There’s no dish that tickles my brain as ‘Thai’ quite more than a Yam salad.
It’s not just their sheer ubiquity in Bangkok, though to be honest honest that’s probably part of it too. If you were to draw one of those little “15 minute city” maps for any given Bangkok neighborhood, I’d bet solid money that you could find a back-alley vendor slinging up a yam within. In a restaurant setting, Yam’s not only a menu fixture, there’s entire restaurants that specialize in the stuff.
But for me? It's also the flavor that's the thing that hits me as ‘Thai’ above all else. It’s like you took all the stereotypical Thai ingredients - chilis, garlic, lime, fish sauce, a glorious fuck ton of sugar - and smashed them all into one singular dish.
But if you actually look up the etymology of this Thai word word - yam - apparently the term is... Hakka Chinese in origin?
We're not not historical linguists, of course, so let’s try to ground this in food. So in this video, we'll teach you how to make Hakka Yam Beef, then try juxtapose it against a Thai Yam (a beef Yam, perhaps, for an apples-to-apples comparison). After looking at the modern Yam incarnations in their respective cultures, maybe we’ll be able to better piece together what’s going on.
Or maybe not. Worst comes to worst, you’ll just have learned two delicious - and pretty easy - dishes.
Stephanie Li and Chris Thomas
2024-08-25 02:37:18 +0000 UTCEmily Balk
2024-08-25 02:33:03 +0000 UTCStephanie Li and Chris Thomas
2024-08-24 00:56:06 +0000 UTCAdrian Slider
2024-08-23 16:56:20 +0000 UTCAdrian Slider
2024-08-23 16:52:30 +0000 UTCEllen Bloomfield
2024-08-23 13:43:44 +0000 UTC