Kai Jiew – Thai Style Omelette

Kai Jiew is a Thai Style Omelette. Unlike western style omelettes, the eggs don’t get a filling inside of cheese and veggies and meat, although some people will add ground pork or ground chicken, or onion or green onion to it, but my mom never did.  I love my mom’s kai jiew. I think every Thai kid can say that. I think every time I see her and there’s a kitchen available (be it at our home in Chicago or during our Christmas trip at a rental house in Manhattan Beach) I always request kai jiew. When I make it, it just doesn’t taste the same as my memory of hers, so I have to have hers every time I can.

It’s her birthday on 3/14- Happy Birthday! Sorry I’m not there in Chicago to hug you happy birthday mom. Miss you!

Kai Jiew is much more forgiving than western style eggs as you are aiming for fluffyness and crispness, but the look doesn’t have to be perfectly smooth and it will get a little brown. And, it is served with rice and is not just a breakfast option but an anytime of day dish. You need about 2 eggs per person if it is a main dish, but if served with other Thai food that is served family style, you could get away with 1 egg. Soy sauce is used to give it saltiness. You will not taste the fish sauce, but somehow if I exclude it, it doesn’t taste right. Although it seems like a lot of oil, this is really more of a flash fry than a deep fry- after I lift the egg out I reused the oil for another dish.

Serves 2- though in the photos you see I halved it just for myself. F doesn’t eat egg that tastes like egg. Actually, this is so good I could eat the whole thing by myself, but so I had to halve it to control myself.

Ingredients (serves 2):

  • 4 eggs
  • 1 tablespoon fish sauce
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • 4 tablespoons of vegetable oil (1/4 cup)

Directions:

  1. Break one egg into a bowl and beat with the fish sauce and soy sauce with a whisk or quickly with a fork until it is nice and bubbly with air. If you want to add other ingredients (ground pork or ground chicken, or onion or green onion) you should now before cooking it. That’s one of the differences between western and thai style omelette is that you can mix it all up beforehand, rather than messing with filling and folding it in the pan.
  2. Heat the large pan with the oil and wait until hot. If you drip a little egg from your whisk or fork it should sizzle and froth. Pour in the egg and deep fry until golden and the edges are a little crispy, about 2 minutes on each side. Lift the egg off the pan and to your plate, and shake off the excess oil a little on your spatula before you move it over the plate.
  3. Garnish with cilantro if you’d like, and serve with white rice and if you’d like, optionally chili sauce. I like mine plain.

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Recently from a cart… Khao Man Gai

I first read about Nong’s Khao Man Gai cart in the Oregonian, the article is now posted online at the Oregon Live website, and there’s a great review of it at Portland Food Carts Website. Her cart is located by 10th and Alder, right across essentially from Jake’s Grill, which I had visited for a happy hour on Wednesday. When I spotted the cart, I vowed to go back the next day to grab my lunch from there.

The cart is just as pictured on her website: a small 2-person operation with her dishing out the rice that was steamed using a chicken broth for more flavor, and then a man in the back efficiently chopping the poached chicken into individual servings. She scoops the rice from the giant rice cookers into a neat dome, he tops it with chicken and adds the garnishings of cucumber and chinese parsley, meanwhile she is scooping the winter squash soup broth into a container or wrapping the package up in the paper, securing it with a rubber band, and slipping the plastic fork wrapped napkin underneath before taking your $6.

Khao Man Gai, a chicken and rice dish from the food cart, Nong's Khao Man Gai, Portland Oregon

The chicken? 4.5 stars- I only don’t give it 5 because I’ve had the fortunate experience of having home-cooked version of this from a Thai mom in Chicago who is known for this dish, and her chicken is much more flavorful- though the bones are still there to pick through, and Nong’s chicken pile on the rice is boneless and very tender and moist.

The rice? 3.5 stars. Again, same comparison, and even some of the rice I’ve had with this dish in Thailand have had more flavor. Maybe my rice came from the rice cooker that was a bit older- but this trip, definitely nothing special. But if you haven’t had it before, you will wonder why you ever make rice with just water when you could use broth.

Khao Man Gai, a chicken and rice dish from the food cart, Nong's Khao Man Gai, Portland Oregon

But, the sauce- that is one of the keys to this dish. And Nong definitely gets 5 stars on this one, and the soup broth is a great addition to the whole lunch package to cool down the tang of the garlic and giner. I could go for a bit more chili, but I know as a standard baseline this is a fine flavoring sauce to the dish given this is Portland.

