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Silken tofu and pig's ear

Leisa Tyler The Age 30.01.2010 10:24
Baba snacks ... stir-friend bean sprouts with crispy pork at the China Inn Cafe.

Baba snacks ... stir-friend bean sprouts with crispy pork at the China Inn Cafe.


Leisa Tyler takes a food crawl through Phuket's old quarter and savours the culinary heritage of migrant Chinese miners.



Phuket teems with fabulous food. Not only are there scores of eateries serving Thailand's indigenous sweet, sour and spicy cuisine but a string of international chefs has recently opened restaurants there. The late Keith Floyd launched Floyd's Brasserie in 2007 with many old English favourites on the menu. Neil Perry fashioned the Thai-influenced menu at the exquisite Trisara Resort. Belgians Corry Ringoet and Marc De Schrijver relocated their acclaimed classical French restaurant De Tafeljoncker from Antwerp to a rural village, then renamed it Royale Nam Tok. But Phuket's most exciting culinary discoveries are found in its age-old traditions, such as Baba cuisine, a strain of Chinese cooking brought to the island during its tin-mining days.

"Phuket's Baba food is just like that found in China's Fujian province but with Thai flavours," says the director of the Phuket Old Town Foundation, Dr Prasit Koysiripong, over a plate of lo ba - a selection of prawn, tofu, sausages and pig's ears that are dipped in a tamarind chilli sauce. "It's native only to Phuket. You can't find it anywhere else in the world."

I am not entirely taken by the pig's ears butlo ba is completely different to any Thai food I've eaten. The tamarind packs a punch, powering each mouthful with a fruity sourness. The aftertaste mellows sweeter, then comes the distinct scent of stinky tofu, a revered snack in China that is made by soaking tofu in rotten vegetables for weeks on end. It's a process that sounds, and smells, considerably worse than it tastes.

Koysiripong and I are on a food-crawl through Phuket's old town. Like most of the town's residents, Koysiripong is ethnically Chinese. They migrated here from mainland China and the straits settlements of Penang and Melaka during the mid-19th century to work in Phuket's prosperous tin mines. Marrying local women (Chinese women were not allowed passage to Thailand until the 1920s), they set about building a rich and storied community. Locally they became known as the "Baba" people, the male component of "Baba-Nyonya", which was a term used to describe ethnic Chinese living in British Malaya.


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