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Long holiday to Thailand


Holiday to thailand is one of the options that should be considered. With the cheap accommodation we can stay long enough in thailand, many villas or rent a house with full facilities. Many lodging places we met there, close to the hill near the coast. This makes us endure long-long stay in Thailand to spend a holiday there.

For the spirited adventurer, Thailand is a country that throb. You can explore the forests and mountains with elephants, rafting, rock climbing, view from near the "Golden Triangle" (first poppy trade center), met with the tribes and the inland mountains, to plunge to the seabed in the beautiful beaches in the world. You can also acquainted with the tramps all of the world!

Living in Thailand is becoming increasingly impressive, addition to the cheap shopping, accommodation of villas or rent house also very good with natural exotic.

Stay for awhile in Thailand, Enjoy your vacation


I have some interesting experience while on holiday to Thailand. According to me, this country has many tourist attractions and a has alot of very interesting place to visit. Many of the traditional cuisine dish can also be found in thailand, In addition to the vacation, Thailand is also a place that cheap to shopping. "I like the holiday to Thailand. Here, shopping is cheap and fun,". In addition, the stay there is also comfortable. If you want to stay for long time while take a vacation and discover all about Thailand, don't be worried about home to stay, with many of rental houses which is quite interesting, villa along the coast or on the hill that is very exotic. it is very suitable for who want to vacation together with couples or families.Thailand is one of the countries in Asia as a destination worthy of your holiday. We can also try some of Thailand cuisine with cooking your self, there are many of traditional market we can visit. And don't miss to visit some beautiful beach in Thailand.


Some of the beaches in a reasonable visited thailand;
- Lamai beach, there we can see the coral reef called Hin Ta Hin Yai and (grandfather and grandmother coral stone). This is the legend of a pair of
lovers who live together and die to become a coral reef. At this beach offers many massage if you want to relax for a while to achieve release.

- Chaweng Beach, the beach is the most long beach on the island. This area is full of night life, bar and restaurant. Area is very
filled with tourists who like the crowd.

- Big Buddha Beach, This is a beautiful bay. Why in a way, because in this area there is a statue of Buddha with a big enough altitude 12m. Can say in such a small island on the road to connect to the mainland. We can not use the shoes for the ride up to see the statue of Buddha, as this place is purified by the Buddhist community.

So, come to Thailand for vacation stay there while enjoying the beauty of nature.

Nasi goreng nanas (Pineapple Fried Rice)


Ingredients:
3 (sliced) Onions - Green
3 Tablespoons Fish Sauce
1/2 Cup (diced, seeded) Tomatoes
1 Tablespoon (fresh, grated) Ginger
1 (diced) Onions 3 Tablespoons Vegetable Oil
4 Cups (cooked, chilled) Rice - Jasmine
1 Teaspoon Sugar - White
1 Cup (chopped) Pineapple
1 Cup (blanched) Beans - Green
5 Cloves (chopped) Garlic
1 (ripe, for serving, optional) Pineapple

Cooking Directions:
1. Cook rice according to instructions and set aside to cool.

2. If serving rice in fresh pineapple (optional), halve the pineapple lengthwise, leaving the leafy top intact and cutting through it. Hollow out each half, reserving 1 cup of the fruit for the rice and extra for garnishing. Save remaining pineapple for another use. Make a small slice on the outside of each half to create a flat base to hold the pineapple steady. Set aside.

3. Crumble the cold rice between your fingers to separate the grains, and set aside.

4. Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a wok or large skillet, swirling to coat the pan. Add the onion and toss until soft, 3 to 5 minutes. Add the garlic and toss until fragrant and soft, about 1 to 2 minutes. Add the ginger and toss for another minute.

5. Add the remaining tablespoon of oil, then add the rice. Fry for 2 to 3 minutes over high heat, then add the beans, tomatoes, and pineapple, and fry 2 to 3 minutes more. Add the fish sauce and sugar, and toss until ingredients are well combined and rice is heated thoroughly, about 5 minutes. Add the green onions and toss to combine.

6. Remove from the heat and transfer to a serving platter, or if using fresh pineapple, fill each half of prepared pineapple with warm rice and garnish with extra chunks of pineapple.

Lontong Balap


Typical original Surabaya's food which is cooked from the rice cake(lontong), sprouts, fried tofu, Lento (made of soybean), soy sauce, fried onion and chili sauce.

Lento is made from rice peanuts/Tholo with flour, afterward it is added with galangal, the spring onion, rough-skinned citrus fruit and adequate salt. It is formed round resembled the croquette.

Lontong Balap is full of sprouts. Lontong Balap is not served well without Shellfish satay (sate kerang).Shellfish satay, is made from the shellfish that is boiled and then it is served like satay, but without being roasted.

Lontong Balap will be more delicious to eat if being added with hot soy sauce and chili sauce. We can find this food in surabaya around jalan kranggan, the most famous is "lontong balap pak gendut". Otherwise we can find this similar food on west java as fried sprouts (tauge goreng).

Gado-gado



Gado gado is a classic Indonesian salad made with green beans, potatoes, carrots, cabbage and bean sprouts garnished with sliced boiled eggs and drizzled with a luscious peanut sauce. Gado gado is such a hearty and filling salad that it can easily be eaten as a complete meal.