Good simple food- not necessarily the kind that should have a cult following like some of the carts in Thailand, but still a good choice even in Thailand of basic good food, and definitely still a great choice from a cart here in Portland! I particularly like this dish on colder days, where the comfort of the chicken in chicken form, deeply infused in rice, and in soup all warm me up.

Khao Man Gai, food cart, Nong's Khao Man Gai, Portland Oregon

Khao Man Gai, a chicken and rice dish from the food cart, Nong's Khao Man Gai, Portland OregonKhao Man Gai, a chicken and rice dish from the food cart, Nong's Khao Man Gai, Portland OregonKhao Man Gai, a chicken and rice dish from the food cart, Nong's Khao Man Gai, Portland Oregon

Nong also has her own storefront now on SE Ankeny and 6h, which offers more homey dishes- I hope to visit it soon. Unlike with the food cart at SW 10th and Alder, you don’t have to go walking around trying to find someplace to sit and balance this package on your lap or bricks to eat since you have access to chairs and tables and all! From when I’ve passed by, the inside is very authentic and feels like stepping into Thailand little street restaurant!

Khao Man Gai, a chicken and rice dish from the food cart, Nong's Khao Man Gai, Portland Oregon

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Perfect Pok Pok

I'm happy to announce that finally, I found a Thai restaurant in Portland that just blew me away. I finally was able to get a driver and dining friends to Pok Pok. Pok Pok is pretty famous in Portland and is on the "Best Restaurant" local list, but is a bit more of a pain to get to via public transportation. I know that the chef is known for specializing in Southeast Asian street food, not the fusion stuff of Typhoon or the regular cooking found in a myriad of many other Thai establishments offering pad thai and fried rice, and non-spicy curries which have been tamed with coconut milk.

And most exciting for me, there is a lot of Northern Thai cuisine offered. So when I went, my eyes went immediately, after trying to understand the english transliterations of the Thai food dishes, to Kaeng Hung Leh, a curry withsweet pork belly and pork shoulder curry with ginger, palm sugar, tamarind, turmeric, Burmese curry powder and pickled garlic. It was marinated just to the right falling off the bone tenderness, and the curry was very savory and rich- more rich than I had in Chiang Mai, but I had no problems with this upgrade.

My drink of choice, a bloody mary with Thai chili vodka, didn't have the fruitiness of the Kickboxer from Saucebox, but did have the tell-tale recognizable taste of those little Thai hot peppers, so it was good enough for me. I would have liked a bit more tomato though.

As for the Het Paa Naam Tok, a Spicy Isaan forest mushroom “salad” with soy sauce, lime and chili powder dressing, shallots,lemongrass,mint, cilantro and toasted rice powder (basically the vegetarian equivalent of the traditional Waterfall Thai Beef dish), it was ok. The Khao Soi with tofu, a vegetarian version of my usual nothern style curry with egg noodle dish, was described as being made with their "secret curry paste recipe, natural chicken on the bone and house-pressed fresh coconut milk. Served with pickled mustard greens, shallots, crispy yellow noodles and roasted chili paste. Chiang Mai specialty, with Burmese origins." The curry itself had great flavor, though I admonished my companions for not using the sides, but the noodles were not fresh egg noodles (though the crispy noodles were right on), so I will have to look elsewear for Khao Soi. I have noticed that other normal Thai restaurants also offer this dish, not just ones that specialize in Northern Thai style food, so there is still potential for me to find a substitute for my fix back in Chicago that I only got from my favorite Thai restaurant Sticky Rice. This dish would taste a lot better with the chicken too instead of being vegetarian (the soup itself of the curry is good), but the noodles are too important for me to forgive.

The Khanom Jiin Naam Yaa, a ground fresh fish curry with krachai, lemongrass, chilies and glangal, served over rice vermicelli with herbs, pickled mustard greens and boiled egg, did not have enough daring fish parts and I was able to tell. Passable, but not remarkable.

A nice surprise was a Vietnamese dish of Ca Muc Nuong, with nice squares of large calamari, grilled whole over charcoal, chopped and served with lettuce and herbs served with a spicy lime/garlic/chile dipping sauce. That dipping sauce was awesomely spicy.


