Thai Desserts and Drinks
Thai Desserts &
Fruit
Thai desserts, in general, use five base ingredients:
coconut cream, coconut flesh, rice flour, palm sugar and eggs. Among the favourites
are thong yip, a sweet egg yolk cup; foi thong, shredded, sweetened egg yolk,
and tako, a jelly served with creamy coconut.
There are few countries that can offer such a range
of fruits like Thailand. Its tropical climate and heavy rains in monsoon season
mean that fruit is everywhere. The diversity of delicious fruity sweetness to
be found is so vast and the cost so little, some health conscientious rebels decide
to diet solely on fruit as an internal body cleansing exercise.
From the vibrant pinks of the dragon fruit to the
prickly looking shells of the rambutan, photo opportunities are an added bonus
to the already particular delight of fruit shopping in Thailand.
Water and Ice
Tap water is usually not drinkable in Thailand.
Bottled water (naam plao) is cheap and inexpensive at 5-10 baht a bottle, and
drinking water served in restaurants is always at least boiled (naam tom).
Ice (naam kaeng) in Thailand usually
comes packaged straight from the factory and is safe; there is only reason to
worry if you are served hand-cut ice.
Iced drinks
Coconut water (naam ma-phrao), iced
and drunk directly from a fresh coconut is a cheap and healthy way to cool the
body - available at restaurants and also from vendors that specialize in fruit
juice.
Fruit juices, freezes and milkshakes
of all kinds are very popular with Thais and visitors alike. Most cafes and restaurants
charge 20-40 baht.
Tea
and coffee
One of Thailand's most characteristic drinks is
Thai iced tea (chaa yen, "cold tea"). Instantly identifiable
thanks to its orange color, this is the side effect of adding ground tamarind
seed (or, these days, artificial color) during the curing process.
The iced tea is always very strong
and very sweet, and usually served with a dash of condensed milk; asked for chaa
dum yen to skip the milk.
Naam chaa and chaa jiin
are weak and full-strength Chinese teas, often served in restaurants for free.
Western-style black tea is chaa rawn 'hot tea'.
Coffee (kaafae) is also
widely available, and is usually served with condensed milk and lots of sugar.
Ask for kaafae toong to get traditional filtered "bag" coffee instead
of instant.
The Starbucks phenomenon has also
arrived in Thailand, but for the moment local competitors Black Canyon Coffee
and S&P still have the edge in marketshare. These are the places to look for
if you want that triple-moccha latte with hazelnul swirl and are willing to pay
100B for the privilege.
Energy
drinks
Thailand is the original home of the Red
Bull brand energy drink — a licensed and rebranded version of Thailand's original
Krating Daeng (meaning "Red Bull"), complete with the familiar logo
of two bulls charging at each other. The Thai version, however, is syrupy sweet,
uncarbonated and comes packaged in medicinal-looking brown glass bottles, as the
target customers are not trendy clubbers, but Thailand's working class of construction
workers and bus drivers in need of a pick-me-up.
Krating Daeng and its many competitors
(including Shark, .357, the popular amongst locals M150 and the inevitable Karabao
Daeng, "Red Buffalo") are available in any convenience stores for 10
baht a bottle.
Alcohol
Drinking alcohol in Thailand, is actually
comparatively expensive — but still very affordable by Western standards.
Thai whisky
Thai whisky
(laew) refers to a number of distilled rice liquors, the best known being
the infamous Mee Khong ("Mekong") brand and its competitor Saeng Som.
Although it is called Thai whisky it is actually a rum. The only resemblances
to whisky are the brown color and high alcohol content, and indeed many people
liken the smell to nail polish remover, but the somewhat rum-like taste is not
quite as bad, especially when diluted with cola or tonic water. Thai people usually
drink Thai whiskey with soda water and ice.
This is also by far the cheapest
way to get blotto, as a pocket flask of the stuff (available in any convenience
store or supermarket) costs only around 50 baht. In areas such as, Khao San road
area in Bangkok, Patong in Phuket and Pattaya, it is quite common to see tourists
sharing a small bucket with Thai whiskey, ice and a mixer, with a straw for each
person drinking.
If you want to drink the same as the locals, order laew Khao
(white whiskey) or laew daeng (red whiskey) both of these are chinese
and very popular. Usually mixed with M150 the health drink creating a potent mixture
sure to slur your speech and put a glow on your face. Both of these whiskeys are
usually only available at mini marts.
Out in the countryside many villages
distil their own moonshine (laew theuan), which is strictly speaking illegal,
but nobody seems to mind very much. Especially when hilltribe trekking in the
North you're likely to be invited to sample some, and it's polite to at least
take a sip.

The infamous Mee Khong Whiskey
Beer
Thai Beer
(bia) is a bit of an upmarket drink in Thailand, with the price of a small bottle
between 50 and 100 baht in most pubs, bars and restaurants, local stores charge
around 35 to 80 baht for a large bottle.
The largest brands are Singha
(pronounced just Sing) and locally brewed Chang and Hieneken, but there is an
ever-changing palette of competitors including, Kloster, Tiger and Leo.

Tiger Beer - Empty :)
Thais like their lagers with relatively high alcohol
content (around 6%), so the beer here may pack more of a punch than you are used
to.
Imported drinks
Imported liquors, wines and beers are widely
available but prohibitively priced for the average Thai. A shot of any brand-name
liquor is at least 100 baht, a pint of Guinness will set you back at least 200
baht and, thanks to a 340% tax, even the cheapest bottle of wine will set you
back over 500 baht.
Note that, in cheaper bars (especially
the go-go kind), the content of that familiar bottle of Jack Daniels may be something
entirely different to what you are used too.
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