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We Tried Bangkok's Fruit Dishes Unlike Anything You’ve Ever Seen
Bon Appétit
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2 years ago
In this edition of Street Eats chef Lucas Sin is in Bangkok, Thailand to try sticky, spicy dressed santol at a legendary fruit stand serving the most elaborate fruit dishes the city has to offer.
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🛠️
Lifestyle
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00:00
(egg cracking)
00:02
Welcome to a bright, sunny day.
00:05
An hour outside of Bangkok, I've been told
00:07
that this is the place to check out some fruit.
00:11
That's where we're going.
00:13
Welcome to J Nok Krathong Somkran,
00:16
which is known for the Somtow fruit cut up
00:19
and dressed in an amazing way.
00:22
In the couple of days that we've been here,
00:23
we haven't seen fruit stands of this size
00:25
making dressed elaborate fruit dishes of this quality.
00:29
There is fruit everywhere.
00:31
This, I think is what we're here for, Somtow.
00:35
Also known as the cotton fruit.
00:37
I'm excited because I have no idea what to expect.
00:40
The outside of this fruit is a little bit like a pet.
00:42
It's a little bit furry.
00:44
It's orange, striped.
00:46
It's quite large, but I have no idea what's inside of it.
00:50
Oh!
00:51
Is this Somtow?
00:53
The middle is like mangosteen.
00:57
It's like slurpy, a little bit slimy in the middle.
01:00
The outside, apricot texture.
01:03
Looks a little bit like a peach,
01:04
tastes a little bit like a sour peach.
01:06
The center, there's a pit in the middle that you spit out.
01:10
But the outside, you slurp, try to scrape as much of it off
01:13
with your teeth.
01:14
Kham khap.
01:16
I see honeydew, dragon fruit.
01:20
Oh, by the way, this is the dedication to fruit
01:22
we have as Asian chefs, but that's not what we're here for.
01:26
What we're here for is Somtow.
01:28
Here in the back in the production kitchen,
01:31
she's peeling through it.
01:33
The skin seems quite pliable,
01:36
but it's got good amounts of fiber.
01:38
We're soaking it in water, and the big boy comes out.
01:43
Wah, wah, okay, okay, okay.
01:47
She's not chopping all the ways through.
01:49
It looks like what she's going for is a spiral
01:52
at a bit of an angle through the top, through the bottom.
01:57
(gasps)
01:58
She presses it open.
01:59
Wah, beautiful.
02:01
Can I taste?
02:03
Oh, it needs to be, okay, yes.
02:04
This is where the bulk of it's done.
02:09
It looks like it's soaked in a little bit of a brine,
02:12
but everyone all day is doing this.
02:14
Chef told us that she prepped 1,000 portions of this
02:18
for today alone.
02:19
Here she is doing the takeout.
02:21
When she presses it into the takeout container,
02:23
she'll get a nice, blossoming swirl.
02:26
That way, when the dressing and the seasoning
02:28
and the sauce goes over the top,
02:29
you can pick it up individually for pieces.
02:31
Syrup, okay.
02:35
This is cane sugar, the chef says,
02:37
has been cooked for eight hours,
02:39
and then infused with chilies,
02:40
just to balance out that sweetness,
02:42
so it's not just one dimension.
02:44
And then over the top, peanuts, coconut,
02:47
little baby shrimp.
02:48
Wah, no way.
02:53
Get out of here.
02:54
Oh yeah, yeah, wah.
02:58
Assumptions are being challenged.
03:00
Fruit usually is sweet.
03:01
You have that classic pairing of peanuts and coconut,
03:04
both of those a little bit nutty.
03:06
You're expecting some earthy, toasted brightness.
03:09
I'm expecting a little bit of a punch from the chili
03:13
for that spice, and then for a thick syrup,
03:17
maybe something that lasts a little bit longer,
03:19
maybe something right on the edge of cloying.
03:23
Mm, whoa.
03:25
The fruit itself is tart,
03:28
but the first feeling is a sort of
03:30
buttery, supple richness.
03:35
It's obviously a little bit like that of green apple,
03:38
a little bit of those tannins at the back of your mouth.
03:40
There's a bit of guava, there's a little bit of soursop,
03:43
and the syrup is really sweet,
03:44
but it's really balanced out with that chili
03:45
and that saltiness.
03:47
It's slippery, it's smooth, but it's not quite silky.
03:50
There's a little bit of firmness because it gives way,
03:54
like a peach.
03:55
Smell toasted coconut and peanuts.
03:59
Smell that nuttiness.
04:00
You smell that fragrance.
04:01
There is a whiff of that dried shrimp, and it's very sweet.
