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| A fish called Batthu. Feh. |
I really hate this ugly-ass fish.
It's called batthu, near as I can make out. Vendors at the open-air San Pakoi market sell them pre-cooked and sitting out uncovered at 80+ degree room temperature. Shoppers walk by and prod the flesh for firmness with their nasty bare fingers. At least twice a week Lian buys two batthu for the dinner table, to be served with rice and soy dipping sauce. They taste as good as they look.
Truth be told, my problem isn't with just the batthu: most of the food and produce we encounter at San Pakoi is slop, pure and simple, and I'm increasingly under-enthused with our day-to-day choices.
So, perfect timing for a change of scenery: six days down south to visit Lian's family in Hua Hin and Bang Khae. Early Sunday morning we board the first Nok Air flight out of Chiang Mai. (Surprisingly, air travel for two to Bangkok is actually cheaper than the train, and 13 times faster.) We connect with a dilapidated third-class train that drops us at the Hua Hin railway station late in the afternoon. There, we are greeted by Lian's daughter, Eve, and her boyfriend ... or, friend Boy. That's really his name. Boy, as in son of Tarzan. (Go ahead, have fun with it.) Boy manages the fitness center at the tony Intercontinental Resort, which is where he met Eve when she was an accounting trainee.
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| Eve and her Boy toy at Udom Pochana. |
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| Shady characters. |
That evening Boy and Eve want to treat us to dinner at the Intercon, where he works. This resort, I should mention, is absolutely stunning and I will save my nickels to stay there, next time we are in town.
About dinner: for some reason, Boy has selected an Italian restaurant for us, which is assolutamente delizioso for me; but for the three Thai people at the table, not so much. Lian's priceless expression here sums up the majority opinion of the buffalo mozzarella in the caprese salad. I am happy (obviously, gorge-gorge!) to make a welcoming home for it on my plate:
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| Me, after three days eating in Hua Hin. |
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| Ascending to a higher plane. |
Curiously, in the last 48 hours my trousers have shrunk at the waist. Must be the humidity.
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Wednesday on our way back north, Lian and I stop in Bang Khae, on the outskirts of Bangkok, to visit Lian's sister and their elderly flasher-mom. As always, I wai politely to her and thank her in English for not showing me her tits again.
Lian's brother-in-law, the bookie, has arranged a room for us at a nearby hotel -- very good and affordable, he assures her. It is nothing of the sort: the lobby is dank, the bellman who walks us upstairs is almost certainly casing our valuables, and, oh, the stink on that room! The bedding is threadbare and ill-laundered, the bathroom has no toilet paper or sprayer, and bath towels are M.I.A. "This room very terrible," mutters Lian, Olive Oyl-like. On the plus side, it IS just twenty-five bucks a night.
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| Yui. |
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| Fook & her mother. |
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| Only the first course: Many more to come. |
I am almost to Heaven. Then the soup tureen arrives and I see my old nemesis:
It is Batthu. Otherwise, a perfect evening.










