Westerners might think that Pad Thai is the Thai national dish, they are not wrong. But for most Thais, there is another dish which is even more popular i.e. Pad Kaprao, stir-fired pork/chicken with holy basil leafs and red chilies. Pad Kaprao usually comes with a fried egg with liquid yolk. 7-11 sells Pad Kaprao with no egg. Pad Kaprao is so popular with most Thais that it is regarded as a "thoughtless dish" in a positive way. When you can't decide a quick meal to order, you would not go wrong to order Pad Kaprao without even thinking. It is a wholesome, satisfying, comfort meal for practically all Thais.
I am Thai and I can confirm, Pad Thai is still a National dish, but we still have many many others. I was taught that "Tom Yam Kung" (Shrimp Tomyam) is the accepted National dishes.
I never set foot in Thailand even though I'm staying next door to it. (Malaysia) But the funny thing is I know this dish throughout my childhood because there was this man who decide to open a hawker stall in my neighborhood to serve this dish only and it was called "Basil Minced Pork on rice". It ran for a good 30 plus years until his death. Never once he ever said it came from Thailand nor he himself is from Thailand. Most likely he has some bad history in Thailand and just want to forget all about it. It became one of my comfort food and now I finally understand where this meal came from. Thank you for the thorough explanation of this meal.
So Chin (the guest chef who joined us in this video) is Malaysian, and he told us about how in KL it's an amazing dish, but usually served with Thai basil (not Holy Basil) because it pairs better with chicken, as obviously there's not much pork served in typical Malay food. Thanks for watching!
As a Thai, born and raised, this is an amazing western perspective on my hometown favorite dish! The knowledge and range are super impressive, far than more than I intially anticipated. But I also firmly believe that there so many missed opportunities about this dish you could discuss about. Such as, 1. The addtional yet super controversial long beans as an 'integral' ingredient 2. An even more detailed history of Pad KraPrao with interviews of proffesors and actual records. 3. Interviewing the owner of 'MOOMGAPAO' and his goals of trying to standardize/fast food-izing the dish for the masses 4. The controversial spelling of padkrapao, both Thai and English. 5. More tips and techniques that I see Thai people do to make their dish unique. If you and your ever plan to do a second volume of this dish. I'd love to volunteer and assist you in creating a more in depth content for everyone to enjoy!
No to the yardlong beans! I noticed a lot of yardlong beans in Cambodia. The most different padkrapao I've had was in a desolate border town in Central Laos, it had no chiles and onions. The best padkrapao comes from pretty much anywhere in Thailand, it's my favorite.
I always get motion sickness when traveling on a long trip and it usually takes like a day to get rid of all the headaches and the "car lag". Then I realized that Pad Krapao can really fix me right up. Like, literally restored me back to 100%. I don't know if it's the Krapao leaves, the chili, or just the heat, but Pad Krapao is now my special remedy for motion sickness.
I was worried when I was coming to Thailand because of the food and the fact that I wouldn’t be able to acclimate myself to a completely different diet. I came across PaK Krapao and I immediately felt a sense of comfort and home, I come from a Spanish and Euro background and the ingredients are very similar to what my family made at home. I am not worried anymore because the food in Thailand is so diverse and delicious, I’ve cultivated a new weekly menu for myself of Turkish, Indian and Thai dishes all of wish are very satisfying and very special to me. And of course PK when the mood strikes 😊
Crispy pork Pad Krapao with fried egg is my favourite Thai dish it’s just so tasty 😋 as a Scotsman living in Udon I enjoy it best when served spicy 🌶️ which my wife says am half Scots half Thai lol 😂
First of all, your channel is so underrated. Even as a Thai, I learn something every time I watch your content. Well produced. Well done! 😊 Second of all, pad kra-pao.... yes, please lol
Less than a minute into the video: "Close your eyes and you can taste it.." It's been 14 years since I've been in Thailand, and yes absolutely, this dish, if I close my eyes and think back I can still taste it. A marvelously simple dish, yet so tasty... I'll fly back to Thailand tomorrow if I had the chance!
As a Thai person who "doesn't eat spicy food", I recommend that you try ordering "Pad Kraprao without chilli" and try it at least once. Whether you like spicy food or not. it's true that most Thai food is spicy. But believe me, most of them always have a non-spicy version. Which every chef can make and it's delicious too. but it might make the chef feel a little bad LOL.
I was feeling a bit depressed today. I don't know why, but watching this little documentary about Pad Kaprao being celebrated by ordinary people really cheered me up.
Yes, super glad that you add Ung Jia Huad on the list. He is THE ONE. That’s the word I looking for “The Classic”. It’s like in the hall of fame of Padkaprao. Nothing too fancy. His version is good enough and right on the middle of every senses.
Your video let's me know that you care so much about the food and the culture. The end scene is like watching a happy ending of a man who has been on a long journey finally coming home.
Living in Thailand for 25 years I am absolutely loving these videos. And like all of the food showcased, these are very well researched, written, filmed and presented, to become that perfect combination of ingridients that once all combined together make very enjoyable viewing.
Extremely impressive. Makes me reminiscint of my time in Thailand, whether it was a 7/11, food hall or street corner. I just couldn't get enough of pad krapao! Keep up the great work OTR team, can't wait to see what you guys put out next.
Appreciate the high attention to detail of how food should be cooked along with the breakdown of the ingredients. The small discussion with your chef friends was a really helpful insight, both of the techniques and of your commitment! Keep it up!
I am swedish and have come to love this dish. I make multiple times a month. I have really experimented with it and now I think I have found my version of it and I love it!
I'm Thai, and of course, born and raised with this lovely dish. This is by far one of the most amazing videos about this ordinary dish! Got a lot of perspectives from high class to blue collar. It is truly THE national dish. Thank you for your vid! Personally, I like it with light spice, but no basil would be a sin.
I live in Germany where I had Pad Krapau with chicken a few times not really knowing that much about it. But I had heard of Thai Basil before and wanted to try it... Man, I was in for a treat! Since thai basil (which there are actually three kinds of, as I learned, but you need the "holy" one) is near impossible to get here through regular consumer channels I went down that rabbit hole already and ordered seeds on ebay to grow my own. But what I learned here, Pad Krapau practically being the national dish, amazes me even more, thanks for that great video!
Holy Basil are main ingredients in rural Thai cusines spicy soups . Pad Kra Pao in the countryside does not use soy sauce but uses fish sauce, dried chili. Pad Kra Pao looks similar to Stir Fried Spicy Bird or Quail in wild food or Khua Kling in southern cusine. In the countryside, red basil or wild basil is commonly use.
As a Thai American born in America, I've had this dish in Thailand and America. I don't enjoy it particularly much, but now the dish has my respect. I'll try it again. Thank you.
I just wanna say your videos are amazing! I'm Thai and yeah you're absolutely right about Pad Krapao is Thai staple. In fact you can literally see Pad Krapao across Thailand in E-san (Thai North East), North or the South and one crazy thing is you could find it 24-7 (Thai street food thing). Keep producing great vids! I'm looking forward for it.
Best food documentary I've ever seen so far. Really fantastic work definitely worth to have my subscription. I'm a Thai citizen myself and I could tell you Pad KraPao is definitely the dish that I could eat everyday for my whole life
Wow this is crazy! I was born and raised in thailand, and pad krapow is still my favorite. I remember eating the dish almost everyday at school, at home, at gradma’s house in the village, on the street, at restaurant, and NEVER get tired of it 😂😅…my job was I just eat, never even wonder about the origin and uniqueness of the dish itself until now. This is just amazing. Thank you for such a great research and content! As a matter of fact, I was eating pad krapow while i was watching this vdo!😂😂😂
What a coincidence, I was having a conversation about this a few days ago about how this dish is so underrated internationally compared to stuff like pad thai or tom yum. Us locals eat pad krapao all the time.
