The Ultimate Guide to PALM SUGAR - Hot Thai Kitchen

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 11 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 278

  • @PailinsKitchen
    @PailinsKitchen  5 років тому +27

    HELLO LOVELY VIEWERS!
    *Important Note: I hope you enjoy this video! If you have more questions, you can leave them in the comments for the community to answer. But if you want to specifically ask me, please ask them on my Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or via my website (all links are in the description above). If you add them here I may not see them due to the large volume of comments I receive across the hundreds of videos on this channel.
    As always, thank you for watching!

    • @popomka9508
      @popomka9508 4 роки тому

      Pailin's Kitchen yes i enjoy all your video very much...thankyou

    • @chanthyroth1502
      @chanthyroth1502 3 роки тому

      Hi, can you please do tutorial on how to make the hard palm sugar into a softer version that you can find in Thailand.
      A friend told me that you can do this by cooking it down and adding water.
      Thank you !

    • @karmacleansingasitis364
      @karmacleansingasitis364 Рік тому

      Thank you for such a wonderful video. We very much appreciate it. Can I ask, are you a vegetarian?

    • @Tortilla.Reform
      @Tortilla.Reform 16 днів тому

      Thank you for all this incredible information! If this helps, I assume a great way to keep your palm sugar from drying out and becoming hard like brown sugar, is to use a marshmallow. I saw someone say they use it as a substitute for bread that can get moldy, and they just swap out the marshmallow every month, so the sugar is always moist when needed

  • @Nicky96792
    @Nicky96792 Рік тому +8

    I love the way that you teach us Thai words too 😊

  • @SnackPacks10
    @SnackPacks10 2 роки тому +7

    You are such a lifesaver haha. Been making your Thai green curry recipe very often for the past several months, getting better and better at it and more and more close to having all the ingredients. I've never cooked Thai food before so it took a while to get all the ingredients, I've been a bit confused by palm sugar due to the form it comes in so I'm soooo relieved when I searched for palm sugar on UA-cam and u had a video about it. So grateful omg. Thank you for teaching me all about the wonders of delicious Thai food 🙏💖😭

  • @Durojes
    @Durojes 5 років тому +33

    When buying Thai palm sugar in the states I like to take those pucks and make a thick simple syrup. 1:1 sugar to water, cooked down until slightly thicker than real maple syrup. It scales for recipes in the same manner and lasts for months in an airtight container, like a mason jar. Love your channel. keep up the great work!

    • @kungfuwife
      @kungfuwife 4 роки тому

      Thanks for the tip for additional usage! ❤

    • @nonnatroth9793
      @nonnatroth9793 4 роки тому

      Can I substitute ratio 1:1 brown sugar and water will do?

    • @StacyOh1717
      @StacyOh1717 3 роки тому

      Does it stay a syrup or does it harden in the jar?

    • @Durojes
      @Durojes 3 роки тому

      @@StacyOh1717 Yeah, it does! Have fun cooking!

    • @Durojes
      @Durojes 3 роки тому +1

      Woopsie, I meant that it stays a syrup. I used it in a commercial kitchen though, so I blew through it pretty fast...if that helps.

  • @ameenaaneesh6862
    @ameenaaneesh6862 5 років тому +9

    Hello Pailin! Great to see you after a while. Hope your baby is doing fine ❤❤. By the way, after the agar agar video, this is my second favourite informative video.
    I'm from South India. We use jaggery (sugarcane) - dark and light in most of our desserts and few savoury vegetarian curries. The purest form comes in Jam form. Commonly available Jaggery is in the form of blocks. We add water accordingly to it, melt it, filter it (solid dirt can be found) and store it in the refrigerator in liquid form.
    Palm Jaggery comes in the semi spherical, dark, toasty tasted form. That's used only for medicinal purposes, such as ginger coffee and herbal medicines. Palm candy is given to children for cough and cold.

  • @naanamora3282
    @naanamora3282 5 років тому +11

    Bought palm sugar today and an hour later saw this episode. Can’t take it back but good to know for next time. Thanks for sharing

  • @trellofello7473
    @trellofello7473 4 роки тому +13

    This video is amazing! I learned SO much and I’m grateful for the time and research put into bringing this knowledge to us 🙏🏼

  • @n.ayisha
    @n.ayisha 5 років тому +2

    great video. i have been hesitant to purchase palm sugar because i had no idea what to look for, and now i know. i really like the way you presented this. you are a natural teacher, and it shows.

