Archive for the ‘Amazing Thailand’ Category

Khanom Krok

Sunday, July 1st, 2007

Khanom Krok - Thai Grilled Coconut Pudding

I’m not a big dessert guy, and especially not a Thai dessert guy, but here’s one Thai treat that serves the palate well.

Khanom Krok can best be described as Thai grilled coconut pudding, usually with a small amount of added ingredient such as corn to tweak it’s flavor a little bit.

There are many different versions, but I prefer the corn or coconut versions. There are sometimes green onion or even mussel versions that don’t quite do much for me.

They usually come in a styrofoam container, as seen in this picture:

Khanom Krok in styrofoam

and you can probably get 20 of them for about 50 cents here in Bangkok. They’re great hot off the grill, which looks like a similar contraption that they use to cook takoyaki with in Japan or just imagine a huge circular grill with lots of little circular dips where the batter is poured. They can get a bit soggy after a while, but still good nevertheless. If you head to Thailand, I recommend you try them. They’re not too sweet so you can even eat them as a breakfast food as well.

Here’s another photo (not actual size, sorry)

Khanom Krok closeup

Cop leaves daughter sleeping in pick-up, and it gets stolen.

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

from The Nation

An opportunist thief drove off from a Bangkok police station late on Tuesday with a police sergeant’s pickup, without knowing that the officer’s sixyearold daughter was asleep in the back.

The theft took place some time between 9pm and 10:30pm at the Lad Krabang Police Station. But it was not until 3am yesterday that more than 100 taxidrivers were involved in their collective heroism by tracking down the 25year-old thief. They spotted him driving the stolen vehicle in Nonthaburi.

The girl was rescued unharmed, apparently not knowing what she had gone through during the fierce hunt for her captor. She slept well during the ordeal, while her captor drove her all the way from Lad Krabang to Prachaniwet, to Ngarm Wongwarn before he was stopped Tiwanon 11, Nonthaburi. The whole distance was about 50 kilometres.

“I was looking for a passenger around Soi Ngarm Wong Wan 18 when I noticed a pickup with a description matching the one stolen,” said Somsak Okkaew, a 34yearold taxi driver.

Somsak heard the report about the stolen vehicle from Jor Sor 100, the popular traffic radio station.

Cabbie Somsak chased after thief Tewa Parnses, as did many other taxis. When the pickup went past the Kae Lai intersection and turned left in the direction of Sanam Bin Nam, a taxi driver cut in front of it.

“When I cut my vehicle in front, I was also thinking in my head of what I would do if the thief pulled out a gun and shot me. Still, my wish to help the girl and arrest the thief was so strong,” said taxi driver Prasert Chairatleetrakoon, 57.

By the time Nonthaburi police arrived, at the entrance to Soi Tiwanont 11, more than 100 taxis had surrounded the stolen car.

Tewa attempted to flee the scene, but the taxi drivers helped to arrest him.

The news of his arrest and the girl’s rescue brought joy to Sergeant Akradej Makasen and his wife Pathumwan.

“I will never leave my daughter in a vehicle again,” Akradej said.

Tuesday looked like any other evening for pickup owner Akradej at first. He finished his shift at Lat Krabang station in the evening, but parked his pickup there because he needed to help his wife, who runs a food stall just metres away.

At around 9pm, he carried his beloved daughter - Orawee or “Namfon” - back to his pickup. He started the engine, switched on the air conditioner and let her sleep. But he did not lock the car.

But when he returned to the station at around 10.30pm, Namfon and his pickup were gone.

“At first, I thought someone was pulling my leg. I thought it must have been a joke,” Akradej said.

His heart sank when his colleagues and relatives insisted that they did not know where his daughter and his vehicle had gone.

“I lodged a complaint with police. I was so worried about my daughter. I had left my loaded gun in the pickup, too,” he said.

Speaking after his arrest, Tewa said he did not know the vehicle belonged to a policeman and he did not know there was a girl inside when he stole the car.

“It’s simply that the motorcycle I was riding ran out of petrol in front of the police station. When I looked around, I saw the pickup was unlocked and its engine was running. So I decided to get in,” he said.

Tewa, who was once a noodle seller in Chachoengsao’s 100yearold market, had borrowed his nephew’s motorcycle for a trip to visit his friend, who works at a convenience store in Lat Krabang.

“I was shocked to see the police uniform and the girl in the vehicle. I was planning to drive the vehicle to visit a relative,” he said.

He said he had never committed a crime before.

Tewa is now facing charges of stealing property from a government compound at night and illegally detaining a minor.

- “I will never leave her in the car again,” Akradej

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Monday, February 12th, 2007

Saw this in The Nation and thought it was interesting……but two questions:

#1. Does this mean I now have to follow 20 commandments?