Thank you for your amazing video about this popular Thai dish. May I note that based on the Thai word for this basil (กะเพรา), its English transliteration should be "kaprao", and not "krapao". Many Thais pronounce and spell this word incorrectly.
I love cooking up a pork Pad Krapao... I live at the cold end of New Zealand and had to add extra insulation to my greenhouse just to grow my own holy basil and Thai chili's.
Goi is not a raw version of larb (which is larb dip), but a separate thing. You also have goi kua which is the cooked version of goi, but it's not larb. Larb is made with minced meat, while goi is made with chopped meat. Goi kua is seasoned while it's being cooked, while larb is seasoned after the meat is cooked. These are the only two differences.
My father is an ex-diplomat, and when my parents had to find chefs for their diplomatic household (chefs have to prepare meals for regular social functions, and must be able to “represent” Thai taste), one of the dishes they tested with was Pad Krapao (but with Thai omelet - and given the number of candidates who failed because of the omelet, apparently it’s a simple dish that’s notoriously hard to get just right).
Compliments again. Love this insightful coverage, this time on Pad Kaprao. Your vlogs' inclusion/integration of local, knowledgeable chefs/folks and revealing to your viewers the associated cultural history and heritage all make for a delightful and rewarding experience. Appreciate the depth and research undertaken which we know both take a lot of time too. Keep it up. Thank you, Adam. (Thumbs up, Jaspar, too!)
As a Thai who love Pad Kaprao, I’m so thankful for this video. Every foreigner prizes Pad Thai as a national dish but I never have Pad Thai for a daily meal, last time I had Pad Thai was like 5-6 years ago. I truly indeed eat Pad Kaprao everyday, and could live with the dish for my entire life. Pad Kaprao✅ Jasmine rice✅ Fried eggs✅ Chili sauce✅
Great channel. Really enjoy the culture / history bit that you include and not just food reviews. My favourite is Pad Krapow moo krob (pork belly) delicious! Lived in Thailand many years now and couldn't tell you the last time I saw a Thai order Pad Thai! But Pad Krapow...all the time!!
When I was a kid, Pad Krapao was one of the very first few menu my grand mom taught me to cook. It's very easy to cook that even an eight years old can cook it. Then it was the very first menu I cook for wife when we start dating. To this date, when even I came back home from work and have no idea what to have for dinner, my wife will cook Pad Krapao as I taught her from my grand mom recipe with a bit of her adaptation.
"More like an amusement park ride" - kudos to you, chef. Thanks for the candid thoughts. Most RUclipsrs wouldn't dare to reveal what they really think. Much respect. I'll be in BKK in a few weeks and will try to get to some of these spots.
YES!!!!! Thank you!!! I've been preaching this forever. Pad Thai always takes a back seat. No matter where I'm at, I can always get great Pad Krapow. It's also my go to at home when I don't know what else to make. ❤
Very Fun and Funny Fact. A lot of the Thais would call Pad Krapao as "Aharn sin kit" or "Mindless food" due to the fact that, If you don't know what to order, pad krapao would be your safest, and thus, "mindless" option.
As I was born in Thailand, I'm so upset the crispy pork was not called out in this video. I recommend trying Pad Krapao crispy pork when you come to Thailand, and you may love Pad Krapao more for sure.
@@TheGero95 That's not what he's talking about. The one that you talkjing about is just one of the techniques to make Grounded pork Pad Krapao, but what he was talking about is a Pad Krapao which contains deep fried pork meat that came from a specific area of the pig, Thats what Crispy pork Pad Krapao is.
@@TheGero95 I think he meant "Crispy Pork" which is pork belly fried until the pork skin is crispy and quite hard. It is usually served by cut into bite-sized pieces. It's not minced pork that's fried until it has a crispy texture and then cooked in this clip. "Crispy pork" is a dish by itself. "Crispy Pork" a.k.a Mhoo-Grob(หมูกรอบ) can be dipping sauce to eat as a main dish with rice or put on top with noodles. Of course, it can also be used to make Pad-Ka-Paow.
Gastronomic food like Pad Kra "Pow" is considered soul food for many Thais. Whenever you feel bad, good, blue, or upset, eating this dish will refresh you in an incredible way.
Now THIS is a proper video about Thai food. Westerners always bring up pad thai or tom yum when talking about Thai food. And yeah, those are great. But I'll bet that when it comes to the food that Thais think of the most when "Thai food" is mentioned, it's definitely Pad Kaprao . And you've done a great job presenting and doing this dish the justice it always deserves. Thank you!!
This channel has such good content. Thanks I can’t stop watching your videos they are very interesting and well researched. A lot of work has obviously gone into these videos.
I generally eat pad krapao every morning for breakfast. I generally buy it from the same young couple at the local market. I just walk there, the lady sees me and bags up my food, and I hand her 35 baht. No words, other than friendly greetings, but often strange glances from locals that see a farang stroll up to this humble food cart and get served without ordering. There's no doubt that this is the real national dish of Thailand once you've been here for a while.
As always great clips. I love it that our path have crossed somehow. I used to go to Jek Ung’s (Chinese “Jek” means uncle”) since I was a boy since my mum worked at SWU down the street. Anyhow, I remember in the old days Pad krapaw does not have any oyster sauce. The oyster sauce was added into the dish around 1980s. Back then, the Pad Krapaw was the dish to determine whether the Tam-Sang place could cook a good Pad Krapaw dish. Since it has only 3 seasonings: fish sauce, soy sauce, and sugar, if you do not have a “good hand” the dish won’t turn out good. Personally, I did not like Pad Krapaw until I went to high school. (Coz my younger brother like it so much it was only thing he would eat, so it always on our dinner table). In my high school’s cafeteria, it had a Halal Tam-Sang place where deep fried chicken was used instead of crispy pork belly for Pad Krapaw. Man, it opened my world to Pad Krapow. Now, I’m hook to either crispy pork belly or deep fried chicken pad kra paw. PS. I’m glad you enjoyed Supanniga place, I did not have a good experience with the place. What a shame! PS2. I wish holy basil would be more readily available.
Great message and thanks a lot for your story. No story about this dish in BKK could forget about Mr. Ung. And that's interesting about the oyster sauce as a later addition- I did find references to it being used much earlier, but I'm guessing it wasn't widespread at that point. Cool to know.
@@OTRontheroad About a year ago, we had a widespread online debate for ingredient on Pad Krapao. It seems like some people do not like dark soy sauce and oysters sauce on their pad krapao. And another debate was about veggie on Pad Krapao. We took pad krapao very seriously.
Pad Kaprao is my personal favorite, beef pad krapao for sure. My wife (who is Thai) and I learned a lot about this dish that we didn't know. Thanks again
In my knowledge from my grandma and aunts, the cumin leaves and dry chilli should be added too (she used to serve in a palace). In the beef version, the cumin leaf is used instead of the holy basil leaf (kra phao).
Right- that's why Kate's version of the beef krapao used dry chilis, and she chose tree perilla as the leaves to replace holy basil (though cumin leaf is also a choice)
The only thing to be improved is selecting the chef Chin Wong. He said garlic and shallot..... no... shallot is not belonged to Pad Thai, not a regular ingredient. You may put shallot in... yes, but for the twisting version only. Also thai basil, he said he know some used Thai basil. Absolutely wrong. That is Pad "Horapa" (Thai basil) a completely different dish. Also... perilla leaf.... different dish. Said this proved that he doesn't really know Thai food. Thai basil is actually the same vegetable as italian basil. For holy basil, there are two types, the white one and the red one. The white one is more popular.
