Robotic Taster Will Judge 'Real Thai Food' 103
HughPickens.com (3830033) writes The NYT reports that Thailand's former prime minister, Yingluck Shinawatra repeatedly encountered a distressing problem while traveling the world: bad Thai food. Too often, she found, the meals she sampled at Thai restaurants abroad were unworthy of the name, too bland to be called genuine Thai cooking. The problem bothered her enough to raise it at a cabinet meeting. Even though her political party has since been thrown out of office, in a May military coup, the Thai government is unveiling its project to standardize the art of Thai food using a robot. The government-financed Thai Delicious Committee, which oversaw the development of the machine, describes it as "an intelligent robot that measures smell and taste in food ingredients through sensor technology in order to measure taste like a food critic." Thailand's National Innovation Agency has spent about $100,000 to develop the e-delicious machine. The e-delicious machine has 10 sensors that measure smell and taste, generating a unique fingerprint (signature) for each sample of food that passes its digital maw. Generally with electronic tasting, there are electronic sensors that work just like the taste buds on your tongue, measuring the quantity of various taste-giving compounds, acidity, etc. While these electronic sensors can't actually tell you how something tastes — that's a very subjective, human thing — they are very good at comparing two foods scientifically. Meanwhile at a tiny food stall along one of Bangkok's traffic-clogged boulevards, Thaweekiat Nimmalairatana, questioned the necessity of a robatic taster. "I use my tongue to test if it's delicious or not," said Nimmalairatana. "I think the government should consider using a human to gauge authenticity."
Nakah Thawichawatt, who runs a business producing herbal supplements, has a vision for the machine that he says will take the next step in the digitization of our lives. The so-called e-delicious tasting machine would produce a digital signature of food at a particular restaurant. Consumers would then indicate their preferences on an app for mobile phones. The app would match consumers with their favorite tastes at other restaurants that participate in the program. "It's just like pressing 'like,' " says Thawichawatt. "You rate the food. Then we will know that you love that taste."
I measure taste like a food critic (Score:2)
but that doesn't mean I can distinguish thai food from vietnamese food any way but linguistically.
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Real Thai food has a strong balance of all flavors. I've never seen a good use of radar charts in engineering, but I think they'd be perfectly suited for assessing good Thai food which would have components to fill out the entire spectrum of sweet, sour, salty, bitter, spicy, savory, crunchy, chewy, etc. in a similar way that good Japanese food tries to throw in something of each primary color when arranging a dish.
As a case study, I present a common northern Thai appetizer: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M [wikipedia.org]
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"krueng therm" (literally "engine fillup")
While "engine" is one possible translation of "khrueang", that's not the sense that's being used in "khrueang toem". There, "khreuang" means "ingredient" or "item" (sense 2 at this dictionary [thai-language.com])--you wouldn't literally translate "khrueang duem" (beverage) as "engine drink", right? :) So, a better literal translation of "khrueang toem" is "additional ingredient".
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leaf to hold it all together
Not really. The flavor of the leave is mild but helps your taste bud and eases the spiciness as well.
As the GP said, real Thai food has strong balance; however, it also depends on where you get the food. Each region has different preferable taste. Normally, Northern part tends to be mild to medium spicy hot, Eastern part is medium to hot, the Central part is mild, and the Southern part is medium to very hot.
I guess it is the reputation that Thai food has to associate with peanuts and/or coconut. This is NOT
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Thanks to Dahan for the link to a good thai dictionary! Maybe the phrase I used was just a colloquialism my family uses in Bangkok... I know I've used it to ask for the condiments carousel in many Thai restaurants all over, though. And yes, sriracha isn't common in Thai restaurants, I couldn't remember the name of the "red stuff" at the time, I guess it's just called "garlic chili sauce"
The engine/ingredients part wasn't as interesting as the "fillup" part, though... it makes it sound like the dish isn't
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Real Thai food is very spicy as the Thais love their chilis. I like my food spicy, but when you ask for Thai food "local style" (as opposed to the tourist food that is a lot milder), you get a VERY hot dish.
Not all Thai food is spicy but very few dishes are bland and tasteless. If you've ever been to Thailand and tasted proper Thai food you'd quickly have learned that the muck that gets passed off at Thai food in western countries is nothing like the real thing. Much like proper Chinese food, it's westernised and made bland. Often in Australia Thai restaurants aren't even run by Thais.
when you ask for Thai food "local style" (as opposed to the tourist food that is a lot milder), you get a VERY hot dish.