  • @MrJfortun
    @MrJfortun 4 роки тому +8

    Wish I had watched this beforegoing shopping for some palm sugar. All I found was heavily adulterated with white sugar. Watched this video and went looking for some 100% pure palm sugar and found that Red Boat sells it on amazon in a jar. It just arrived and wow is that good and different from what I was able to get in my local asian market.

  • @kavithasivasamy873
    @kavithasivasamy873 5 років тому +20

    Personally, I find that the palm sugar at Sri Lankan grocery stores (not Indian grocery stores) is purer than the palm sugar at Asian and even Thai grocery stores overseas. Make sure you ask for 'kitthul' and not 'jaggery'. Traditionally, blocks of palm sugar in srilanka are wrapped in a net of palm reeds (if you see that stuff it's the best version of palm sugar).

  • @B2Hives
    @B2Hives 5 років тому +1

    Knowing a home producer upcountry, buy a big bucket filled to the top, 100% pure is soft, spreadable and melts not dissolves in your mouth. It is wonderful.

  • @rtongcn
    @rtongcn 5 років тому +4

    I love your ingredient series! I recently made a couple of your recipes for my husband’s Thai coworkers and they loved them! Thank you for helping me earn kitchen street cred!

  • @jennychyeo3016
    @jennychyeo3016 4 роки тому +2

    Excellent explanation. Educational.
    Now I understand the ingredients better for use. Thank you.

  • @zulemazahir666
    @zulemazahir666 Рік тому

    I'm using palm sugar I've had sitting around for a long time, to make kaya for my first time also. I must say this video is incredible! Extremely interesting, great lighting and sound etc etc.
    Definitely subscribing and excited to watch more videos!

  • @kungfuwife
    @kungfuwife 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks, Pailin! Just got my first bag of palm sugar pucks for pad thai and you answered them all!

  • @mehmey
    @mehmey 4 роки тому +4

    HARD palm sugar totally works in the mortar and pestle!! Thank you so much!!! I couldn’t cut it with a knife yesterday but jsut now i SMASHED a piece and it broke into smitherines.

  • @松田もしくろす
    @松田もしくろす 5 років тому +5

    Sounds like a good product to have available in an online store.

  • @Littlemissx1977
    @Littlemissx1977 5 років тому

    Someone brought me back palm sugar from Cambodia and I’m happy to say it looks and feels and tastes like the real deal.

  • @littlefever
    @littlefever 3 роки тому +7

    This was exactly what I needed, thank you : ) For another ingredient series i would LOVE to hear about cilantro/coriander as it seems there are many versions out there, and I cant find the one and most amazing version I had in Thailand. Been looking and searching, but maybe you have the info

  • @davidthomas6094
    @davidthomas6094 5 років тому +4

    When I saw there was a 14-minute video on palm sugar, I was surprised. But it's worth it. By the way, as to dried-up palm sugar pucks, I wonder if they'd respond to what works well with hardened brown sugar: stick it in a ziplock bag with a slice or two of bread for a day.

    • @emalinel
      @emalinel 5 років тому

      They'd probably soften up a bit, but I don't think they'd crumble completely

    • @PailinsKitchen
      @PailinsKitchen  5 років тому

      Wouldn’t work as well because there is much less surface area to absorb the moisture from the bread.

  • @derrick_martin_g.
    @derrick_martin_g. 2 роки тому +1

    I cut the granulated palm sugar with a light colored demerara sugar and that gives a pretty good flavor.

  • @hananurra6122
    @hananurra6122 5 років тому +5

    In Indonesia especially Java the palm sugar a lot darker than the Thai version. To be compared to white sugar, the palm sugar has more caramelly flavor. There are two terms of palm sugar Gula Merah and Gula Aren. And in Indonesia, to be exact in small town we use granulated palm sugar like the coconut one's Pai showed in the video to substitute brown sugar. It's just because easy to find and a lot cheaper than brown sugar.

    • @MomoChanhs
      @MomoChanhs 5 років тому +4

      I was in the food industry making products for Southeast Asia and had worked with both gula aren and thai palm sugar. Both of them are very different. Gula aren is more molasses/caramel-like in taste, but thai palm sugar is more like butterscotch. There are some differences, but both are great (and can substitute brown sugar as you'd said)! If you can get your hand on thai palm sugar, give it a try :)

    • @hananurra6122
      @hananurra6122 5 років тому

      @@MomoChanhsWow! that's very interesting. Is it because the difference of the making process or the type of nectar? I'll make sure to try Thai palm sugar one day.