Wow, i sit back and enjoy your amazing & interesting research in this vid., my happiness would be complete if i could eat right now the delish and popular Pad Krapao 😋✌ Amazing work, thank you very much, ka 🙏👍
Love your video . And I wish to see my hometown dish on your channel some day. Have you had the opportunity to try Northern Thai cuisine before? There are many traditional dishes from the Northern region that you might find interesting. If you ever have the chance to visit Chiang Mai, it would be a wonderful experience. ( Not in Summer ) 😀
Hello you might like this dish if you liked Pad Ka pao. Because i once give a dish of a Kachin Meat dish to a Thai and they like it so much that they even said they would like to try something new. It's a meat dish that started by marinating the meat with pounded chilli, basil, culantro (mexican corainder), vietnamese corainder and some fish sauce. Then you just heated the mixed ingredients with light heat. (No oil required). It's very tasty and so many methods to make it. I think it deserves some attention because as a pad ka pao lover will love the kachin meat dish.
One thing I'm pretty sure is that for ผัดกะเพรา you have to put the letter R in the second word, not the first, because R represents ร. Some people do confuse the spelling in Thai between กะเพรา and กระเพรา, the first being the correct one. To keep your spelling, R has to be moved, results in Pad Kaprao.
Again- if we spelled it the other way, a percentage of people would be upset. We followed the Paillin’s kitchen and Thaiist spelling, which is also the (very) slight majority of menu translations. I fully get that it isn’t how everyone spells it, but neither is any other way.
@@OTRontheroad Yeah. I understand the spelling variation, that's totally fine. I don't think anyone will be upset over that. My intention was only to place the R in the correct order to make sure that you use rolling R sound in the right word.
One fine show, well story telling. As for me I really love to see you pair Moo krob with Pad Krapao or perhaps dive in to Moo krob world crunchy Pork. Thank you so much and well done!
Had a very, very kind subscriber offer to help with this. I don't want to impose, but it's certainly in the plans to slowly go back and add Thai subtitles to each video, over time.
Second video I’ve seen from you and I’m loving it. So in depth, historical but also very personal. Feel like I’m able to get a glimpse of the heart of the culture with through food
As a Thai person I think Phed Mark’s krapow is actually very tasty, you just need to order mild otherwise the spiciness is overpowering. They use ample small thai garlics which to me add so much flavor to the dish.
I stumbled upon your channel because of your Tom Yum and figured you'd have a video of my favorite Lao/Thai/Burmese dish and, lo and behold, I didn't even have to go out of my way to stumble on your video of it 😅
Such a universally appealing dish! There are other varieties using cumin leaves (esp with beef) as well. A highly contentious topic on Thai social media (at least a few years ago) is whether or not adding other vegetables like long beans and onion is acceptable. My position is that minimal long beans is fine as it adds nice texture. Onion not so much. Corn and carrot, absolutely not. Another contention is that there are claims of "ancient" kra prao recipes that don't have soy sauce or oyster sauce, just fish sauce. It would also have things like dried galangal and sometimes lemongrass.
This really does come down to OTR's existential crisis of when do we declare a dish to have "started"? I'm absolutely certain (given that fish sauce and holy basil were well known in Thailand since the early days of Ayutthaya) that some form of that dish you described existed. But...is that the same as this?? It's so much up to the eye of the beholder.
Finally getting the viewing numbers to match the quality of the videos. Not just some of the best Thai food history videos, but in food history overall that I've seen on RUclips.
As an Indian, I can say even though Holy Basil went from India to Thailand, the Thai have developed their own UNIQUE holy basil variety (just like they have done with other Indian ideas) and you need this particular Thai variety to make this wonderful Pad Kaprao. Indian Holy Basil has much smaller leaves. In India Thai Basil seeds are available. Hopefully you would find it online too. Thai Cuisine's genius really comes out in this dish. Best wishes to the Thai people ❤️ from India.
Best dish ever. Easy to prepare hard to perfect. But always satisfying at any time of the day and year. I use the typical ingredients but like to add small chunks of garlic, shallots and lemon grass fried all together in peanut oil, and finished with a dash of sesame seed oil. Of course with level 10 chilli. Can't go wrong. 👍👍👍
As a Thai, I can say that Im a Pad Krapao enjoyer. In the morning, I eat Pad Krapao. For lunch, I also eat Pad Krapao. When I comes back from school, I still eat Pad Krapao. I love all kinds of Pad Krapao like Pad Krapao with crispy-pork , Pad Krapao seafood , etc. The best way to eat Pad Krapao for me is to add it with fried egg (for me it has to be sunny side up)
Pad kaprao cooked with fresh chili together with dry chili is my favourite version. Dry chili add more aromatic smell and flavour. Other than thai national dish, in funny term, pad kaprao also called 'no brain' dish lol. People who have no idea to order a dish in ahan-tamsang shop, they always order pad kaprao. It's like the first dish pop up in your mind so you don't have to thinking about 'what to eat'. Thank you always for your fantastic videos.
What a well thought out and extensive video on Pad Krapao. One of my favorite Thai dishes. I've had Pad Krapao in central and southern Thailand. To this day, my favorite version was on the drier side with salted super crispy basil. The basil literally crunched in your mouth. I've seen this done with kaffir lime leaves on other Thai dishes but not with basil. It truly elevated the dish to the next level.
This channel always give me very good informations .....even I'm Thai. And I'm not normal Thai >>> I can cook + quite good for thai history + I usually can find a lot and varied information in shot time. Anyway this channel make me feel exciting everytime when I watch you video.
"If you are chef/cooker and you cannot make Pad Krapao to be edible, you are not deserve to be in the kitchen ever again" It is very very hard to goes wrong.
Fun Fact กะเพรา : Ka-Prao is one of the most misspelling words in Thailand (among thai people😅) (Dont take it too serious, misspelling isn't that unforgivable) The *correct* one is กะเพรา : Ka-Prao Then, we have some *imposters* กระเพา : Kra-Pao กระเพรา : Kra-Prao กะเพา : Ka-Pao /insert sus amogus sound/ *When we say it, it usually sound like กะเพา : Ka-Pao especially when we say it fast😅
So Leela Punyaratabandhu (SheSimmers) cookbook writer and linguist is wrong when she spells it: Ka-Phrao? ”Let’s start with spelling the Thai word กะเพรา correctly (with one ร and only one ร in the second syllable), because you can’t romanize it correctly otherwise. For the romanized spelling, there is more flexibility. I’m not a fan of using ”ow” to represent เ-า, but as long as there’s only one R and it’s in the second syllable it’s ok.”
@@foodtaliban Sorry for unclear statement. What I mean is this word in Thai can be easy to be misspelled. กะเพรา is the most correct. But I’m not sure about romanized version. I put down “ : Ka-Prao” to help non-Thai speaker understand what this word sound like. Since I’m not linguist, maybe Ka-Phrao is more correct than Ka-Prao. Thank you for more information
I LOVE your channel. Every video is engaging and tells a deep story about something we all have in common: food. Thank you for making these. I’m going to look for your patreon.