The best way is to ask in Thai, "Phet" means spicy, "Phet mak" is very spicy and "Phet mak mak" is very very spicy. For those
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So are these foreign thai places actually "bland" or is "real" thai food simply overly spiced?
While I do not know how you would define that "overly" in the "overly spiced" description of yours, real Thai food (and yes, I have been to Thailand many times on business trips) are certainly much more tasty than what you get from those "Thai Restaurants" on your main street in Europe or America
I have great doubt that the robot could do a decent job identifying a real tasty Thai food from a bad one
Sure, the bot can judge the level of spiciness / sourness / sweetness by measuring the level of glucose / acid
Misread (Score:3, Funny)
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A taste bud to nowhere boondoggle
Moron (Score:1)
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People who like spicy food are stupid? I guess that writes off Thailand and most of the Indian sub-continent, along with plenty of other people.
Seriously, I feel like this is a new low in Slashdot insults - not because it's obviously incorrect, but because it's such an unimportant and unnoticeable personal preference (at least if you were insulting someone's bad taste in fashion or grooming or art, you could complain about having to look at the result). Really, I'm stupid because of the food that I like?
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I think the implied assertion was that people who think spicy = flavor are morons.
In other words, just cause it burns more doesn't mean it tastes better.
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Say what? (Score:2)
Gordon Ramsey is not a culinary genius. I think you miss the whole point of the shows if you get that idea. He's a business chef and his goal is to make money, not to make food necessarily taste great. Often times a chef has to cut quality to make a profit, so good and great are two very different things.
It does not take pounds of pepper (implying black pepper) to make something hot. If you would have said "peppers" I'd agree with the you, since the best heat in food comes from various chili peppers. V
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Except, you don't get Michelin stars just for nothing. He trained under Michelin star chefs.
He's turned that into a lot of restaurants, a lot of money, and a lot of fame.
You may or may not like Ramsey (not everybody does, and that's fair), but if you think he's "just a business chef" out to make money, you're
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Whether I like him or not does not make any difference to my point. His fame is due primarily to being a very savvy business person, not because any dish he touches tastes like gold (sorry, I can't come up with a universally acceptable flavor analogy for "awesome").
You mistakenly took my comment as an attack, and that is far from the truth. Chefs are certainly in two categories, and finding pairs working together yields 5 Star dining establishments. The first kind of Chef is the artist, that is the guy t
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Perhaps you should recognize that different cultures have different perspectives on food, and that that diversity is what makes eating food from different cultures interesting.
Or, instead, you could develop a robot which will allow you to enforce your own personal culinary tastes on people all over the world.
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It may be my imagination or something, but I've noticed that a number of foods that I like have a better taste when they are also spicy hot. Is it possible that capsicacin oil acts in a similiar way to salt in enhancing flavors? For example I order pad thai mild for my children and hot for myself. On occasion I'll eat their leftovers for lunch and it always seems that the flavor isn't nearly as strong as mine was.
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Thai food is known for its balance of flavours. It's a delicate balance of a minimum of 2 (but usualy 4) of spicy, sweet, bitter, salty and sour in a dish.
It's also VERY easy to screw up.
As an aside, Jet Tila was appointed the Culinary Ambassador to Thailand [laweekly.com] for his role as a guide to Thai cuisine. (People from LA and Food Network viewers will recognize the name for he's had numerous appearances on various shows).
I guess we'll have a new Food Network special - Jet Tila vs. this machine.
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As if Gordon Ramsey could cook...
This is test equipment not a robot (Score:5, Insightful)
I would call it a robot if it wandered the streets of Bangkok smelling for the most Thai food and recording on a map where it found it.
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Thai Tasting (Score:3)
I don't know... Being a taste tester for Thai food sounds like a good way to suffer severe burnout.
