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CHIANG MAI |
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Chiang Mai has been expanding
at a fast pace for the last few years and it appears the city is turning into
the hub of the north for IT, medical, handicraft, spa and more. This makes the
place attractive for investors from Bangkok as well as foreigners to do
business.
Coffee shops can now be
found all over Chiang Mai, offering reasonable lunch and snack dishes. Most
guesthouses and hotels serve western breakfasts along with Thai fruit. There are
now hundreds of restaurants in the city with cuisines from a few dozen countries
that shows the diversity that is reflected in the restaurants opening in the
last few years. Locals used to prefer simple dining options, with emphasis on
quality food rather than setting or service. They’re now demanding higher
standards of their restaurants with larger variety.
Wine arrived in Chiang Mai as many 5 star restaurants began to open, mostly at
hotels and resorts, along with some boutique hotels. As the millennium arrived,
diners could finally enjoy an exquisite dining experience with all the frills of
a 5-star restaurant with a fine range of quality imported wines.
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Thai
curries are well known and are green (geng
pet kiau), red (geng pet deng)
or mussaman which is a Malay
curry. The hot spicy soup is Tom Yam
and comes with either prawns or chicken. Don't miss steaming
pla jian (whole fish poached in
ginger, onions and soy sauce), or mild kai
phat met ma muang (chicken fried with vegetables and cashew nuts),
or the Thai lunch favorite, somtam
- a spicy papaya salad. Northern favorites include
sai ua (spicy sausage),
khao soy (a blend of Indian-style curry broth and crisp Chinese noodles),
Kaeng hang lae (pork curry casserole
with ginger and peanuts) and kaen yuak
(banana palm curry).
Rice comes either as steamed (kau sooay),
fried (kau pat), or the
northern-style of sticky rice (kao neow). Thai salads are usually spicy and
referred to as Yam. There is normally a full range of noodle dishes, including
noodle soup (kuai tio nam), dry
noodles (kuai tio haeng) and
crispy noodles (mi krop). |
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Chiang Mai was once part of the Lanna kingdom, which
in its heyday, between the 13th and 16th centuries, encompassed all of Northern
Thailand and parts of present day Laos and Burma. Lanna (the name meaning "one
million rice fields") cuisine differs from that of modern Thai, with it's sticky
rice and pork sausages, remains distinct from Southern Thai cooking. The Chiang
Mai staple, khao soy, is testament to the Lanna's hybrid origins.
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