In terms of historical pieces of evidence, soy sauce was nothing to do with pad krapow. In the old versions of pad krapow that were available in the central region of Thailand and fading down in the last 45 years around 80s, pad krapow's ingredients were as follows: The meat-minced pork minced , sliced pork , chopped chiken, and in many areas- chicken offal including intestime; Condiment-fish sauce , salt, palm sugar or granulated sugar Veggie- bird eye chilli, yellow chilli, holy basil leaves and its flower Cooking oil- coconut oil or pork oil Soy sauce version in the newer version from many Thai-Chinese restaurants of 1960s. In 1980s, the new Thai make-shift restaurants spread throughout the country due to Thailand's economic boom, in especial, in business, commercial, industrial, and residential areas. Urbanizatiiion has created the make-shift restaurant called Tam Sang (made to order-ตามสั่ง). Without health regulation from the law enforcers. These shops have been mushrooming since. In the lunch time , the most efficient food that quick, hot, homey, spicy, all at once is pad krapow for sure. Dark soy sauce version of the 1970s-1980s was different from those of today. The cook stir fried the rice and mix it with all meat and others. It called Kra Pok Cluck- stirfried krapow rice not Kla Pow Lard Khao - pad krapow on top of rice. To color the rice, dark soy sauce was added to created the dark and cha fragrant. After 1980s, light soy sauce version, cooking sauce verion, dark soysauce version, and lately oystersauce version were added due to availability of supernarket and semi-modern trading system. The logistics of these sauces just officially began in this time and penetrated to Thai local kitchens. There sauces were common in this era. With the rising of ingredient prices, around 1990s, vegetable such as long bean and carrot were added to reduce the cost of meat. Until recently, the vegetable is pricely as well and the public do not want to destroy the 'genuinity' of pad krapow in their percetion. They deny such added veggie in their pad krapow. In the past, duck egg was available and easy to obtain in neighboring area. Therefore, freid egg with that running york, rich, and crisp were mainly made of duck egg. Before 1970s, large scale chicken farms were not common. After that, the egg price has been comparatively low for many years due to its production across the country. Pad krapow is such fascinating economic, social, political, environmental, technological, and also legal indicators of modern Thai society.
Pad Kaprow as my grandmother cooks for me, she uses red Thai holy basil. It is similar to the Thai holy basil these days but the stem is red or purple. This gives a stronger flavor than the green one. Sadly these days, people forget about it. The ingredients are Thai garlic, fish sauce, bird-eye chili, sugar and meat products. The second generation of Pad Kaprow has begun when many who do not know how to cook or do not learn how to do it start using light soy sauce, dark soy sauce and oyster sauce, the taste has changed.
"It serve everywhere from the back alley to the busy street. From workers cafeteria to Michelin restaurant." within 2 mins of the video, you got my thumbs up XD ffs. You're so good at what you're doing.
17:35 when Chef Kate pushed that dish, is it just me or she's trying to say "try it" ? XD since the guy is also a chef so you'd know instead of babbling.
Inspired by the discussion at 18:00 and because I'm the hugest fan of shiso/perilla, I just made Pad Perilla Beef: it turns out that not only is perilla is a poor substitute for krapow in this dish, the new dish in its own right doesn't really work either. That heady herbacious fragrance that magically transforms this dish is now missing, while the bit of sour and bitter notes mentioned in the video don't really elevate or even complement the savoury beef.
Perilla is a term referring to Tree Basil- sorry, I explained this in the comments but should have made this more clear in the video itself. Perilla in a thai context does not mean what in English we would refer to as the perilla plant! It’s “tree basil”
@@OTRontheroad Thanks for that clarification! Indeed, looking more carefully at the "perilla" in the video, it does not actually resemble shiso. For future reference, here's what I just dug up: "A strong, aromatic perennial herb, Tree Basil is native to India, Southeast Asia and tropical Africa. The leaves emit a strong clove aroma and is, hence, also referred to as Clove Basil. As such, the leaves are often used as a food enhancer and for herbal tea infusion. Besides culinary applications, it is an effective insect repellant too."
Westerners might think that Pad Thai is the Thai national dish, they are not wrong. But for most Thais, there is another dish which is even more popular i.e. Pad Kaprao, stir-fired pork/chicken with holy basil leafs and red chilies. Pad Kaprao usually comes with a fried egg with liquid yolk. 7-11 sells Pad Kaprao with no egg. Pad Kaprao is so popular with most Thais that it is regarded as a "thoughtless dish" in a positive way. When you can't decide a quick meal to order, you would not go wrong to order Pad Kaprao without even thinking. It is a wholesome, satisfying, comfort meal for practically all Thais.
And foreigners! It's my thoughtless dish, too. It's what Jaspar and I order when we're locked into editing.
I am Thai and I can confirm, Pad Thai is still a National dish, but we still have many many others. I was taught that "Tom Yam Kung" (Shrimp Tomyam) is the accepted National dishes.
"thoughtless dish"
That's perfect description and exactly what I did quite often when I was in Thailand :D
@@carrot6018 ต้มยำกุ้งเป็นอาหารโปรโมต(ก็ไม่ใด้ผิดอะไร)
แต่ต้มยำแบบนำใสต่างหากที่คนทุกภาคชอบ(ไก่.ขาหมู.ปลาและอื่นๆ)..และอีกอย่างน่าจะเป็นนำ้พริกประจำภาคต่างๆ..เป็นส่วนที่ขาดไม่ใด้ในสำรับ
@@dsys8393 thanks for the info
There's no Thai TV Programs or contents, that dig deep into Pad Krapao story deep as you. I can guarantee.
I am Thai. And , I would like to Thank for the deep history from this video.
Great episodes
I never set foot in Thailand even though I'm staying next door to it. (Malaysia)
But the funny thing is I know this dish throughout my childhood because there was this man who decide to open a hawker stall in my neighborhood to serve this dish only and it was called "Basil Minced Pork on rice". It ran for a good 30 plus years until his death.
Never once he ever said it came from Thailand nor he himself is from Thailand.
Most likely he has some bad history in Thailand and just want to forget all about it.
It became one of my comfort food and now I finally understand where this meal came from.
Thank you for the thorough explanation of this meal.
So Chin (the guest chef who joined us in this video) is Malaysian, and he told us about how in KL it's an amazing dish, but usually served with Thai basil (not Holy Basil) because it pairs better with chicken, as obviously there's not much pork served in typical Malay food. Thanks for watching!
คนไทยเรียกผัดกระเพราอีกชื่อนึงว่า อาหารสิ้นคิด เพราะถ้าคุณคิดไม่ออกว่าจะกินอะไร จะสั่งอะไรกิน สุดท้ายก็จบที่กะเพรา มันมีอยู่ทุกที่ในประเทศไทย ทุกคนเคยกิน ทุกคนทำเป็น มีทั้ง กะเพราหมู กุ้ง เนื้อวัว ปลาหมึก หอย และอีกสารพัดเนื้อที่จะนำมาผัดกระเพรา ฉะนั้นไม่แปลกที่ผัดกระเพราจะโด่งดังในประเทศไทย เพราะทุกคนเคยกินมันอย่างแน่นอน
This is the most fantastic celebration of Pad Krapao ever. Such respect, research, and refinement.
yes
As a Thai, born and raised, this is an amazing western perspective on my hometown favorite dish! The knowledge and range are super impressive, far than more than I intially anticipated.