04:04
This is definitely a summer dish.
04:09
Imagine this at a picnic, carved out
04:11
so that you can take a piece on your own,
04:13
eat it over conversation.
04:14
I mean, look out here.
04:15
All these people queuing up,
04:17
all these people here first thing in the morning.
04:18
This is one of the most popular fruit stalls
04:21
here outside of Bangkok.
04:22
I also see something over here.
04:25
What is this one for?
04:29
- Number one.
04:30
- For green mango?
04:31
- A chai.
04:33
- This is at the front of the stall.
04:34
Okay, cool.
04:36
Here's some beautifully cut green mango
04:37
with that embellishment, with that specialty knife.
04:40
Fruit carving is a big part of the culture.
04:43
This looks like chopped shallots,
04:45
more little baby dried shrimp, chilies,
04:48
that same syrup, and I smell fish sauce.
04:50
And as it sits here in the front,
04:52
all those flavors come together.
04:54
And one bowl of elasticity red brown sugar.
04:58
It looks like tamarind with a little bit of chili
05:01
and crystal white sugar, and maybe some palm sugar also.
05:05
When you order green mango,
05:07
this is what you get over the top.
05:09
Look at this beautiful gloss.
05:10
And a little bit of a topping over here too, dried shrimp.
05:14
Thank you.
05:16
This is the queen of fruit herself.
05:18
So green mango, unlike yellow ripe mango, is less ripe.
05:25
But also, you're eating it for a different flavor.
05:27
So there's a little bit of savoriness,
05:29
it's significantly less sweet,
05:30
and you want some sourness and tartness in it.
05:32
This is really good.
05:36
This is really good.
05:38
It's like every flavor together,
05:43
every single part of your palate is hit.
05:45
Here's that bright orange shrimp.
05:46
This is usually a saltwater shrimp.
05:48
These are shrimpy.
05:49
They're dry, so a little bit crispy,
05:53
little bit chewy in the middle.
05:54
It's giving us salinity
05:55
to balance out all the aggressive sugar.
05:58
The mango itself is nice and tart,
06:00
almost like a chip from when you dip it.
06:02
It's almost like three stages, sweet and sour first,
06:07
and then the savoriness from the shrimp, the fish sauce,
06:10
and then finally chili, just like lasting chili heat
06:14
at the back of your palate.
06:15
I've had versions of this before
06:17
with pork and different other contexts,
06:18
but within fruit, this is really quite special.
06:21
Is green mango a different type of mango?
06:23
Oh, I see.
06:24
So green mango is a totally different species of mango.
06:27
They're eaten primarily for their texture
06:29
and their sourness.
06:30
When they're ripe, they're not as good.
06:31
So don't assume that green mangoes
06:33
are just raw versions of the regular mangoes
06:35
that we get that we eat sweet.
06:36
Very much.
06:37
Let me tell you what's typical.
06:40
What's typical is a fruit stand in Southeast Asia.
06:44
What's typical is a cornucopia of delicious sweet fruits
06:47
that you can get, the variety that you can get
06:49
in a place like Bangkok.
06:51
What's not typical is the popularity of this place.
06:54
All day, you're just gonna see people drive up,
06:56
hop out to get their fruit,
06:57
hop back in their car, onto their way.
07:00
There are a couple of things
07:01
that make this dish uniquely Thai.
07:02
One, the availability of this fruit.
07:04
If I could get this on a regular basis,
07:06
I'd be messing with the dish all the time.
07:08
Second, the technique.
07:10
Cutting it so that you can smoosh it down,
07:13
spiral it, share it.
07:14
Third, the seasoning.
07:16
Obvious sweetness, fruit, sweet on sweet,
07:18
but also the chilies.
07:20
That echo, that backspice, the savoriness
07:23
from the fish sauce, from the shrimp.
07:25
It all comes together into something
07:27
that is a full pilot, almost full-body experience.
07:31
For us tourists, for people who aren't here in Bangkok,
07:34
I think one of the most amazing things
07:35
is to explore the fruit culture
07:37
because of the variety of textures,
07:39
variety of sweets and flavors.
07:41
Part of it is standing outside
07:42
in the sweltering heat like this,
07:44
waiting for your fruit to be cut up
07:45
and getting it dressed so beautifully, so perfectly.
07:48
It's not something I've ever had before,
07:49
and it's something I'm looking forward to having again
07:51
the next time I'm back.
07:52
Behind you, by the way, durian.
07:57
Stuffed with sticky rice.
07:59
With a queen herself,
08:01
Jai Nong Kratom Som Krum.
08:02
(laughing)
08:05
[BLANK_AUDIO]
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