File:Tom jued tahoo.jpg

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Summary

Tom chuet tahu (Thai: ต้มจืด): A light broth (here a vegetable broth but pork and/or chicken is also common) with soft tofu and vegetables. It is often also called kaeng chuet (Thai: แกงจืด, keang normally means curry although this dish doesn't have any of the spices that make up a curry).

It is normal to change the ingredients that one wants in tom chuet. One can choose from several types and mixtures of vegetables (Chinese cabbage will nearly always be one of the vegetables) and have such things as minced pork (moo sap), tofu (tahu), mung bean noodles (wunsen) and seaweed (sarai, Thai: สาหร่าย) to be added. The garden herb used in this soup will nearly always be Thai celery (khuen chai, Thai: คื่นช่าย) and only sometimes coriander (cilantro).

The soup, as with most soups in Thai cuisine, is eaten together with other dishes and not as a starter. It being vegetable-based and with its fairly neutral taste, it goes well in combination with creamy coconut-based curries, spicy stir fries based on chilli pastes, and with deep fried dishes.

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File history

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current14:27, 6 January 2017Thumbnail for version as of 14:27, 6 January 20171,920 × 1,285 (318 KB)127.0.0.1 (talk)<b>Tom chuet tahu</b> (Thai: ต้มจืด): A light broth (here a vegetable broth but pork and/or chicken is also common) with soft tofu and vegetables. It is often also called <b>kaeng chuet</b> (Thai: แกงจืด, <i>keang</i> normally means curry although this dish doesn't have any of the spices that make up a curry). <p>It is normal to change the ingredients that one wants in <i>tom chuet</i>. One can choose from several types and mixtures of vegetables (Chinese cabbage will nearly always be one of the vegetables) and have such things as minced pork (<i>moo sap</i>), tofu (<i>tahu</i>), mung bean noodles (<i>wunsen</i>) and seaweed (<i>sarai</i>, Thai: สาหร่าย) to be added. The garden herb used in this soup will nearly always be Thai celery (<i>khuen chai</i>, Thai: คื่นช่าย) and only sometimes coriander (cilantro). </p> The soup, as with most soups in Thai cuisine, is eaten together with other dishes and not as a starter. It being vegetable-based and with its fairly neutral taste, it goes well in combination with creamy coconut-based curries, spicy stir fries based on chilli pastes, and with deep fried dishes.
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