But I also firmly believe that there so many missed opportunities about this dish you could discuss about. Such as,
1. The addtional yet super controversial long beans as an 'integral' ingredient
2. An even more detailed history of Pad KraPrao with interviews of proffesors and actual records.
3. Interviewing the owner of 'MOOMGAPAO' and his goals of trying to standardize/fast food-izing the dish for the masses
4. The controversial spelling of padkrapao, both Thai and English.
5. More tips and techniques that I see Thai people do to make their dish unique.
If you and your ever plan to do a second volume of this dish. I'd love to volunteer and assist you in creating a more in depth content for everyone to enjoy!
I like Pad Krapao with long bean, but I hate one with too much corn in it, it always become too sweet.
@@worawatli8952 Corn should not be in pad krapao...
No to the yardlong beans! I noticed a lot of yardlong beans in Cambodia. The most different padkrapao I've had was in a desolate border town in Central Laos, it had no chiles and onions. The best padkrapao comes from pretty much anywhere in Thailand, it's my favorite.
@seoulstice sometimes they see a foreigner and assume that you don't like spicy food😁
chilli, garlic, sauce, meat, kaprao leafe, other than this is bullshit.
I always get motion sickness when traveling on a long trip and it usually takes like a day to get rid of all the headaches and the "car lag". Then I realized that Pad Krapao can really fix me right up. Like, literally restored me back to 100%. I don't know if it's the Krapao leaves, the chili, or just the heat, but Pad Krapao is now my special remedy for motion sickness.
Yes, I feel you. But for me it’s a spicy somtum that can cure me from motion sickness, headache etc. 😅
I agree. The scent of basil has some medical properties.
I think its really the holy basil.. It has for me in many cases also always some kind of healing effect, also some other dishes with the holy basil..
Probably the chili’s since they release endorphins..
The mix of basil for the senses, and chili for the kick.
Pad Krapao is not just a food, it is the people, it is the culture, it is the spirit of all Thai.
The correct is Pad Kaprao กะเพรา not Pad Krapao กระเพา.
I was worried when I was coming to Thailand because of the food and the fact that I wouldn’t be able to acclimate myself to a completely different diet. I came across PaK Krapao and I immediately felt a sense of comfort and home, I come from a Spanish and Euro background and the ingredients are very similar to what my family made at home. I am not worried anymore because the food in Thailand is so diverse and delicious, I’ve cultivated a new weekly menu for myself of Turkish, Indian and Thai dishes all of wish are very satisfying and very special to me. And of course PK when the mood strikes 😊
Spicy food save the day
I'm Thai.I like food from many countries.Thai,western,Korean,Indian,Japanese,Chinese.I cook it myself .
Please share your list, I would like to know. 😊
Crispy pork Pad Krapao with fried egg is my favourite Thai dish it’s just so tasty 😋 as a Scotsman living in Udon I enjoy it best when served spicy 🌶️ which my wife says am half Scots half Thai lol 😂
First of all, your channel is so underrated. Even as a Thai, I learn something every time I watch your content. Well produced. Well done! 😊
Second of all, pad kra-pao.... yes, please lol
Less than a minute into the video: "Close your eyes and you can taste it.." It's been 14 years since I've been in Thailand, and yes absolutely, this dish, if I close my eyes and think back I can still taste it. A marvelously simple dish, yet so tasty... I'll fly back to Thailand tomorrow if I had the chance!
ผมเป็นคนนึงที่ชอบร้านของ Mark Wiens มากๆ ผมกินเผ็ดมาตั้งแต่เด็กๆ แล้วยิ่งโตก็ยิ่งกินเผ็ดมากขึ้นเรื่อยๆ จนเจอร้านนี้โดนลิ้นโดนใจสุดๆ
As a Thai person who "doesn't eat spicy food", I recommend that you try ordering "Pad Kraprao without chilli" and try it at least once. Whether you like spicy food or not.
it's true that most Thai food is spicy. But believe me, most of them always have a non-spicy version. Which every chef can make and it's delicious too. but it might make the chef feel a little bad LOL.
My most favorite Thai dish ever! I can eat this every day all day!😋😋😋
I was feeling a bit depressed today. I don't know why, but watching this little documentary about Pad Kaprao being celebrated by ordinary people really cheered me up.
Yes, super glad that you add Ung Jia Huad on the list. He is THE ONE. That’s the word I looking for “The Classic”. It’s like in the hall of fame of Padkaprao. Nothing too fancy. His version is good enough and right on the middle of every senses.
Your video let's me know that you care so much about the food and the culture. The end scene is like watching a happy ending of a man who has been on a long journey finally coming home.
Your "Return to Khlong Toei" had me in tears, it was sweet.
Living in Thailand for 25 years I am absolutely loving these videos. And like all of the food showcased, these are very well researched, written, filmed and presented, to become that perfect combination of ingridients that once all combined together make very enjoyable viewing.
Extremely impressive. Makes me reminiscint of my time in Thailand, whether it was a 7/11, food hall or street corner. I just couldn't get enough of pad krapao! Keep up the great work OTR team, can't wait to see what you guys put out next.
There's no way this channel only have 28.6k subs. The quality is amazing keep it up!
Appreciate the high attention to detail of how food should be cooked along with the breakdown of the ingredients. The small discussion with your chef friends was a really helpful insight, both of the techniques and of your commitment! Keep it up!
I am swedish and have come to love this dish. I make multiple times a month. I have really experimented with it and now I think I have found my version of it and I love it!
I'm Thai, and of course, born and raised with this lovely dish. This is by far one of the most amazing videos about this ordinary dish! Got a lot of perspectives from high class to blue collar. It is truly THE national dish. Thank you for your vid!
Personally, I like it with light spice, but no basil would be a sin.
I live in Germany where I had Pad Krapau with chicken a few times not really knowing that much about it. But I had heard of Thai Basil before and wanted to try it... Man, I was in for a treat!
Since thai basil (which there are actually three kinds of, as I learned, but you need the "holy" one) is near impossible to get here through regular consumer channels I went down that rabbit hole already and ordered seeds on ebay to grow my own.
But what I learned here, Pad Krapau practically being the national dish, amazes me even more, thanks for that great video!
Holy Basil are main ingredients in rural Thai cusines spicy soups . Pad Kra Pao in the countryside does not use soy sauce but uses fish sauce, dried chili. Pad Kra Pao looks similar to Stir Fried Spicy Bird or Quail in wild food or Khua Kling in southern cusine. In the countryside, red basil or wild basil is commonly use.
As a Thai American born in America, I've had this dish in Thailand and America. I don't enjoy it particularly much, but now the dish has my respect. I'll try it again. Thank you.
I just wanna say your videos are amazing! I'm Thai and yeah you're absolutely right about Pad Krapao is Thai staple. In fact you can literally see Pad Krapao across Thailand in E-san (Thai North East), North or the South and one crazy thing is you could find it 24-7 (Thai street food thing).
Keep producing great vids! I'm looking forward for it.
Best food documentary I've ever seen so far. Really fantastic work definitely worth to have my subscription. I'm a Thai citizen myself and I could tell you Pad KraPao is definitely the dish that I could eat everyday for my whole life
Wow this is crazy! I was born and raised in thailand, and pad krapow is still my favorite. I remember eating the dish almost everyday at school, at home, at gradma’s house in the village, on the street, at restaurant, and NEVER get tired of it 😂😅…my job was I just eat, never even wonder about the origin and uniqueness of the dish itself until now. This is just amazing. Thank you for such a great research and content!
As a matter of fact, I was eating pad krapow while i was watching this vdo!😂😂😂
You deserve more sub with this kind of quality
What a coincidence, I was having a conversation about this a few days ago about how this dish is so underrated internationally compared to stuff like pad thai or tom yum. Us locals eat pad krapao all the time.
