Set within a lush, tropical landscape, Thailand is a theatre of cultural and sensual contrasts. Every Thai meal is a delicate balancing act of bold flavours; hot, sour, sweet, salty and bitter. These flavours all work in harmony together not only in the individual dishes, but are brought together in a dining experience that balance mind, body and spirit. While the cooking of Thailand has borrowed from other countries such as China, Malaysia and India, the Thais have added their own spirit and created a unique cuisine with unmatched tastes and aromas. Their use of ingredients such as the heavenly aromatic kaffir lime, highly scented lemongrass and pungent shrimp paste gives this cuisine the ability to excite the palate. In addition, the arrival of the chilli from Europe in the sixteenth century, enabled the Thais to branch out and use these intense peppers as well as fresh green peppercorns, white peppercorns and galangal to create the depth of heat we expect today from the cuisine.
Royal Thai is the most refined type of Thai cuisine. Originating in the king's palace in the heart of Bangkok, it is here that each regional dish, that had its roots in peasant-style cooking, was refined in taste and aroma, with its presentation enhanced by exquisitely carved vegetables and fruit. The family tradition of passing down memorial books including family recipes (made popular in the middle of the nineteenth century) coupled with the kings' historic patronage of regional cuisine, ensures Royal Thai cuisine lives on today in the world's best Thai restaurants.
Cultivated for centuries in the Thai localities and under the expert tuition of the chefs in the Thai Royal palaces, Thai cuisine has become a firm favourite in the West and is now one of the most sought after ethnic in-home cooking occasions.
It is traditional to eat dishes in a banquet style, with rice being the most important dish. Everything is an accompaniment to the rice and usually consists of a curry, fish dish, a stir fry, a salad, a soup and vegetables. The soup is served with the main meal, rather than before it which is more common in the West. The raw vegetables and fresh herbs act as a palate cleanser between dishes. Food is eaten with a spoon and fork, and food is pushed onto the spoon with the fork. Chopsticks are only used for noodle dishes and sticky rice is used to scoop up food with the right hand.