#2. Doesn’t the Culture Ministry have anything better to do?

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Loving by the rules

The Culture Ministry has launched the ‘10 Commandments of Love’ in an attempt to prevent teenagers getting too carried away on Valentine’s Day. They are:

1. Love with patience, so as not to become a premature parent

2. Truly love only one person

3. Love with mercy, trying not to hurt the one you love

4. Carefully love to avoid taking risks that might lead to contracting sexual diseases

5. Love with honour, waiting until the proper time to have sex

6. Love in accordance with custom

7. Love reasonably, not taking sexual advantage of your lover

8. Love permanently, without defaming the one you love

9. Love honestly, believing in your partner

10. Love with understanding, forgiveness and without anger

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A Ghost named….Pop

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

I have never met a Thai person that doesn’t believe in ghosts. And I’m not talking about, “Yes, I feel a spiritual presence all around me” kind of soft belief in ghosts. No, Thai people believe in the poltergeist type of ghost, where they can come back to the world and cause all sorts of havoc here. I saw this article in The Nation and thought it deserved further publication out of sheer amusement.

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Villagers gang up to cast out Phi Pop

Frightened of evil spirits known as Phi Pop - a demon believed to posses a person to eat his intestine while also forcing him to seek and consume raw animal organs and meat at night-time - villagers at Kalasin’s Sam Chai sub-district raised Bt35,000 to exorcise the ghosts allegedly dwelled in two female villagers.

The Nation arrived at the ceremony at the Ban Nong Kung Noi community hall yesterday morning while spirit doctor Paithoon Sommitr, 63, was chanting magic words and spilling water over the absent-minded Thong who laid down on the floor, screaming and crying.

Village headman Suwit Phaitecha, 53, said that, following four mysterious and sudden deaths of villagers late last month feared to cause by the evil spirits, some 1,000 residents raised about Bt35,000 - each of the 760 households contributing Bt50 - for an exorcism of Phi Pop allegedly possessed Thong and Pai (not their real names), both in their 40s.

Local health official Juthamas Wilasri who rushed to the ceremony and later conducted a physical check-up on Thong found that the woman was weaken from fasting, absent-minded, had occasional seizures thus submitted her to Khammuang Hospital.

Juthamas said she had checked about the four “mysterious deaths” and initially found that they were all elderly persons aged around 65 to 80 and some were said to die of heart disease, heart failure and strokes.

Yutthana Kietdamnoenngam

The Nation

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UBC bans CNN…..I think

Saturday, January 20th, 2007

Thaksin CNN

Not that I’d expect any less from UBC (Thailand’s cable Monopoly), but they’ve been kowtow-ing to the military regime lately and banning CNN completely in the run-up to former Prime Minister Thaksin’s interview scheduled for this Saturday. I guess they’re even afraid of a single sound byte from the Thaksin interview being able to affect people here. The wierd thing is, I did a google-search (Yes, I’m a Google-searching guy, sorry Yahoo) yesterday and couldn’t find anything about the ban. I even searched thaivisa.com, a hangout for old, balding white guys, and no one there was even complaining about it, which was strange because it seems like all people ever do is complain on that site.

Anyways, my point is, for all you non-in-Thailand livers out there, if anyone could record the interview from CNN and upload it to YouTube, I’d like that….that’d be swell.

UPDATE:
After looking for a picture to use at the top of the article, It seems the entire transcript of the interview is available on the CNN site, which I’ll paste here in case you’re too lazy:

SINGAPORE (CNN) — CNN’s Dan Rivers spoke to ousted Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The following is a transcript of the interview. Rivers began by asking Shinawatra about his alleged involvement in New Year bombings in Bangkok.

Shinawatra: It’s baseless allegations. No one believes so. Because everyone knows who is, who am I. I come from election, I come from the people. I owe gratitude to our people. I do everything for the good of the country and the people. I don’t do something that’s stupid.

Rivers: So you had no involvement.

Shinawatra: Not involvement at all. But I would like to express my deep sympathy, deepest sympathy for those who lose, lost their loved ones and also all those who are injured. And the individuals who are involved must be brought to justice.

Rivers: This is the first time you’ve spoken since the coup of September the 19th, first of all, you were in the United States, in New York at the U.N., when this happened, how did you find out that this was going on?

Shinawatra: Well I find out just about four, five hours before, before it happened, but I trying to get into the television station but it’s very difficult at that time I cannot get into it until I can get into channel 9 briefly, but you know, which I, it’s a rumors at that time but I don’t believe that this can happen again in the 21st century.

Rivers: So it was surprise when it happened?

Shinawatra: It’s very surprise because you know, but anyway 70 years in Thailand, 17 coup happened is very unfortunate but it’s, it’s an event that happened here in Thailand.