Thank you for your amazing video about this popular Thai dish. May I note that based on the Thai word for this basil (กะเพรา), its English transliteration should be "kaprao", and not "krapao". Many Thais pronounce and spell this word incorrectly.
I love cooking up a pork Pad Krapao... I live at the cold end of New Zealand and had to add extra insulation to my greenhouse just to grow my own holy basil and Thai chili's.
Very impressive with your love of the dish.
Pad krapao is definitely one of the 5 Thai dishes I can’t live without. Other dishes are Nam phrik, somtum, larb, and goi (raw version of larb).
Great list! They’re all amazing dishes.
Yam naem khao tod (ยำแหนมข้าวทอด) ❤
Have you tried How Dong before?
Goi is not a raw version of larb (which is larb dip), but a separate thing. You also have goi kua which is the cooked version of goi, but it's not larb. Larb is made with minced meat, while goi is made with chopped meat. Goi kua is seasoned while it's being cooked, while larb is seasoned after the meat is cooked. These are the only two differences.
Been binging your stuff and my dude you have more knowledge of Thai food than the people on the streets in Thailand!
As a Thai person, I really like the content of this channel. So detailed and insightful.
My father is an ex-diplomat, and when my parents had to find chefs for their diplomatic household (chefs have to prepare meals for regular social functions, and must be able to “represent” Thai taste), one of the dishes they tested with was Pad Krapao (but with Thai omelet - and given the number of candidates who failed because of the omelet, apparently it’s a simple dish that’s notoriously hard to get just right).
I literally drooled on my desk watching this. Pad Kaprao is probably my favorite dish on the planet.
I literally had to pause this, go get some pad kaprao, and sit down with it before I could resume watching.
Compliments again. Love this insightful coverage, this time on Pad Kaprao. Your vlogs' inclusion/integration of local, knowledgeable chefs/folks and revealing to your viewers the associated cultural history and heritage all make for a delightful and rewarding experience. Appreciate the depth and research undertaken which we know both take a lot of time too. Keep it up. Thank you, Adam. (Thumbs up, Jaspar, too!)
Thanks so much!
As a Thai who love Pad Kaprao, I’m so thankful for this video. Every foreigner prizes Pad Thai as a national dish but I never have Pad Thai for a daily meal, last time I had Pad Thai was like 5-6 years ago. I truly indeed eat Pad Kaprao everyday, and could live with the dish for my entire life.
Pad Kaprao✅
Jasmine rice✅
Fried eggs✅
Chili sauce✅
Great channel. Really enjoy the culture / history bit that you include and not just food reviews. My favourite is Pad Krapow moo krob (pork belly) delicious! Lived in Thailand many years now and couldn't tell you the last time I saw a Thai order Pad Thai! But Pad Krapow...all the time!!
When I was a kid, Pad Krapao was one of the very first few menu my grand mom taught me to cook. It's very easy to cook that even an eight years old can cook it. Then it was the very first menu I cook for wife when we start dating. To this date, when even I came back home from work and have no idea what to have for dinner, my wife will cook Pad Krapao as I taught her from my grand mom recipe with a bit of her adaptation.
"More like an amusement park ride" - kudos to you, chef. Thanks for the candid thoughts. Most RUclipsrs wouldn't dare to reveal what they really think. Much respect. I'll be in BKK in a few weeks and will try to get to some of these spots.
YES!!!!! Thank you!!! I've been preaching this forever. Pad Thai always takes a back seat. No matter where I'm at, I can always get great Pad Krapow. It's also my go to at home when I don't know what else to make. ❤
Very Fun and Funny Fact. A lot of the Thais would call Pad Krapao as "Aharn sin kit" or "Mindless food" due to the fact that, If you don't know what to order, pad krapao would be your safest, and thus, "mindless" option.
Hah!
Along with “Kai jiaew” or “Thai/Chinese-styled omelette”
@@kayagorzantrue
Seems a but counterintuitive to call a national dish "mindless"
@@dapperdan7229Well it's not officially.
This's my first vid I've watched from this channel and from a local perspective, I gotta say it's well - documented and nicely done, good job guys!
As I was born in Thailand, I'm so upset the crispy pork was not called out in this video. I recommend trying Pad Krapao crispy pork when you come to Thailand, and you may love Pad Krapao more for sure.
Literally called out 2 minutes into the video you absolute donut
@@TheGero95 That's not what he's talking about. The one that you talkjing about is just one of the techniques to make Grounded pork Pad Krapao, but what he was talking about is a Pad Krapao which contains deep fried pork meat that came from a specific area of the pig, Thats what Crispy pork Pad Krapao is.
@@sagiriizumi2393 no u
@@TheGero95 I think he meant "Crispy Pork" which is pork belly fried until the pork skin is crispy and quite hard. It is usually served by cut into bite-sized pieces.
It's not minced pork that's fried until it has a crispy texture and then cooked in this clip. "Crispy pork" is a dish by itself.
"Crispy Pork" a.k.a Mhoo-Grob(หมูกรอบ) can be dipping sauce to eat as a main dish with rice or put on top with noodles. Of course, it can also be used to make Pad-Ka-Paow.
@@ACCANIX ฉันชอบก้นใหญ่และฉันไม่สามารถโกหกได้
Thank you for making a documentary to illustrate that Pad Krapao is more than just 'ordinary dish', but it something legendary national dish!
Gastronomic food like Pad Kra "Pow" is considered soul food for many Thais. Whenever you feel bad, good, blue, or upset, eating this dish will refresh you in an incredible way.
Now THIS is a proper video about Thai food. Westerners always bring up pad thai or tom yum when talking about Thai food. And yeah, those are great. But I'll bet that when it comes to the food that Thais think of the most when "Thai food" is mentioned, it's definitely Pad Kaprao .
And you've done a great job presenting and doing this dish the justice it always deserves. Thank you!!
Omg, my favorite dish. Thanks for making it.
This channel has such good content. Thanks I can’t stop watching your videos they are very interesting and well researched. A lot of work has obviously gone into these videos.
Thanks for taking the time to write! Appreciate the kind words.
I generally eat pad krapao every morning for breakfast. I generally buy it from the same young couple at the local market. I just walk there, the lady sees me and bags up my food, and I hand her 35 baht. No words, other than friendly greetings, but often strange glances from locals that see a farang stroll up to this humble food cart and get served without ordering. There's no doubt that this is the real national dish of Thailand once you've been here for a while.
Best dish in the world, bar none. Very first thing I eat when arriving in Thailand. I have dreams about this dish, lol. Cheers guys, great vid.
As always great clips. I love it that our path have crossed somehow. I used to go to Jek Ung’s (Chinese “Jek” means uncle”) since I was a boy since my mum worked at SWU down the street. Anyhow, I remember in the old days Pad krapaw does not have any oyster sauce. The oyster sauce was added into the dish around 1980s. Back then, the Pad Krapaw was the dish to determine whether the Tam-Sang place could cook a good Pad Krapaw dish. Since it has only 3 seasonings: fish sauce, soy sauce, and sugar, if you do not have a “good hand” the dish won’t turn out good.
Personally, I did not like Pad Krapaw until I went to high school. (Coz my younger brother like it so much it was only thing he would eat, so it always on our dinner table). In my high school’s cafeteria, it had a Halal Tam-Sang place where deep fried chicken was used instead of crispy pork belly for Pad Krapaw. Man, it opened my world to Pad Krapow. Now, I’m hook to either crispy pork belly or deep fried chicken pad kra paw.
PS. I’m glad you enjoyed Supanniga place, I did not have a good experience with the place. What a shame!
