The Tranquilo Traveler
The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.
“Keep stirring! Keep smiling!” Thai Cooking Class in Chiang Mai

No visit to Chiang Mai would be complete without at least one day of Thai cooking class. There are 12 formal schools throughout the city and dozens more casual opportunities to get yer lemongrass on. The day that our elephant trek is rained out, Bermom and I sign up for a six-hour, seven-dish day with the Master Chef school.

After an ingredient briefing at the fresh market, we are whisked into a nearby village where we each take our place behind a cooking station. For the rest of the day, we slice, dice, and listen to the canned-but-still-amusing cooking/comedy routine of our instructor who begins the day by holding up a spoonful of red chili paste and shouting, “No chili — no Thai food!”

There are other orders to follow, including “Keep stirring! Keep smiling!” which is easy to do as we turn out dish after dish: Green chicken curry, tom yum soup, red panang curry with tofu and pumpkin, pad thai, spring rolls, and for desert, sticky rice and mango. We eat the first few dishes immediately after cooking them, and the rest are brought together at a table and served with a sweaty-cold Chang Beer.

4 Responses to ““Keep stirring! Keep smiling!” Thai Cooking Class in Chiang Mai”
Happy new year to you all!! We are looking forward to Thai cooking now from the kitchen of Bermom once back in the USA. Love the pictures and narrative of your travels. Have a great time.
Judy
josh+sutay,
yummanumms as we say to little oliver at meal time! happy happy new year to the both of you.
love,
wawona family
Most of the culinary schools not only offer cooking classes to the students but help their students becoming master in culinary arts. These schools have excellent team of culinary professional that provide students with the best of culinary guidance.
Leave a Reply
If you have not commented here before, please take a moment to peruse our
Commenting Guidelines.
Pages
BY JOSHUA BERMAN
Categories
- 0. Volunteering Abroad
- 1. Round-the-World Honeymoon
- Belize
- Book Review
- Colorado
- El Salvador
- Fun with Maps
- Guatemala
- Mexico
- Nicaragua
- Outward Bound Wilderness
- Spanish Language Schools
- Teaching
- Travel
- Travel Quotes
- Travel Writing: Guidebooks, News, & Resources
- Wildland Fire
- World Music Review
Travel links
- Travel Insurance
- Discount Hotels
- Hostels in Honolulu
- Airport Parking
- Around the World Airfare
- Adventure Travel
- Written Road
- South Africa Travel
- London Hostels
- Travel Blogs
My Links
- Travel Bloggage
- Eric Gauger
- The Practical Nomad
- Adam Katz
- David Stanley
- Erik Olsen
- Gadling
- Jeff Greenwald
- The Written Road
- Jon Rawlinson
- Where Am I Wearing?
- Lee & Sachi
- Perceptive Travel
- Planeta.com
- Pology
- The Randymon
- www.ephemerratic.com
- Vagablogging
- Thirteen Months
- Cheapeast Destinations
- Travel Writing
- Travelers' Tales
- World Hum
- Ze Frank: Mind Trips
- Dancin' Matt
- Swiss Family Travelers
- Travel Babel
- Brave New Traveler
- Dan & Audrey's Uncornered Market
- Intelligent Travel
- Wide World Café
- Wayne Bernhardson: The Southern Cone
- Yoga Sutay
- Journey Etc.
- stories about living abroad
hey What an amazing adventure. We (my husband, tommy and I) are totally envious from rainy portland OR! Sutay, I have thought of you often since JHU graduation, wondering what you are up to. . .I just got the JH nursing magazine with your info on it! A trip around the world with a loved one is the best possible. I will keep checking the site to have worldly adventures vicariously through you!