Rivers: Will you go back to, back to politics?

Shinawatra: No. No. (DR: Go back as a private … ) Enough is enough. Six years you serve the countries. You been working hard. You sacrifice your time even your life. And, even your family life. So it’s, it’s time for me to go back as a private citizen. And contribute to the Thai society outside political arena.

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I assume there’s more to the interview that will be shown on Saturday….if this is it, then it’s quite sad the military government would feel threatened by this.

URGENT NEWS: Double-pricing for tourists happens in Bangkok!

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

Apparently, there’s a new phenomenon in Bangkok called double-pricing for tourists…have you heard about it? I’ll try to link to the Bangkok Post article here, but they’re always changing their website so you’ll probably have to search for it from bangkokpost.com if you want to read it.

Basically, there have been some seafood restaurants charging exorbitant prices over the New Year’s holiday, which I assume is because not many people (both local and foreign) have been going out, so the restaurants thought it would be funny to play Enron with foreign customer’s bills.

In typical Bangkok Post fashion, facts are few and far between. The list one customer being charged about 4,500 baht (about $125) for a giant prawn (uhh…do they mean lobster hopefully?) and 200 baht (about $5.50) for a plate of fried morning glory. They also list a group of 10 tourists getting charged more than a thousand dollars for ‘just a couple of dishes’, but I find that hard to believe, must have just ‘accidentally’ added another zero in the credit card machine.

Underneath the Bangkok Post’s sorry excuse for a story, there does exist overcharging in Thailand, of course, as well as many other tourist zones in the world (and probably more so in developing countries). Even I’m guilty in a way. When I worked at a pizza restaurant in Santa Monica, near the promenade, our cash register would automatically add gratuity for parties of 6 or more. After getting stiffed by clueless Europeans time after time (the restaurant was in a tourist zone, French and Germans were the worst), I would just mark the table as a 6-top, even if there were only four or five people. I justify this because……well, I don’t really justify it, but many restaurants in Europe and tourist zones around the world add a 10% service charge to the bill, so I figure I was just making the tourists feel more at home.

A couple years later, karma decided to kick my a__ and I ended up working in a restaurant in Japan (Wolfgang Puck’s). I originally took the position thinking the waiter actually gets to keep the service charge that gets collected (WRONG…at least in Japan this doesn’t happen, not sure about other places that have a service charge).

But, the real double-pricing that goes on in Thailand is more often a rigged taxi meter or an outrageous price from a tuk-tuk driver. If you look at it simply from an economic perspective, double-pricing seems a bit fairer. There is also definitely a difference between a price being negotiated beforehand, like a tuk-tuk, and an inflated restaurant bill or taxi fare, which are a bit more deceitful.

Another issue of double-pricing that angers foreigners sometimes is National Park entry. Currently, foreigners have to pay about $10 for entry, while Thais pay $1. It’s said that this is because foreigners don’t pay tax in Thailand, which is half true. While foreigners don’t pay income tax in Thailand, they do pay plenty of sales tax (VAT) to the government. Still, it would be interesting to see how much foreigners are put off by these double-standard fees and the elasticity of demand of the National park entry fee. National parks also give foreigners who work in Thailand the Thai price ($1), as long as they show their work permit at the entrance.

Also, for those of you not interested in reading all of the Bangkok Post article (it’s actually quite short), here’s my favorite quote from it:

”In fact, we have to admit that some restaurant operators have been overcharging foreign tourists for a long time. We just didn’t receive any complaints”

That’s a quote from the deputy director-general of Thailand’s Department of Internal Trade, Songklod Ubolsing. Just gotta wonder, if they didn’t receive any complaints, how did they know about it?

Asia Times Article

Friday, January 5th, 2007

for a good grasp on the pre/post coup situation in Thailand, check out this article by Shawn Crispin in the Asia Times, it gives you (pretty much) all you need to know:

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IA02Ae01.html

Bomb blasts in Bangkok

Monday, January 1st, 2007

Just want to let everyone know I’m ok……

more info later, gonna get some sleep now….

Two more bombs explode at Central World, Pratunam

Two more bombs exploded in the heart of Bangkok once the new year started, severely injuring many foreign tourists and some Thais.

The two bombs exploded nearly at the same time seconds after the new year started.

The first bomb exploded at the Best Sea Foods restaurant on the Saen Saeb Canal near the Pratunam Pier just seconds after the New Year countdown ended.

Three foreigners and two Thais were injured. One of the foreigners had one leg amputated by the blast. The foreign tourists were having dinner at the restaurant.

Police said the bomb was hidden in a bumper tire at the pier.

