting land have always lived close to the land and the waters. The main ingredients (rice, fish, vegetable and herbs) reflect this close relationship. Meat was eschewed since animals were the mainstay of farm life.

     Thai cooking involved grilling, baking and stewing, until the Chinese introduced the technique of hot frying in a wok a. k. a stir-frying. Portuguese trader brought chilli and Indians, curries ands spices. Over time, imaginative Thai cooks added their own ingenuity, substituting rare and expensive ingredients with local foods.

     Thai cuisine has four regional styles and the Royal or Haute Cuisine. The latter uses the best, rarest, most expensive and freshest ingredients.

     Only the best is good enough for the King and entourage. Aesthetically pleasing food presentation and colour contrast are important focal points in the Royal cuisine. Thai cooks are true masters in carving vegetables.

     A typical Thai meal is a communal affair and meant for at least two, mostly for four or more. Everything is served at once and consumed with steamed rice. Essentially, rice is the starch base, flavoured with vegetables, protein and sauce.

Generally, the following dishes figure prominently:
∗ Hors deouvre are savoury and eaten on their own or as side dishes. Stuffed dumplings, crisp fried noodles, satay and spring rolls.

∗ Salads, called yam, may be sour, sweet or salty. Fish-sauce based dressings can be served with meat, seafood and vegetables.

∗ Marsh mint, lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves and cilantro are used as garnish, and hot chillies provide the 'fire".

∗ Versatile chilli dips are served with vegetables, meat or fish. Chillies, garlic, onion, shrimp paste, fermented fish, sour tamarinds, or dried shrimp, all serve as basic ingredients for dips. They are delicious, quick to whip, bur require a deep sense of ingredient compatibility.

∗ Flavourful soups are meat or vegetable broth or coconut cream based with a blend of herbs and spices providing the flavour. In Thai tradition, soup is served along with other dishes more as a "lubricant" and flavour contrast to steamed rice.

∗ Thai curries consist of pastes of fresh herbs and spices cooed with coconut cream before adding meat or vegetable. Main curry ingredients are chilli peppers, garlic, shallot, galangal, coriander root and brachia (a small brownish orange). Canned curries never taste as satisfying as a fresh made from scratch.

∗ Thai main courses in western sense consist of fried rice or noodles wit...

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