 
I tried to challenge Pok Pok by ordering a dessert which sounded like an improvement of normal breakfast food: Pok Pok Affogato, which they offer as condensed milk ice cream drowned in a shot of Vietnamese coffee, served with a Chinese fried donut. I thought the donut was fried too crispy rather than being doughy on the inside and crisp on the outside-it would shatter as we tried to break it, almost like a chip. But it tasted perfect, and the bowl of ice cream and coffee was perfection.

I also tried the Coconut Ice Cream Sandwich, which is coconut – jackfruit ice cream served on a sweet bun with sweet sticky rice, peanuts, condensed milk and chocolate syrup. The sweet bun was not sweet enough though, not like what you would get in Thailand. But, I was still impressed by the Pok Affogato and am ok with it. I smile because they did get the size of the scoops of ice cream right!

Next time I go, I already have ideas on what I want. I would try the Kai Yaang (roasted chicken), Papaya Pok Pok (which is one of their specialities and namesake because of the sound made when mashing ingredients with morter and pestle), the Sii Khrong Muu Yaang which sounds like its been fancied up slightly (Carlton Farms baby back ribs marinated in whisky, soy, honey, ginger and Thai spices. slow grilled over charcoal and served with 2 spicy dipping sauces), and Yam Khai Dao, described in the menu as a salad of crispy fried egg,Thai chilies, Chinese celery, onions and carrot with lime, palm sugar and fish sauce dressing. Yams are all based on their balance of acidity, so it is delicate mixing and not just a salad of ingredients thrown together.

Until we meet again, Pok Pok…

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Flavor profiles outside the USA

When you travel overseas, one of the best, most recommended souviniers I like to advocate for people to bring back is interesting snacks. Tastes vary all over the world, and candy, chips, and soda are cheap ways to bring this back to the US to remember and share.

Here is what I brought back as highlights from my recent 2 week trip.

 

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Cravings for Asian food

I'm not sure if it's because I know I'm going to Thailand soon (from the 29 of December to January 11), but this week I really had a craving for some Asian food. I didn't try anyplace new- instead, I went back to two places to see if I ordered something else, would I still like the place.

For dinner one evening, I returned to Typhoon and had the "Three Flavor Fish"- a flash-fried halbut with a spicy sweet and sour sauce. Unfortunately when the waiter put it down the stacked fish fell over, but you can see the delicious crispiness all the same. It's quite a bit of fish, and I ate all of that up. Maybe I was straining myself for the last third, but that crispness wouldn't be there if I saved it and took it home. Another thing I like there is there large selection of teas to choose from, so I had a pot all by myself practically. 

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I also went back in Beaverton while running my first Zipcar errand to Petco and Fred Meyer to a dinner at Jin Wah, which I have also blogged about earlier. This time, I remembered to capture the Joy Yee-ness of the place in their photographed food examples, and the largeness of their menu. This time, I somehow noticed the oilyness that I missed the first time- or was willing to overlook because of their drug-like control of me when I have their chinese sausage fried rice. This time, when I tried their noodles, it was a fail. No crispy burnt parts at all! Fail!

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And… Zipcar? What's that? Well, I recently joined Zipcar, which is a membership car coop program in which I pay a small annual fee, but otherwise it's about $10 an hour to rent a car (or $70 a day) and there are several cars nearby in walking distance just sitting in designated rental parking spots (for instance, 8 within half a mile of my house alone). I use my card to just open the car after making a reservation approximating how long I would use it, either doing so online or via phone. I don't pay for insurance, or for gas (there is already an insurance card in the car, and a gas card I can use as well). The use of the car card is pretty cool- it scans it from the windshield, which unlocks or locks the car. The actual key to the ignition is permanently attachedf with a cord in the car. Thieves don't steal the car because unless you activate it with the card, the engine doesn't even work.

I also got a discounted annual fee by buying a coupon book from Whole Foods, and that book has lots of coupons for groceries and restaurants. I've already made the money spent on the book back on savings through my membership savings of not paying an application fee and getting some driving credits, and that's without me using the grocery store coupons in the book. I have often thought of joining ZipCar, but since I know of 3 ZipCars within a 5 minute walk of me (one is only 2 blocks away) and with the addition of that coupon book and the fact that some of the bigger stores like Target, Petco, and such are farther away and would be a pain to go to public transit wise, it just makes sense for me to have a Zipcar.

So I own a car now! Sorta.

zipcar

 

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