    • @wahyuferiyansyah7290
      @wahyuferiyansyah7290 3 роки тому +1

      @@hananurra6122 The difference is just ratio, Thai palm sugar has more white sugar content and Indonesian maximum 5% (even some palm sugar doesn't have white sugar at all). Also the cooking process of Indonesian palm sugar is longer than Thai
      That's why is more molasses flavor in there and pure
      Note : you can tell the different by Indonesian palm sugar that you splash it with some water and it will melted so easily, it was doesn't happen in Thai palm sugar.

    • @wahyuferiyansyah7290
      @wahyuferiyansyah7290 3 роки тому +1

      @@hananurra6122 Even when you touch it with your sweating hand it gonna be sticky and mussy right away
      You can also use it on Thai cuisine with using 1/2 ratio. Example 1 tbsp Thai palm sugar, you have to use 1/2 Indonesian palm sugar mix with 1/2 regular white sugar
      The fact that some province in Thailand also known gula aren and they called gula melaka

  • @jowu235
    @jowu235 5 років тому +3

    I brought palm sugar when I visited Amphawa, Thailand last season . It’s better taste than I brought in Bangkok.

    • @jowu235
      @jowu235 5 років тому

      @Yoswin Freeman Thank you for telling me, that helps a lot.

  • @mer1tiki
    @mer1tiki 8 місяців тому

    Great content, I subscribed! love to cook and I am trying to catch up with my friend who spent a month in Thailand learning from highly regarded Thai chefs.

  • @karenbrower9952
    @karenbrower9952 4 роки тому +2

    I got a jar of 100% pure palm syrup sugar which is like that softer palm sugar paste. It had a wax layer over the top in the jar. It is very fruity flavored. Almost like honey with umph.

  • @Yybini
    @Yybini 5 років тому +2

    I just back from Bangkok holiday.....I like there very much

  • @Estenberg
    @Estenberg 4 роки тому +1

    I like your detailed look at specific ingredients

  • @sansantun3978
    @sansantun3978 Рік тому

    Thank you so much for all this great information about palm sugar .

  • @achmadmarendes
    @achmadmarendes 4 роки тому +2

    there is another palm tree, called enau tree, arenga pinnata, popular in Indonesia. its leaves are used to make traditional roof, its fruit makes a good cold drink addition, and the trunk can be harvested for staple food (like a sago)

  • @danajones3818
    @danajones3818 6 місяців тому

    You are so easy to learn from! So clear and detailed. 🎉❤❤❤❤🎉

  • @danajohnson5993
    @danajohnson5993 5 років тому +1

    I do use the puck sort for Thai cooking, but prefer the dark granulated stuff for baking or substituting for dark brown sugar. I also make pancake type syrup from it which I actually prefer to maple. In my younger days I worked in a sugar shack making the maple product. Great learning experience and a heady aroma to work in.

  • @mentaritravel1004
    @mentaritravel1004 3 роки тому +1

    this is interesting as palm sugar in my country are mostly dark and darker brown. Thank you

  • @Pestyfield
    @Pestyfield 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you (Kap Kun Kha?!) --It's been awhile since I visited beautiful Thailand but I think that's correct ;) -- I love this very informative video and hope to watch more on your channel.

  • @MLLL1234
    @MLLL1234 5 років тому +5

    I love this...I learned something new!!

  • @gialuanthang7716
    @gialuanthang7716 5 років тому +1

    Palm sugar is the best for Thai food in general and sweet soups/ traditional desserts. We Vietnamese also use a lot of palm sugar, mainly for desserts, and it would be very easy to know if it is one of the ingredients since the aroma is easily recognizable. We also have to kind of granulated palm sugar so I don't have to spend the first ten minutes trying to shave the big block into a finer texture.

  • @karenrobbins6656
    @karenrobbins6656 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you! This is helpful. Now the hard part is finding some good Palm sugar

  • @snowmembe
    @snowmembe 5 років тому +3

    Watching the many quality versions of palm sugar and its purity, it reminded of Breaking Bad somehow. Great information, Palin! 🤗👍🏻👍🏻

  • @Buhay_Isla
    @Buhay_Isla Рік тому +1

    Finally i found Thai Palm Sugar…It’s Healthy Sugar and Taste Good.
    I used it today for making my Filipino Dessert Called BiloBilo.