The second bomb exploded at a public telephone booth at the pedestrian flyover linking Central World and Kesorn Plaza. Several foreigners were injured and rushed to hospitals.

It was fortunately that the New Year countdown event at Central World was earlier cancelled by 8 pm and thousands of revellers had already dispersed but many were still wandering around.

Police had to ask tourists and revellers to try to leave the area as soon as possible for fear that there could be another bomb.

Police said the bomb near Central World might be planted shortly before it exploded as police earlier checked the area but did not find it.

There were rumours of bomb explosions in many areas throughout the night and objects suspected to be bombs were sighted in several areas.

A suspected bomb was located at the Buddy Bar on Khao Sarn Road about half an hour after midnight and tourists were evacuated from the area.

By 1 am, police also disposed another bomb at the Lumpini Night Bazaar before it explodes.

The Nation

Things NOT to do in Thailand

Friday, December 22nd, 2006

In case any of you were considering visiting Thailand and wondering about local customs and behaviours, here is an example of what not to do here:

Drunk Swiss faces Thai wrath for King grafitti

BANGKOK (Reuters) - A drunk Swiss has been arrested for defacing portraits of Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej on the revered monarch’s birthday and faces up to 15 years in jail, a newspaper and police said on Friday.

Police in Chiang Mai identified the man as Oliver Rudolf Jufer, a long-term resident of the northern province, but declined to give details, citing the sensitivity that surrounds any alleged disrespect to the king, whom many Thais regard as semi-divine.

Oliver Rudolf Jufer - accused of painting over the king's portraits
(photo from Thai Photo Blogs)

“I can’t tell you anything because it is a lese majeste case,” Chiang Mai city police chief Colonel Yutachai Puaprasert told Reuters.

Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej reviews a parade to mark his 79th birthday in Bangkok December 2, 2006. A drunk Swiss has been arrested for defacing portraits of Adulyadej on the revered monarch’s birthday and faces up to 15 years in jail, a newspaper and police said on Friday. (REUTERS/Chaiwat Subprasom)
The southeast Asian nation’s lese majeste laws carry a penalty of between three and 15 years in jail for anybody found guilty of slandering or defaming a member of the royal family.

The Matichon newspaper said Jufer, 57, had told police he sprayed black paint on portraits of the world’s longest-reigning monarch in six villages in the province on Tuesday, the king’s 79th birthday.

He had admitted to being drunk at the time, the paper said. Dried paint was found on his fingers and he was caught on security cameras going into a shop which sold a spray can found discarded near one of the defaced images, it added.

As is customary in Thai detective work, he had to return to the scene of the crime for a police re-enactment — but early in the morning to avoid the risk of being lynched by passers-by.

The Swiss embassy in Bangkok said it had been informed about the arrest of a Swiss national in Chiang Mai and that police were seeking a court order to extend his detention for further interrogation.

Matichon was the only newspaper to report the episode after Chiang Mai police asked local journalists to kill their coverage to minimise the disrespect.

Copyright © 2006 Reuters

$20 bil Blunder

Wednesday, December 20th, 2006

This Title of this post is adjusted from the headling of The Nation newspaper today (Bt820-billion blunder).

Basically, the central bank of Thailand thought it would be a good idea to tell foreign stock investors that they have to reserve 30% of their money when investing in the stock market. For example, if JP Morgan wanted to bring in $100 million to invest in the stock market here, they could only use $70 million of it, the other $30 million just has to sit in a bank doing nothing.

Needless to say, foreign investors don’t like their money just sitting around, so people were selling stocks like crazy yesterday, so much so that trading had to be halted on the Stock Exchange of Thailand. It lost about 15% of its total value, or $20 billion (U.S. dollars).

After this happened, the government admitted that ‘they might not have thought this through completely’ and reversed this decision. The markets gained about 11% today, only leaves them with an approximately $5.4 billion (U.S.) loss now.

Here is a smidgen of quotes from experts in the field about this fiasco:

“The one thing worse than an incompetent central bank is an incompetent central bank that flip-flops,” said Bratin Sanyal, head of Asian equity investments at ING in Hong Kong.

“They are proving themselves to be very unprofessional. Their actions are very irresponsible. They have totally lost credibility,” said Catherine Tan, head of Asia Emerging Markets at Forecast in Singapore. “I don’t see foreigners returning to Thailand anytime in the near future. Markets now have no confidence in the government.”

“We don’t need to discuss who to blame. Our priority is on fixing the problems.” Thai Minister of Finance Pridiyathorn Devakula.

Thai Minister of Finance Pridiyathorn Devakula

Additional Reading:

FT Article showing how during the stock crash, the government said they weren’t going to do anything about it.

The Nation newspaper article, insinuates failures by Minister of Finance and Central Bank governor