Tag Archives: thai cuisine

Tuk Tuk Thai in Berkeley

Sweet sticky rice and mango at Tuk Tuk Thai

Sweet sticky rice and mango at Tuk Tuk Thai

Good place for a sweet Thai treat.  We’re often visiting Tuk Tuk Thai (2466 Shattuck, Berkeley) for lunch but thought we’d pop in today for a little sticky rice with mango.  While it’s easy to make this warm dessert at home, sometimes you don’t want to deal with it and have it handed to you.  They make a nice version here, with just enough coconut milk — it’s not swimming in it.  One word of caution:  if you already ate a meal and then want this dessert, share it.  Sticky rice goes a long way.

Tuk Tuk Thai in Berkeley

The only food item of note involves our lunch today at Tuk Tuk Thai Cafe (2466 Shattuck, Berkeley).  I have enjoyed their lunch special for some time now and almost always order the BBQ chicken with sticky rice and green papaya salad.  Transliterated, that’s gai yang and som tum.  Fact is, Tuk Tuk produces superior som tum.  Being a student and lover of Issan-style cooking, I know my som tum, and this is tops.  The papaya is grated coarse so it retains its texture, and all the ingredients meld into that sweet-sour-hot-pungent flavor profile that is the hallmark of Issan cuisine.  The grated papaya and condiments are pounded together in a wooden mortar, you see, which brings the salad together.  Traditionally, dried shrimp, lime juice, fish sauce, dried chili pepper, tomatoes, palm sugar, green beans and sugar are used.  If you want to try to make it there are about a zillion recipes on the web, but try to find one that uses the ingredients I list.  Until I got the Thai mortar and pestle, I had some luck using big wooden spoons to smash the mass into the bottom of a large stoneware bowl.  Now, if only I could get Matthew to stop ordering lunch special #1, the chow mein.  No matter how I try to steer him, he is a stick of furniture.

Thai Black Sticky Rice Pudding

Blacky sticky rice pudding

Last night I made some Thai black sticky rice pudding.  One of my fellow interns at the SF Chronicle was testing a recipe for this on a day I wasn’t scheduled to be in, and I’ve been thinking about it ever since.

When I was at 99 Ranch Market yesterday, bags of black glutinous rice were giving me the eye.  I grabbed one, headed home and threw a few cups in to soak.

You should check this dish out.

For a basic version you’ll generally need only black glutinous (AKA “sweet” or “sticky”) rice, coconut milk, sugar and salt.  Black sesame seeds for topping, if you like.  The result will be sweet, nutty, creamy and a whisper salty.

The steamed black rice will have a deep purple color. Don’t wear a white shirt while working with it.

Here’s a good basic recipe, and you can adjust the sugar, coconut milk and salt as desired after you try it as-is once.

Don’t leave out the salt, though, because it serves as a counterpoint to the sweet element. Its absence will be conspicuous.

Here’s the one from the SF Chronicle that I missed that day.