Available Formats
Pok Pok: Food and Stories from the Streets, Homes, and Roadside Restaurants of Thailand [A Cookbook]
By (Author) Andy Ricker
By (author) JJ Goode
Foreword by David Thompson
Random House USA Inc
Ten Speed Press
15th November 2013
11th November 2013
United States
General
Non Fiction
641.59593
Hardback
304
Width 208mm, Height 274mm, Spine 30mm
1259g
A guide to bold, authentic Thai cooking from Andy Ricker, the chef and owner of the wildly popular and widely lauded Pok Pok restaurants. A guide to bold, authentic Thai cooking from Andy Ricker, the chef and owner of the wildly popular and widely lauded Pok Pok restaurants.After decades spent traveling throughout Thailand, Andy Ricker wanted to bring the country's famed street food stateside. In 2005 he opened Pok Pok, so named for the sound a pestle makes when it strikes a clay mortar, in an old shack in a residential neighborhood of Portland, Oregon. Ricker's traditional take on Thai food soon drew the notice of theNew York Times and Gourmetmagazine, establishing him as a culinary star. Now, with his first cookbook, Ricker tackles head-on the myths that keep people from making Thai food at home- that it's too spicy for the American palate or too difficult to source ingredients.Ricker shares more than fifty of the most popular recipes from Thailand and his Pok Pok restaurants-ranging from Khao Soi Kai (Northern Thai curry noodle soup with chicken) to Som Tam Thai (Central Thai-style papaya salad) to Pok Pok's now-classic (and obsessed-over) Fish-Sauce Wings. But Pok Pok is more than just a collection of favorite recipes- it is also a master course in Thai cooking from one of the most passionate and knowledgeable authorities on the subject. Clearly written, impeccably tested recipes teach you how to source ingredients; master fundamental Thai cooking techniques and skills; understand flavor profiles that are unique to Southeast Asian cuisine; and combine various dishes to create show-stopping, well-balanced meals for family and friends. Filled with thoughtful, colorful essays about Ricker's travels and experiences, Pok Pok is not only a definitive resource for home cooks, but also a celebration of the rich history, vibrant culture, and unparalleled deliciousness of Thai food.
In this groundbreaking masterwork, Andy Ricker weaves together superb recipes, enlightening cultural narratives, meaningful personal essays, and an incomparable insight into the essence of Thai foodways. But perhaps this books greatest achievement is the honest, uncompromising way it brings real Thai cookery right into American readers homes. The bar has been set for ethnic cookbooks going forward.
Andrew Zimmern
Everything I know about Thai food I learned from Andy Rickerhow to order it, how to eat it, and now, how to cook it.Pok Pokis destined to be the Thai bible for every adventurous home cook. Part memoir, part cooking manifesto, it beautifully and passionately shows Rickers no-nonsense approach to one of the worlds most exciting cuisines. When my daughters ask why they grew up eating so muchkhao soi kai,papaya salad, andlaap pet isaanat home, Ill tell them they have Andy Rickerand this bookto thank.
Andrew Knowlton, restaurant and drink editor, Bon Apptit
More than a Thai cookbook or even a regional Thai cookbook, this is a book about people: the street and market vendors, home cooks, and restaurant owners who Andy Ricker has met and studied with for over two decades in Thailand. In Pok Pok, Andy shares their stories, skills, and ideasand his own passion for discovering a cuisine by going door to door. Oh yeah, and he makes some insanely delicious food along the way.
Francis Lam, writer and judge on Top Chef Masters
Youd be hard-pressed to find better Thai food than what Andy Ricker is serving at Pok Pok. And now, with his cookbook, we finally get to see the people, places, and experiences that were the inspiration for it all.
David Chang, chef/owner of Momofuku
This book, as far as Im concerned, is an argument ender. When Andy says make som tam lao like this, its like Jacques Ppin telling you how to make an omelette. The matter is settled. Previously, I would never have even attempted to prepare most of these dishes in my home. I had always felt that Thai food was best left to the experts. But this book has given me hope and confidence.
Anthony Bourdain
"In his introduction, Ricker makes the modest proclamation that his cooking knowledge is limited when measured against Thailands vast cuisine. However, this limitation has had no visible effect on his success, given that his eatery, Pok Pok, was recently rated by Bon Apptit as the eighth most important American restaurant. All one really needs to know about Ricker, and this finely detailed cookbook and travelogue, comes at the start of his recipe for fish-sauce wings. Sounding like a gourmand Allen Ginsberg, he writes, Ive spent the better part of the last twenty years roaming around Thailand, cooking and recooking strange soups, beseeching street vendors for stir-fry tips, and trying to figure out how to reproduce obscure Thai products with American ingredients. He spills out his acquired knowledge here across 13 chapters and nearly 100 recipes. Lessons learned along the way include the beauty of blandness as exhibited in his flavor-balanced bland soup with glass noodles, and waste not, want not, as showcased in recipes for stewed pork knuckles and grilled pork neck. Rickers prose, as aided by food writer Goode, is captivating, whether he is discussing Americas obsession with sateh, or when profiling characters hes encountered in his travels, such as Mr. Lit, his chicken mentor and Sunny, his go-to guy in Chiang Mai.
Publisher's Weekly Starred Review
ANDY RICKER worked in restaurants all over the world before opening his first restaurant, Pok Pok, in Portland. He has since gone on to open Whiskey Soda Lounge, Pok Pok Noi, and Sen Yai in Portland, and Pok Pok NY in New York City. JJ GOODE has co-written several books including Pok Pok with Andy Ricker, April Bloomfield's A Girl and Her Pig, and Morimoto with Masaharu Morimoto.