Re:Thai Tasting (Score:4, Interesting)
While I personally see a device like this (sorry... ROBOT!) of rather limited use for testing prepared dishes, I can see great utility for it for testing ingredients. You could have a standardized, unambiguous way to rate the quality or at least properties of a given product, be it meat, fruit, vegetables, etc. I bet cultivar breeding programs in particular could really benefit from this - "Well, I was hoping that this new mango would be a huge innovation, but actually it's almost identical to a Keitt. Though to be fair its mouthfeel is somewhat like a Carrie, and it does have a small amount of a new novel aromatic compound..." Just a single mass produced sensor package that measures a wide range of different properties at once in a repeatable, universal manner. If such a thing could become widespread, I'd bet half of the "cultivars" out there would pretty much disappear, having been shown to be essentially identical to others.
Re:Thai Tasting (Score:4, Interesting)
I definitely agree there is value in testing the ingredients. The strength of peppers varies widely based on their growing conditions, and it would be good to avoid making a dish too hot or too bland.
I can also see using this automated taster to evaluate how a hybrid produces year over year, how the fruit of different parents crossed to produce the same hybrid compares to the original hybrid, or how the taste may vary from field to field. That's when it could be more useful to quantify the difference from the "standard".
But I think when you're hybridizing you'd still want a human doing the evaluation. It's a new thing, and quantifying taste of a new thing isn't as important as the perception of the taster.
Waste of money (Score:1)
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Re: Waste of money (Score:1)
To encourage road trips. Seriously!
http://www.viamichelin.co.uk/tpl/mag6/art200903/htm/tour-saga-michelin.htm
A "robatic" taste tester? (Score:1)
Meanwhile, typos and poor editing still done by a drunk marmoset.
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Meanwhile, typos and poor editing still done by a drunk marmoset.
No, wait. A drunk marmoset would actually be a significant upgrade. Give it a chance!.
Well .. most asian food in the US is crap (Score:4, Insightful)
Asian restaurants in the US cater to what they the think the US public wants to consume and not what is "authentic" to their cuisine. While which probably makes for good economic sense, doesn't make for the best food experience. (As an extreme, Imagine how the local asian family restaurant in the US having a plate of fried chicken heads on its menu would fare).
But these restaurants are so ingrained with this practice that even if you go into a Thai restaurant and ask for the dish to be "Thai-hot", they'll ask if "you are sure about that?" and still dial it back to something that is only middling spicy.
So while I can agree with the sentiment of the TFA, it win;t going to happen. If anything its really just the new heads of Thailand flexing their muscles to show that their coup d'etat is the best thing for the country.
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I don't really see the percentage in making something too spicy, I mean why not just eat the spices alone, you'll get the same flavour. On a related note I know a Thai woman who does exactly that, even keeps a box of antacids on hand while doing so.
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Asian restaurants in the US cater to what they the think the US public wants to consume and not what is "authentic" to their cuisine. While which probably makes for good economic sense, doesn't make for the best food experience. (As an extreme, Imagine how the local asian family restaurant in the US having a plate of fried chicken heads on its menu would fare).
I don't think you realize what is available in restaurants in the US. I live within walking distance from the "Chinatown" of one of the largest metro areas in the US and I assure you that there are plenty of restaurants with dead animals hanging in the windows, menus that don't have a single word of English on them and a staff of workers that don't speak a word of English either. They have plenty of customers that from visual and auditory clues you might describe as "immigrants" but also plenty of "Americ
Re:Well .. most asian food in the US is crap (Score:4, Insightful)
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My roomate is Vietnamese. Her friend's husband once remarked about having an "American Breakfast"--bread and cheese. That's what he understood we eat for breakfast here in the states. We were chuckling because, of course, an "American Breakfast" is bacon, eggs, hash browns, toast or biscuits, ham, pancakes, sausage, steak, etc. There's lots of options and some are regional, but bread and cheese, for the most part, aren't on that list.
For lunch, I'd maintain that the "submarine sandwich" is probably suff
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The question is, what is "American" food? Except for burgers with french fries and Apple tart nothing comes to my mind.
Industrial microwave food from the deep freezer perhaps?
In Japan, it was apparently a beef patty covered in a grey, salt sauce with a side salad and side of pasta. While I Japan, we went to an "American restaurant" to see and this is what we ended up ordering. We could tell it was an American dish because it came with plain pasta rather than rice.
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Not only that, but keep in mind that some immigrant cultures have been in the U.S. for a long time, and their cooking styles may drift over time. Chinese-American cuisine has been around for over 150 years, and allegedly is much more similar to native Chinese cooking from 150 years ago that to today's native Chinese cooking.
