17 December 2012
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Vegetarian Thai Food – Khun Churn
Recently, we had a friend visit from San Francisco who is vegetarian, trending vegan. Now, I spent two years or so in university as a vegetarian, so my reaction to vegetarians isn’t inherently hostile. Plus, unlike some vegetarian friends we’ve had visit, this friend is very low-key about what he eats and that made it a lot easier to accommodate him. That said, the experience of trying some vegetarian Thai restaurants here in Bangkok was not so positive.
During his visit, we ate at two restaurants that are specifically vegetarian. The better of the two, which I’ll write about here, is Khun Churn. A 15-year old Chiang Mai restaurant, Khun Churn opened a branch a few years ago in the basement of the Bangkok Mediplex building, adjacent to the Ekkamai BTS station. The retail floors of the building are largely deserted and arriving at 7:00 one evening, we almost gave up on the restaurant being open, so many lights were already turned off.
We arrived to find a friendly and inviting space, though, nicely decorated and with welcoming staff. The menu is comprehensive and accommodates not just vegetarians but eaters of “Buddhist Jae” food, a sort of strict veganism that also includes no garlic, shallots, and certain other foods that overstimulate the senses. The kitchen is able to mix and match as you desire, leaving out ingredients that you don’t eat or including them if you do.
Our meal got off to a particularly good start with Miang Takrai Bai Chaplu – a version of Miang Kham, a popular Thai appetizer. The normal dish features betel nut leaves served with a variety of condiments – small pieces of lime, shallot, peanut, dried shrimp, fresh chili, and ginger. The name means, roughly, “many things in one bite,” and provides a nice way to perk up your taste buds in anticipation of the meal ahead. Khun Churn’s version contains sliced lemongrass, mint, roasted sesame, ground peanuts, roasted coconut, cilantro and chili paste blended together. Needless to say, the flavor packs a wallop and is intensely interesting.
Sadly, the Miang Takrai was the flavor highlight of the meal. The next dish was Kuayteaw Lord, noodle rolls stuffed with tofu, black ear mushrooms, bean sprouts, and served with a black sweet and sour sauce. These were okay, but the sweet and sour sauce (mostly sweet) was the first of too many dishes that relied on the sweet soy sauce. Thai food is known for its balance of flavors – sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and spicy – and all too often, “sweet” was the dominant note.
The next dish was called “Merry Mushroom” and featured three types of mushrooms – erringi, Shitake, and oyster – breaded, deep fried, and served with an garlic and onion cream sauce. Well, that’s what the menu said. It was not a cream sauce, but was a soy, garlic, shallot, and coriander sauce. The Shitake mushrooms stood up well to the deep frying but the erringi and oyster mushrooms tasted like breading and nothing else. The sauce was okay, but didn’t stand out.
For the next dish, our guest asked us to order Pad Thai, so we ordered a version called Pad Thai Woon Sen, made with mung bean (“cellophane”) noodles rather than the typical wide rice noodles. This version was less sweet than many of the other pad thai dishes he had eaten on this trip, but the overall flavor was still a bit one-dimensional. Pad Thai relies on tamarind paste to form the sour base of the sauce. Without fish sauce, the dish ended up unbalanced and some sort of salt would have helped round out the flavor.
Since Khun Churn is a northern Thai restaurant, it seemed appropriate to try a famous northern dish, Nam Prik Ong. This dish is usually made with chili paste, ground pork, and tomatoes and is served as a dip for fresh vegetables and deep fried pork skin. Here, tofu was used instead of pork and the pork skin was replaced by a clever “tofu skin” that achieved the same texture in the hot oil. I hate to say it, but tofu makes a poor substitute for pork because tofu doesn’t add any flavor. Something – a little concentrated mushroom stock, perhaps – was needed to give the dish its characteristic meatiness.
We ordered another take on a classic dish, chicken stir fried with cashew nuts – Gai Pad Med Mamuang. This version substituted tofu for the chicken. The problem is, the original version (one of my favorite dishes) is made with oyster sauce or fish sauce, which gives the dish that satisfying umami flavor. Instead, they relied on sweet dark soy sauce which gave the dish a very sweet flavor but lacked the roundness or robustness that would have made the dish satisfying. Again, a pinch of salt or some mushroom stock might have helped deliver the missing element.
