"Truck" is not the best way to describe our transport. Actually, we had a van with a driver- described as VIP, but ultimately cheaper per person than the alternatives after we crammed dozen and a half cruisers in. It had some specific rules emblazoned on the side panel windows. Remember, people: no durian. No dogs. No smoking. No sex. But karaoke? OK! Hmmmm.
Arriving at the market is overwhelming at first. It covers an area that's easily larger than a couple of city blocks, with tiny alleyways between packed vendor stalls. Single file is the only way to make progress in the flow of the crowd. There are a few places to sit, but most of them are under hot airless covers. Helpful in the rainy season, no doubt, but unnecessary now - especially when almost everything can be eaten by hand.
We start with the simple stuff. This is easy, because there are more edibles on a stick than the Minnesota State Fair. Unlike the Fair, most of them are identifiable (let's ignore the mystery meat kebabs- but hey, look at those baby octopus!) and barbecued instead of deep fried. Mmm, smokey blackened squid with a fiery chili sauce...
There are the stalls that stop you in your tracks, like this one selling massive grilled prawns: each one is about the size of a lobster tail. This is the "high end" of the market: most vendors sell servings for $.50-$1 (like the sate sticks above), but a full plate of these babies is a little over US$10.
Bacon makes everything better, right? How about grilled, bacon-wrapped straw mushrooms? (I'll take those over the bacon wrapped hot dogs...).
Other times you kind of have to just look the other way... like the fly swatter getting a little too friendly with the crab. I'll pass. On the other hand... see those shredded veggies in the bag at the right side? That's a green papaya salad. Pounded in a large mortar with a dressing that brings together the key elements of sweet, salty, sour, spicy, it's one of my favorite things to eat in Thailand.
These light pancakes get a leaf of lettuce, a few thin slices of pork, some vegetables and a mystery sauce to be miraculously transformed into the best non-fried spring roll to grace your tastebuds.
Walking by suddenly was not an option, and raising my camera to take a photo wasn't really satisfying enough. So we bought a bag.
I admit it: I had to close my eyes for that first one. The vendor watched me with rapt concentration, and I gave her a completely honest reaction. "Arroy!" Holy cow, but little fried crickets are GOOD. Think of it this way: it's a crunchy, salty snack. How far off can you really go? I don't know what else was mixed in when the vendor gave them a quick fry up and another shake of some mystery marvel powder, but it was delicious!
Two ingredients that show up over and over: lemongrass and kaffir lime leaves. You really can't substitute for the flavor of either, and their unique citrusy tang is getting worked into meals on Totem now too. These are finely sliced and mixed into fried rice, then topped with a sate of your choice and a selection of sauces.
If you're going to eat, you'll want to drink. There's plenty of chilly Chang beer, but when else can you have fresh sugarcane juice? Stacks of sugarcane sit next to the machine that pulverizes them into juice, then decanted into recycled glass pop bottles. It's sweet, not as sickly sweet as you'd expect.
Time for dessert! Two kids demonstrate a universal truth, watching with unbroken intensity as a vendor prepares their custom order of frozen goodness. Ice cream here is prepared by hand, to order, by blending the base flavor with mix-ins like fruit or sprinkles over a cold plate.
Sated and happy we piled back into our VIP transportation, where the driver did his best to charm us by turning on the black light and cranking up the country and western, and we did our best to surprise ourselves by belting out the lyrics to "Country Road" as we bounced back to the anchorage.
Hungry yet? Here are more photos from the night market to indulge your Thai food fantasies.
Well-nourished readers know that reading this on the Sailfeed website fills our plate.