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  2. List of Thai ingredients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Thai_ingredients

    Literally translated, the Thai name means "claws of the Garuda". These slightly bitter and slightly sour leaves can be served raw together with a chilli dip. It is also used as a vegetable in certain Thai curries. Phak liang ผักเหลียง Melinjo: Commonly made into an omelet. Associated with Southern Thai cuisine. Phak lueat

  3. Thai eggplant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_eggplant

    Thai eggplant (Thai: มะเขือ, RTGS: makhuea) is the name for several varieties of eggplant used in Southeast Asian cuisines, most often of the eggplant species Solanum melongena. [1] They are also cultivated in India and Sri Lanka and feature in Sri Lankan cuisine .

  4. Senegalia pennata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senegalia_pennata

    Cha-om omelette; a popular Thai and Burmese dish Thai cuisine. Deep-fried cha-om leaves with Nam phrik kapi. In Northeast India, in the states of Mizoram and Manipur, climbing wattle is an ingredient in indigenous cuisine like kaang-hou (fried vegetables) and eromba. The plant is locally known as khanghmuk in Hmar, khang in Meiteilon and ...

  5. Thai cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_cuisine

    The soy sauces which are used in Thai cuisine are of Chinese origin, and the Thai names for them are (wholly or partially) loanwords from the Teochew dialect: si-io dam (black soy sauce), si-io khao (light soy sauce), si-io wan (sweet soy sauce), and taochiao (fermented whole soy beans). Namman hoi (oyster sauce) is also of Chinese origin. It ...

  6. Thai basil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_basil

    Sweet basil (Ocimum basilicum) has multiple cultivars — Thai basil, O. basilicum var. thyrsiflora, is one variety.Thai basil may sometimes be called chi neang vorng, anise basil or licorice basil, in reference to its anise- and licorice-like scent and taste, but it is different from the Western strains bearing these same names.

  7. Thai salads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_salads

    Achat is the Thai version of the Malay and Indonesian pickle called acar. Where the original acar can be made with a whole range of vegetables, the Thai versions are limited to cucumber. Achat is often served in a small dish as a dipping sauce for sate, thot man pla (spicy Thai fish cakes), and popia thot (deep-fried spring rolls).