  • @shelleytienchang4171
    @shelleytienchang4171 3 роки тому

    Great information!!👍👍 Much appreciated for your time and effort sharing with us.😍

  • @ngangocly4201
    @ngangocly4201 3 роки тому +1

    Thanks for sharing this video! Great job!

  • @Shin_Lona
    @Shin_Lona 3 роки тому +2

    Good information. The pucks I have are slightly smaller, but definitely like the middle one.
    Not gonna lie, I've been known to add a be splash of maple syrup to my fried rice... Kinda amazing.

    • @adamthehtkminion6750
      @adamthehtkminion6750 3 роки тому +1

      Brilliant! :) (she actually suggested the same for a similar recipe on a recent video - forget which one though ...) Cheers! Adam

  • @corlissyamasaki3476
    @corlissyamasaki3476 4 роки тому +1

    Hi Palin! Originally, I found Coconut palm sugar which was granular. Today, in Chinatown, I found palm sugar in a jar and it looks like a paste. The granular one was more expensive than the paste, however, the paste is from Thailand. Hopefully, the paste has better flavor.

    • @ColRubyDimplesManacha
      @ColRubyDimplesManacha 2 роки тому

      I wish I could still find the stuff in the jar! Used to get that from the market in the town I used to live in. Haven't been able to find it anywhere since moving. If I remember correctly, the brand was Na'am thai something, it had a red lid. Love that stuff!

  • @deeferan7467
    @deeferan7467 5 років тому

    Hi Pai, you might ask your Indonesian friend too the one from your culinary school, i'm Indonesian and we have that kind we called it GULA JAWA, we use that to manny dessert and cooking specially sambal too.

  • @bethieskulls
    @bethieskulls 5 років тому +2

    I LOVE YOU!!! Thank you for your information and recipes!

  • @kimookN
    @kimookN 5 років тому +1

    Very informative video as always ka. Thank you Khun Pai.

  • @Sam-ul4zq
    @Sam-ul4zq 3 роки тому +1

    Had no idea, thanks for the explanation

  • @SweetandMellow999
    @SweetandMellow999 5 років тому

    Thank you Pai! I have been buying the cheapest one and didn't even know it. Love these videos!

    • @durians6
      @durians6 5 років тому

      I love all your videos, Palin. So informative and interesting! Thank you for sharing your invaluable experience with us.

  • @abelinhazoomzoom
    @abelinhazoomzoom 5 років тому

    Thank you so much for the tips and information on Palm sugar, it will be easier to buy next time buying it at my local Asian grocery store.

  • @stevemcnair-wilson6106
    @stevemcnair-wilson6106 4 роки тому +1

    Excellent, everything I needed to know....thanks

  • @francesrevo3692
    @francesrevo3692 Рік тому +1

    Great video. Very informative.😊

  • @linhflores1655
    @linhflores1655 5 років тому +1

    Love your videos! I started using palm sugar in my other recipes awhile back and think it really adds more depth in the flavor of the dish. Thanks for the background info on palm sugar. I like to know about the ingredients Im using.

  • @mariaferrer3679
    @mariaferrer3679 4 роки тому

    Another great video! Thanks Pai 😊 it was certainly an eye opener 👍🏻

  • @janlamberth8910
    @janlamberth8910 5 років тому

    Brilliant bit of filming, so much info, thank you

  • @adepja
    @adepja 4 роки тому +1

    I have palm sugar that looks like the second one but has really strong flavor that kinda reminds me of caramel. It isn't crumbly though it's really solid and takes a lot of pressure with a sharp knife to cut or break it so I have no idea how pure it is but it tastes amazing in coffee so I'll keep using it.

  • @ThydaCookingTV
    @ThydaCookingTV 5 років тому +2

    Similar to Thailand 🇹🇭 Cambodia 🇰🇭 has more than 20 millions of palm trees and we the farmers make sugar by hands.

  • @lynnc9531
    @lynnc9531 2 роки тому +1

    very informative video, thank you!

  • @FOODANDTRAVELDESTINATIONS
    @FOODANDTRAVELDESTINATIONS 5 років тому +1

    We use palm sugar to make many popular Vietnamese desserts.