PS2. I wish holy basil would be more readily available.
Great message and thanks a lot for your story. No story about this dish in BKK could forget about Mr. Ung. And that's interesting about the oyster sauce as a later addition- I did find references to it being used much earlier, but I'm guessing it wasn't widespread at that point. Cool to know.
@@OTRontheroad About a year ago, we had a widespread online debate for ingredient on Pad Krapao. It seems like some people do not like dark soy sauce and oysters sauce on their pad krapao. And another debate was about veggie on Pad Krapao. We took pad krapao very seriously.
this is one of, if not the best ever truly deep, knowledgable, and authentic food content ive ever came across, amazing job.
My mum is Thai and i would have to say Pad Krapao done by a Thai mum is the best. 😊
Pad Kaprao is my personal favorite, beef pad krapao for sure. My wife (who is Thai) and I learned a lot about this dish that we didn't know. Thanks again
When me and office worker go to eat launch we always eat pad kapraw 3 times per week .now crispy pork pad kapraw is my favorite.
Bro/sis, y’all have the best content. Thank you for quality information and hx … keep up the good work !
And thank you for eating with spoon not fork haha 😊
In my knowledge from my grandma and aunts, the cumin leaves and dry chilli should be added too (she used to serve in a palace).
In the beef version, the cumin leaf is used instead of the holy basil leaf (kra phao).
Right- that's why Kate's version of the beef krapao used dry chilis, and she chose tree perilla as the leaves to replace holy basil (though cumin leaf is also a choice)
I love, love, love it! I lived in Thailand for nine years, and Thailand has so many amazing dishes, but this is the best!
I am yet to meet a Thai who doesn't like this dish. Such a unifier!
My all-time favorite Thai dish! So simple and delicious, highly recommend it to anyone who hasn't tried it
The only thing to be improved is selecting the chef Chin Wong. He said garlic and shallot..... no... shallot is not belonged to Pad Thai, not a regular ingredient. You may put shallot in... yes, but for the twisting version only. Also thai basil, he said he know some used Thai basil. Absolutely wrong. That is Pad "Horapa" (Thai basil) a completely different dish. Also... perilla leaf.... different dish. Said this proved that he doesn't really know Thai food. Thai basil is actually the same vegetable as italian basil.
For holy basil, there are two types, the white one and the red one. The white one is more popular.
Wow, i sit back and enjoy your amazing & interesting research in this vid., my happiness would be complete if i could eat right now the delish and popular Pad Krapao 😋✌ Amazing work, thank you very much, ka 🙏👍
Utterly brilliant, especially how you chose to end this. Superb documentary short. Tears.
Love your video . And I wish to see my hometown dish on your channel some day. Have you had the opportunity to try Northern Thai cuisine before? There are many traditional dishes from the Northern region that you might find interesting. If you ever have the chance to visit Chiang Mai, it would be a wonderful experience. ( Not in Summer ) 😀
Hello you might like this dish if you liked Pad Ka pao. Because i once give a dish of a Kachin Meat dish to a Thai and they like it so much that they even said they would like to try something new. It's a meat dish that started by marinating the meat with pounded chilli, basil, culantro (mexican corainder), vietnamese corainder and some fish sauce. Then you just heated the mixed ingredients with light heat. (No oil required). It's very tasty and so many methods to make it. I think it deserves some attention because as a pad ka pao lover will love the kachin meat dish.
This is my go to dish whenever i dont know what to order :D I found it best made in Northern Thailand tbh :D
Great video! this channel is great at capturing the essences of Thai food.
One thing I'm pretty sure is that for ผัดกะเพรา you have to put the letter R in the second word, not the first, because R represents ร. Some people do confuse the spelling in Thai between กะเพรา and กระเพรา, the first being the correct one. To keep your spelling, R has to be moved, results in Pad Kaprao.
Again- if we spelled it the other way, a percentage of people would be upset. We followed the Paillin’s kitchen and Thaiist spelling, which is also the (very) slight majority of menu translations. I fully get that it isn’t how everyone spells it, but neither is any other way.
@@OTRontheroad Yeah. I understand the spelling variation, that's totally fine. I don't think anyone will be upset over that. My intention was only to place the R in the correct order to make sure that you use rolling R sound in the right word.
@@OTRontheroad Anyway. Great content as always. I really enjoyed your videos. Keep up the good work.
One fine show, well story telling. As for me I really love to see you pair Moo krob with Pad Krapao or perhaps dive in to Moo krob world crunchy Pork. Thank you so much and well done!
You should really get Thai Subtitles going on your vids. Thai people would love it.
Had a very, very kind subscriber offer to help with this. I don't want to impose, but it's certainly in the plans to slowly go back and add Thai subtitles to each video, over time.
I agree with you.
Exactly, you guys offer such good production and informational value. Thais will love this perspective
Second video I’ve seen from you and I’m loving it. So in depth, historical but also very personal. Feel like I’m able to get a glimpse of the heart of the culture with through food
As a Thai person I think Phed Mark’s krapow is actually very tasty, you just need to order mild otherwise the spiciness is overpowering. They use ample small thai garlics which to me add so much flavor to the dish.
I stumbled upon your channel because of your Tom Yum and figured you'd have a video of my favorite Lao/Thai/Burmese dish and, lo and behold, I didn't even have to go out of my way to stumble on your video of it 😅
Such a universally appealing dish! There are other varieties using cumin leaves (esp with beef) as well. A highly contentious topic on Thai social media (at least a few years ago) is whether or not adding other vegetables like long beans and onion is acceptable. My position is that minimal long beans is fine as it adds nice texture. Onion not so much. Corn and carrot, absolutely not. Another contention is that there are claims of "ancient" kra prao recipes that don't have soy sauce or oyster sauce, just fish sauce. It would also have things like dried galangal and sometimes lemongrass.
This really does come down to OTR's existential crisis of when do we declare a dish to have "started"? I'm absolutely certain (given that fish sauce and holy basil were well known in Thailand since the early days of Ayutthaya) that some form of that dish you described existed. But...is that the same as this?? It's so much up to the eye of the beholder.
Finally getting the viewing numbers to match the quality of the videos. Not just some of the best Thai food history videos, but in food history overall that I've seen on RUclips.
Very kind of you. Really appreciate the words and thanks for taking the time to write
As Thai I would said that individual mom's Pad Krapao is the best version of Pad Krapao no matter what
I have to add this. I thoroughly enjoy your channel's way of doing social history.
As an Indian, I can say even though Holy Basil went from India to Thailand, the Thai have developed their own UNIQUE holy basil variety (just like they have done with other Indian ideas) and you need this particular Thai variety to make this wonderful Pad Kaprao. Indian Holy Basil has much smaller leaves.
In India Thai Basil seeds are available. Hopefully you would find it online too.
Thai Cuisine's genius really comes out in this dish.
Best wishes to the Thai people ❤️ from India.
Best dish ever. Easy to prepare hard to perfect. But always satisfying at any time of the day and year.
I use the typical ingredients but like to add small chunks of garlic, shallots and lemon grass fried all together in peanut oil, and finished with a dash of sesame seed oil.
Of course with level 10 chilli. Can't go wrong. 👍👍👍
The most popular dish that we could eat everyday lol
As a Thai, I can say that Im a Pad Krapao enjoyer. In the morning, I eat Pad Krapao. For lunch, I also eat Pad Krapao. When I comes back from school, I still eat Pad Krapao. I love all kinds of Pad Krapao like Pad Krapao with crispy-pork , Pad Krapao seafood , etc. The best way to eat Pad Krapao for me is to add it with fried egg (for me it has to be sunny side up)
Pad kaprao cooked with fresh chili together with dry chili is my favourite version. Dry chili add more aromatic smell and flavour.
