Guest guest Posted July 28, 2003 Report Share Posted July 28, 2003 An interesting commentary on http://www.westonaprice.org/traditional_diets/thailand.html at http://www.ahoa.org.au/cgi-bin/cgiforum.pl?action=showentry & thesection=default & e\ ntry=809 & start=15 & end=0 Has anyone here lived in Thailand and can comment on this? Roman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2003 Report Share Posted July 28, 2003 >Has anyone here lived in Thailand and can comment on this? > >Roman I don't know about Thailand, but our local Korean store just got a makeover and the " traditional " foods got waylaid in favor of packaged nasty stuff. The food channel tour of Thailand looked a lot like how the WAP folks described it, and the Thai restaurants have great food, as so the Thai cookbooks. But I have no doubt that the average Thai might be eating a lot worse. The stores that sell " Thai food " now feature videos, candies, pastries -- stuff that NEVER existed in Thailand. I visited a couple of old Hawaiians once in my youth -- they served rice at every meal, along with seaweed and a variety of interesting foods including a lot of coconut. The old man drove out to the shore and dove for his seaweed, and they cracked open the coconuts to shave off the meat (with a shaver he made from an old tin can) to make these delicious rice cakes. Do Hawaiians eat that way now? Probably not. In the last 20-40 years, diets worldwide have changed DRASTICALLY, and not uniformly (as the trip to Provance shows). Anyway, I guess my point is: 1. The " American way of life " is infecting the rest of the world quickly. 2. Changes in land ownership, growth of large cities, use of pesticides, etc. is changing how people can " forage " for things like wild herbs, mudfish, etc. that used to supplement their diets. 3. Changes in society (more people " going to work " for a living) changes how much time anyone can afford to cook. So I'd think both points of view are quite valid! The " Thai cuisine " is just as WP describes it, and it is wonderful. AND it may no longer be the primary cuisine of many Thai people. The author only describes his own experience -- what was it like 40 years ago? What is it like for the more fortunate families? -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 I was introduced to NT by a wonderful Thai cooking teacher named Kasma, in Berkeley. She is really Thai and the food was widely varied including plenty of meat and coconut milk. Cooking oils were coconut and peanut. Deep frying was fairly common, as well as sauteeing. The food was lots of work though, often using mortle and pestle to make curries and spice mixes, mash green papayas, etc. Very different from restauraunt fare which is americanized . It is amazing food. Anyway Kasma (who has a great cheery attitude) had been pissed off for years about all the bad publicity about coconut oil. Her husband, an internet geek, had Candida and discovered WAP and the coconut oil group, and they began selling NT and Omega coconut butter, along with Kasma's cookbooks. What do you think is wrong with the article? Daphne > An interesting commentary on http://www.westonaprice.org/traditional_diets/thailand.html at http://www.ahoa.org.au/cgi-bin/cgiforum.pl? action=showentry & thesection=default & entry=809 & start=15 & end=0 > > Has anyone here lived in Thailand and can comment on this? > > Roman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 It's in http://www.ahoa.org.au/cgi-bin/cgiforum.pl?action=showentry & thesection=default & e\ ntry=809 & start=15 & end=0 Roman Daphne Blumenthal wrote: > What do you think is wrong with the article? > > Daphne > > > >>An interesting commentary on > > http://www.westonaprice.org/traditional_diets/thailand.html at > http://www.ahoa.org.au/cgi-bin/cgiforum.pl? > action=showentry & thesection=default & entry=809 & start=15 & end=0 > >>Has anyone here lived in Thailand and can comment on this? >> >>Roman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2003 Report Share Posted July 29, 2003 Well, sounds like what he's really saying is the Thai diet, like many diets worldwide, is deteriorating. I think the WAPF article is an accurate portrayal of traditional Thai diet (based solely on my experience with Kasma and her class). I also recall her saying lard is traditional but she doesn't use it because it would freak out her (American) cooking students. Pork, chicken, lots of seafood, are all part of the cuisine, as well as lots of coconut milk and oil. Kasma also conducts trips to Thailand with a focus on food and discourages people who won't eat at least seafood from going on her trips because of the difficulty in accomodating their needs in remote villages. Link to her web site is below. Her picture is true to life, in that she is vivacious (probably in her 40's or possibly older) with great teeth and a round face. http://www.thaifoodandtravel.com/ > > > What do you think is wrong with the article? > > > > Daphne > > > > --- In , Roman <romeml@h...> wrote: > > > >>An interesting commentary on > > > > http://www.westonaprice.org/traditional_diets/thailand.html at > > http://www.ahoa.org.au/cgi-bin/cgiforum.pl? > > action=showentry & thesection=default & entry=809 & start=15 & end=0 > > > >>Has anyone here lived in Thailand and can comment on this? > >> > >>Roman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2003 Report Share Posted July 30, 2003 > Link to her web site is below. Her picture is true to life, in that > she is vivacious (probably in her 40's or possibly older) with great > teeth and a round face. > ----> She's older than 40s ....her biography says born in 1950. She really looks great! My experience with traveing over the past 20 years has been that our SAD ideas are quickly beoming standard for even rural countries. I travelled in China right after they opened to foreigners and never saw white flours, Coke, etc. I bet now even in rural aras you can get a coke. I was reading an article about Africa that described how when the roads washed out they would hand carry the beer, cigarettes and Coke to the village stores. I think a good source of information is old travelouges and Nat. Geographics as opposed to looking at the present diets of developing countries. Also i would think that Kasma at 53 would be cooking the traditional ways her mother taught her. And that might be different than what she would learn today growing up in Thailand. Lynn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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