We concluded with a Gaeng Kiaw Waan – a green curry with tofu and vegetables. I was curious to try this because the previous Thai vegetarian restaurant we had been to served such a miserably watery version of this classic curry. The version at Khun Churn was more robust and had a creaminess that was enjoyable. Sadly, the flavor was still very sweet and lacked the necessary balance.
As a whole, the meal was good but not enough to make me want to return to the restaurant on its own merits. Instead, it will remain filed in that dusty category of places to bring vegetarian friends to.
Afterwards, we walked across the street to the Gateway mall, a Japanese themed mall, to enjoy some Japanese style shaved ice desserts. This is when vegetarian dishes being very sweet is okay!
Comments (13)
Ice desserts! Yummy! I haven`t eat those in years … I love those since I was a kid! I always wanted ONLY that ice and nothing else! LOL
I have had vegans visiting and taken them to a vegan restaurant here. I was not a fan of the food. They seemed to overuse herbs to “make up” for the lack of meat. I am a fish eater for real.
Very pretty photos – seems the camera loved the food more than you did… The shave ice looks very tasty!!
A lot of places use chicken broth or beef broth for flavoring. I suppose fish sauce, crab sauce and shrimp sauce are also no nos for true vegans and some Buddhist vegans sort of let it slide?
Basically it is the Buddhist that are what keep these vegetarian places alive, it is a culturally important aspect of the vegetarian life style in Thailand.
If shrimp is on the menu, I could be a vegetarian.
Buddhist Jae. Yes, that’s a bit extreme. Ascetic even.
I’m with you on the sweetness.
Sad to hear that the sweet note in the Thai food even in Thailand was the dominant flavour in the food. If you ever come to Toronto and so happen to want Thai food, hit up Khao San Road or Sabai Sabai. Would be interested to hear if your trained Thai pallet would consider the food there to be more balanced. I love both those places in Toronto!
Great photos.
Now the Miang Takrai Bai Chapla are my fav to look at and hubby loves the photo of the Merry Mushrooms. Yummy and beautiful to look at.
You all look like you are enjoying your sweet treat.
Have a wonderful week and blessings.
Everything looks so good!
The food looks good. It’s too bad they were so one dimensional. I hope they’ll take note of your blog. Perhaps you need to adopt Chef Gordon Ramsay’s blustery approach and give them some feedback.
yum. i never knew you were a vegetarian. i too was one back during college. i was even a RAW VEGAN for few months for a work experience in LA. great experience. i still have an appreciation for vegetarian cuisine and continue to consume them from time to time. taiwan has great vegetarian creations. more than any other asian countries. you should try them someday, if you haven’t already.
@Grannys_Place - Thanks for the rec!
@rudyhou - Thanks for the rec, too. There is actually a vegetarian Taiwanese restaurant a few blocks away I’ve been meaning to try. I have nothing against vegetarian food but I suppose I expect it to be good food. Being vegetarian doesn’t give it a pass when it comes to good flavor.
@ElusiveWords - Nah, here in Thailand a hot temper doesn’t yield good results.
@oxyGENE_08 - @ZSA_MD - @murisopsis - Thanks – sadly, the looks were better than the taste.
@brooklyn2028 - When I make it up to Toronto, let’s add one of those places to the list of places to dine. Then you can bake me some of your desserts! =D
@Inciteful - Ha ha! If shrimp were on the menu, you wouldn’t be much of a vegetarian!
@PPhilip - Well, not even a matter of vegan, but vegetarian. A vegetarian won’t, by definition, eat foods prepared with meat stocks, fish sauce, etc.
@Fatcat723 - I suppose an effective use of herbs and spices can be a good thing, but it has to be done with care. Seems like that wasn’t the case this time!
@SherryAngeLMysteriez - I have to think that the ice desserts must be relatively low calorie, since a lot of it is just water, right?