Anecdotally, I have found that Vietnamese-American food, which is a much more recent cuisine style than Chinese-American, is relatively similar to native Vietnamese, with decreased spic
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If anything its really just the new heads of Thailand flexing their muscles to show that their coup d'etat is the best thing for the country.
I guess you didn't make it all the way through the first sentence where it says this is the FORMER prime minister.
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Every country has good food - except for Finland, of course. ;)
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Every country has good food - except for Finland, of course. ;)
I LOVE pula!
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Your supposed to use Vodka like Americans use Katsup/Japanese use soy.
How to judge "real" Thai food (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a given that Thai food is amongst the most delicious cuisines in the world so you only need to find the right place to eat! These two simple points should help:
1. Are you in Thailand? Many places around the world come close but it's never quite the same.
2. Is it packed full with locals with just enough space to squeeze in? If the place is packed full you can be sure it is great and this goes for small food stalls just as much as for nice restaurants! Thai people are passionate about food and eat out a lot so the good places will be very full; better stay away from the empty ones.
This is all you really need and you can be 98% certain before even having tried the food! chok dee krub!
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Most everybody loves food, regardless of what culture they come form. And just because someone is genetically linked to one culture doesn't mean that they are predisposed to favor that cultures foods over another. I can't tell you how many times I've met people who were the first generation of their family raised in the US, and when asked about their favorite foods it was all generic American stuff. Whatever their Mother cooked for them growing up, no matter how amazing to someone else, was just the norm fo
I've seen this episode before (Score:2)
Of course given that the end is inevitable, i for one welcome our new robotic food tasting overlords.
Maybe Anthony Bourdain (Score:5, Interesting)
I saw a giant Mekong catfish lay on the side of the road for at least three or four days before it was considered "ripe" enough to use in food. When I was there refrigeration was rare and most food sat out in heat and humidity for extended periods. The climate was even a bit more that I was used to -- and I was born and raised in the deep south before air conditioning was common. The aroma of a Thai open air market is to say the least unique. Thailand is one of the most beautiful places I have ever seen, and the people are the friendliest and most open anywhere, but eating "real" Thai food is something I was never able to really appreciate.
There are places I have eaten in the US that have excellent Thai food, but it is not what you find the Thai's eating in Thailand. Maybe Anthony Bourdain can eat real Thai food, but on a recent episode of his show it appeared that even he was having a bit of trouble with some of it.
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You do realise that Thailand may have developed over the past decades, and that North-East Thailand may not be representative of the rest of the country, don't you?
Personally I think you're more likely to pick up diseases eating in "clean" hotels and chain restaurants staffed by poorly trained teenagers than a roadside stall run by an elderly couple whose livelihoods have depended on not poisoning their customers for decades. If you're spending a year in a country, you're going to have to get used to the l
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Yes, I know that everything has changed in 40+ years. I was there in 1971 and 1972 and it was a different world and a different place then. Also I was aware even then that the foods used and preparation varied widely around the country. Where I was was right on the border with Laos and there was much overlap between the Thai and Laotian foods. Even the ubiquitous Khao Phat fried rice varie
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I hate to spell this out like that but you have to realize that North Eastern Thailand is the hottest, most rural, poorest and generally most "backwards" part in the whole country... it is not mere coincidence that an overwhelming number of Thai-farang marriages are with Isaan girls and yes, they have some rather strange customs and ways there but this does not apply to all of Thailand. Real NorthEastern food is not for the faint of heart but there are so many different really real Thai dishes from differen
That's no real Thai! (Score:2)
That's no real Thai! It's a robot.
"Cheesoid" from "That Mitchell and Webb Look" (Score:1)
Good idea (Score:3)
They do take their cuisine seriously... (Score:1)
There is no such thing as Authentic Thai (Score:1)
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This.
My mother makes an awesome Mac n' Cheese. She doesn't do anything fancy that I know of, but it tastes better than any other Mac n' Cheese I've had.
That's not to say that nobody else makes authentic Mac n' Cheese, but I just prefer my mother's. .. I should call my mother and have her make me some Mac n' Cheese next time she visits.
As long as their priorities are straight (Score:2)
Nevermind the military coup, the rampant government sanctioned underaged sex trade, the sky high rate of AIDS in the country...
Let's spend $100,000 on a machine to help settle a food authenticity debate.