Ingredients:

The sauce: Sambal Kacang (Peanut Sauce)


The vegetables:

112 g / 4 oz / l cup cabbage or spring greens, shredded
225 g / 8 oz / 2 cups French beans, cut into 1-cm / 1/2-inch lengths
4 medium carrots, peeled and sliced thinly
112 g / 4 oz /1 cup cauliflower florets
112 g / 4 oz / 1 cup beansprouts, washed

For the garnish:

Some lettuce leaves and watercress
2 hard-boiled eggs, quartered
1 medium-size potato, boiled in its skin, then peeled and sliced;
or 225 g / 8 oz of slices of lontong (optional)
1/2 cucumber, thinly sliced
1 tbsp crisp-fried onions
2 large krupuk, or a handful of fried emping, broken up into small pieces (optional)

Boil the vegetables separately in slightly salted water, for 3-4 minutes, except the beansprouts which only need 2 minutes. Drain each vegetable separately in a colander.

To serve, arrange the lettuce and watercress around the edge of a serving dish. Then pile the vegetables in the middle of the dish. Arrange the eggs, sliced potatoes or lontong, and sliced cucumber on top.

Heat the peanut sauce in a small saucepan until hot; add more water if it is too thick. Adjust the seasoning, and pour the sauce over the vegetables. Sprinkle the fried onions on top. Serve warm or cold. If you want to serve hot gado-gado, it can be reheated in a microwave oven. When reheating, however, do not include the lettuce and watercress, cucumber slices, fried onions, krupuk or emping. Add these garnishes immediately before serving.

Nasi liwet



This dish is the trademark of Solo, Central Java, even more than 'timlo' (see another page of this section).

The name 'sego liwet' or 'nasi liwet' means more or less 'boiled rice'.

It refers to the way the rice is done just for this dish; usually we boil some rice in a pot ('manci' in Javanese, 'panci' in Indonesian), and stir it until the bubbles come out, at which point we take the rice out and put it into the steamer, named 'dandang' in Javanese (there is no Indonesian name for it). Both kitchen props are made of alluminium.

That was before the advent of electric rice-cookers.

And this advent is householdwise -- until today, a lot of Javanese homemakers still cook rice that way, since electric rice-cookers, though might be affordable to many (as long as it is made in China, it won't cost more than US$ 15), suck too much electricity and in the end cause a jump of monthly bill.

Anyway, the Solonese 'nasi liwet' is dubbed so because the rice is to get cooked in the pot without ever getting transfered into a steamer. So it is considerably softer than the usual.

Of course we don't eat just rice; the Solonese have fixed what to be eaten with this kind of rice a few hundred years ago: fried 'jepan' with chili and coconut milk, which we call 'sambel goreng jepan' and in Indonesian it is called 'sambal goreng labu siam' (see the veggies section).

Then some thick coconut milk with a little salt, which is cooked until it got bubbles, called 'arèh', is put on the rice. Eggs and chicken boiled in coconut milk are also added. Then a little chili sauce, handmade, is to make the dish complete, plus a large shrimp cracker ('krupuk urang' in Javanese, 'kerupuk udang' in Indonesian).

Nasi liwet is that simple; so it is really beyond comprehension why the Solonese chose it as their character-representing dish, or why other people come to attach it to them.

Nasi Goreng (fried rice)



Nasi goreng is the Indonesian version of fried rice - that is what it means in Bahasa Indonesia. The dish is often accompanied by additional items such as a fried egg, fried chicken, satay, or krupuk (fried crackers / chips made of shrimp or vegetables). In many restaurants, when accompanied by a fried egg, it is sometimes called as nasi goreng spesial.

Nasi goreng can be eaten at any time of day, most Indonesian people often eat nasi goreng during breakfast, and mostly the ingredients are a previous day's dinner leftover. The rice should be cooked ahead and let it to go cold to make, and this is why the leftover dinner is used because the rice is preferably taken from day before.[1] Nasi goreng is a complete meal but sometimes it is also part of a banquet.

The main ingredients for the plain nasi goreng include pre-cooked (and preferably cold) rice, soy sauce, garlic, shallot and some spring onions for garnishing. For the special one, add fried egg, a cracker, some slice of raw tomatoes and cucumbers.

Nasi goreng can also be found in restaurants in western countries, mostly in Chinese and Indian ones, but with local adaptation. For instances, by adding some curry seasoning. In the Netherlands, several Indonesian-Chinese restaurants offer nasi goreng with selected original spices to suit the Dutch taste.

Here is Indonesian Fried Rice recipe ;

INGREDIENTS

* 1/2 cup uncooked long grain white rice
* 1 cup water
* 2 teaspoons sesame oil
* 1 small onion, chopped
* 2 cloves garlic, minced
* 1 green chile pepper, chopped
* 1 small carrot, sliced
* 1 stalk celery, sliced
* 2 tablespoons kecap manis
* 2 tablespoons tomato sauce
* 2 tablespoons soy sauce
* 1/4 cucumber, sliced
* 4 eggs


DIRECTIONS

1. Bring the rice and water to boil in a pot. Cover, reduce heat to low, and simmer 20 minutes.
2. Heat the oil in a wok, and cook the onion, garlic, and green chile until tender. Mix in the carrot and celery. Stir in the rice, and mix in kecap manis, tomato sauce, and soy sauce. Continue cooking about 1 minute, until heated through. Transfer to bowls, and garnish with cucumber slices.
3. Place eggs in the wok, and cook until set. Place in the bowls over the rice and vegetables.