Other than thai national dish, in funny term, pad kaprao also called 'no brain' dish lol. People who have no idea to order a dish in ahan-tamsang shop, they always order pad kaprao. It's like the first dish pop up in your mind so you don't have to thinking about 'what to eat'.
Thank you always for your fantastic videos.
What a well thought out and extensive video on Pad Krapao. One of my favorite Thai dishes. I've had Pad Krapao in central and southern Thailand. To this day, my favorite version was on the drier side with salted super crispy basil. The basil literally crunched in your mouth. I've seen this done with kaffir lime leaves on other Thai dishes but not with basil. It truly elevated the dish to the next level.
Love these OTR videos ... more please 🙏
This channel always give me very good informations .....even I'm Thai. And I'm not normal Thai >>> I can cook + quite good for thai history + I usually can find a lot and varied information in shot time.
Anyway this channel make me feel exciting everytime when I watch you video.
Thanks a lot!
"If you are chef/cooker and you cannot make Pad Krapao to be edible, you are not deserve to be in the kitchen ever again" It is very very hard to goes wrong.
As a Thai who eat Pad Krapao at least once a week, this video is perfect. Instant subscribe.
Fun Fact
กะเพรา : Ka-Prao is one of the most misspelling words in Thailand (among thai people😅)
(Dont take it too serious, misspelling isn't that unforgivable)
The *correct* one is
กะเพรา : Ka-Prao
Then, we have some *imposters*
กระเพา : Kra-Pao
กระเพรา : Kra-Prao
กะเพา : Ka-Pao
/insert sus amogus sound/
*When we say it, it usually sound like กะเพา : Ka-Pao especially when we say it fast😅
imposter here, i prefer Gapao instead of Krapao. Kra- sounds more like 'Kor' ข/ค than 'Gor' ก
@@11popk87 at first I thought you're into the right version, but, nahh... You just can't pronounce Prao, right ? ร เรือ กระดกลิ้นไม่ได้ ? XD
@@sleekslack กระดกไม่ได้จริงๆ 555 เป็นตั้งแต่กลับมาจากต่างประเทศ :)
So Leela Punyaratabandhu (SheSimmers) cookbook writer and linguist is wrong when she spells it: Ka-Phrao?
”Let’s start with spelling the Thai word กะเพรา correctly (with one ร and only one ร in the second syllable), because you can’t romanize it correctly otherwise.
For the romanized spelling, there is more flexibility. I’m not a fan of using ”ow” to represent เ-า, but as long as there’s only one R and it’s in the second syllable it’s ok.”
@@foodtaliban Sorry for unclear statement. What I mean is this word in Thai can be easy to be misspelled. กะเพรา is the most correct. But I’m not sure about romanized version. I put down “ : Ka-Prao” to help non-Thai speaker understand what this word sound like. Since I’m not linguist, maybe Ka-Phrao is more correct than Ka-Prao.
Thank you for more information
I LOVE your channel. Every video is engaging and tells a deep story about something we all have in common: food.
Thank you for making these. I’m going to look for your patreon.
That's awesome of you, much appreciated. Linked in the description
In terms of historical pieces of evidence, soy sauce was nothing to do with pad krapow. In the old versions of pad krapow that were available in the central region of Thailand and fading down in the last 45 years around 80s, pad krapow's ingredients were as follows:
The meat-minced pork minced , sliced pork , chopped chiken, and in many areas- chicken offal including intestime;
Condiment-fish sauce , salt, palm sugar or granulated sugar
Veggie- bird eye chilli, yellow chilli, holy basil leaves and its flower
Cooking oil- coconut oil or pork oil
Soy sauce version in the newer version from many Thai-Chinese restaurants of 1960s. In 1980s, the new Thai make-shift restaurants spread throughout the country due to Thailand's economic boom, in especial, in business, commercial, industrial, and residential areas. Urbanizatiiion has created the make-shift restaurant called Tam Sang (made to order-ตามสั่ง). Without health regulation from the law enforcers. These shops have been mushrooming since. In the lunch time , the most efficient food that quick, hot, homey, spicy, all at once is pad krapow for sure.
Dark soy sauce version of the 1970s-1980s was different from those of today. The cook stir fried the rice and mix it with all meat and others. It called Kra Pok Cluck- stirfried krapow rice not Kla Pow Lard Khao - pad krapow on top of rice. To color the rice, dark soy sauce was added to created the dark and cha fragrant.
After 1980s, light soy sauce version, cooking sauce verion, dark soysauce version, and lately oystersauce version were added due to availability of supernarket and semi-modern trading system. The logistics of these sauces just officially began in this time and penetrated to Thai local kitchens. There sauces were common in this era.
With the rising of ingredient prices, around 1990s, vegetable such as long bean and carrot were added to reduce the cost of meat. Until recently, the vegetable is pricely as well and the public do not want to destroy the 'genuinity' of pad krapow in their percetion. They deny such added veggie in their pad krapow.
In the past, duck egg was available and easy to obtain in neighboring area. Therefore, freid egg with that running york, rich, and crisp were mainly made of duck egg.
Before 1970s, large scale chicken farms were not common. After that, the egg price has been comparatively low for many years due to its production across the country.
Pad krapow is such fascinating economic, social, political, environmental, technological, and also legal indicators of modern Thai society.
This is so true.
When I stayed in both Chiangmai and Bangkok, this is the meal most locals were eating and is present to every restaurant I ate at.
Pad Kaprow as my grandmother cooks for me, she uses red Thai holy basil. It is similar to the Thai holy basil these days but the stem is red or purple. This gives a stronger flavor than the green one. Sadly these days, people forget about it. The ingredients are Thai garlic, fish sauce, bird-eye chili, sugar and meat products. The second generation of Pad Kaprow has begun when many who do not know how to cook or do not learn how to do it start using light soy sauce, dark soy sauce and oyster sauce, the taste has changed.
"It serve everywhere from the back alley to the busy street. From workers cafeteria to Michelin restaurant." within 2 mins of the video, you got my thumbs up XD ffs. You're so good at what you're doing.
17:35 when Chef Kate pushed that dish, is it just me or she's trying to say "try it" ? XD
since the guy is also a chef so you'd know instead of babbling.
Here I am eating raspberry Licorice while craving for more Thai food. FML
Inspired by the discussion at 18:00 and because I'm the hugest fan of shiso/perilla, I just made Pad Perilla Beef: it turns out that not only is perilla is a poor substitute for krapow in this dish, the new dish in its own right doesn't really work either. That heady herbacious fragrance that magically transforms this dish is now missing, while the bit of sour and bitter notes mentioned in the video don't really elevate or even complement the savoury beef.
Perilla is a term referring to Tree Basil- sorry, I explained this in the comments but should have made this more clear in the video itself. Perilla in a thai context does not mean what in English we would refer to as the perilla plant! It’s “tree basil”
@@OTRontheroad Thanks for that clarification! Indeed, looking more carefully at the "perilla" in the video, it does not actually resemble shiso. For future reference, here's what I just dug up: "A strong, aromatic perennial herb, Tree Basil is native to India, Southeast Asia and tropical Africa. The leaves emit a strong clove aroma and is, hence, also referred to as Clove Basil. As such, the leaves are often used as a food enhancer and for herbal tea infusion. Besides culinary applications, it is an effective insect repellant too."