  • @Johnnyboycurtis
    @Johnnyboycurtis 5 років тому +18

    I never knew I wanted to know so much about palm sugar lmao

  • @siewleegoh6722
    @siewleegoh6722 3 роки тому +1

    Pai thank you for the information

  • @YouTube-Troll
    @YouTube-Troll 3 роки тому +2

    Hi, I love your videos and I love Thai food! I have a palm suga here but it turned rock hard, now I can’t get it out of the plastic container. Do you have this problem too? I’m thinking to steam it so the suga will melt but the container is plastic not sure if it’s a good thing to steam plastic. Will appreciate it, if you can share with me your thoughts. Thank you!

  • @omgwth9796
    @omgwth9796 5 років тому +4

    It's true they put white granulated sugar in to make the puck of palm sugar harder or firmer.
    The high quality puck of palm sugar contain about 20% white granulated sugar.

  • @mirkomueller3412
    @mirkomueller3412 5 років тому

    Just discovered your channel. Learned a lot. Subscribed immediately. Great Job !!!!!!

  • @herbw3841
    @herbw3841 4 роки тому

    I would like to suggest that you should point this out:
    if the growers harvest the nectar from the coconut palms then the plant would not be able to bear coconut fruits. Thus the growers have to decide whether coconuts or palm sugar. That same nectar fermented makes an alcoholic drink which is called toddy here (some place elsewhere called it arak).
    BTW I usually but palm sugar (gula melaka/gula tuak) from a road side shop (about 4 km from where I stay, by bike) as I know it is genuine. I can smell the aroma when I remove the bin cover of the metal container and pick them. Most often they are cylinderical in shape as traditionally the hot syrup are poured into bamboo container tubes (2 to 4 inches) and then left to solidify as they cooled.
    👍👍👍

  • @wanderrick1007
    @wanderrick1007 5 років тому

    The video glitched when Pailin tastes the 'pure' palm sugar.What a magic.

    • @ThydaCookingTV
      @ThydaCookingTV 5 років тому

      Wan Derrick You mention Pailin province of Cambodia 🇰🇭? It has border with Thailand 🇹🇭 to

  • @AbsTheUploader
    @AbsTheUploader 3 роки тому +1

    You gave an example of the Maesri Palm Sugar - I am looking for a soft 100% pure palm sugar, I liked the look of your pastey one in the video but would you say the Maesri Palm sugar is the closest and most pure I can get in a tub? It seems that is the only one I can find online that fits the bill.

  • @kavitasoni2158
    @kavitasoni2158 5 років тому +5

    Tank you for this information 🙏💞💞

  • @alanchow9061
    @alanchow9061 5 років тому

    Thank you Pai u did answered all the question I want to know about palm sugar n what sort of substitution... waiting for yr next recipe here. Thanks..

  • @AheadofThymeRecipes
    @AheadofThymeRecipes 5 років тому

    Always a pleasure watching your video, Pailin. So informative. I'm going to get some and eat like candy.

  • @1990christmas
    @1990christmas 3 роки тому +1

    Wish I watched this before I threw out my pods or palm sugar. This was very helpful

  • @fynejules
    @fynejules 5 років тому +6

    That was very informative and helpful!
    Could do a 101 on palm oil? When to use? Why does it have such a bad reputation?

    • @ericpmoss
      @ericpmoss 5 років тому +2

      Palm kernel oil is a great oil to use -- it's now the go-to oil in smooth peanut butters. The reputation is due to the deforestation in Indonesia that is pushing orangutans to extinction. The forests are all being flattened to raise oil palms.

    • @donbushek
      @donbushek 4 роки тому

      eric moss True, but not just in Indonesia. Palm oil has become a cash crop in much of the deforested Amazon basin as well. Please don’t support the palm oil industry. And check ingredient lists. It shows up in places you wouldn’t expect.

  • @kryptonitekittee7665
    @kryptonitekittee7665 3 роки тому

    When I don't know which brand of the same food product to buy, that's how I choose too: the most expensive one. Hey, it has worked out well so far! 😁

  • @cosmosman7156
    @cosmosman7156 Рік тому

    Great video with a lot of informations👍Didn't know that the process of making coconut sugar is similar to the maple syrup we have here in Canada! Am always looking for the best type of sugar away from the white refined one;although I should say that the palm sugar that comes in a block is not the most practical product to use on everyday basis(I prefer grounded or liquid type of sugar or sweetner) it remains better than the white refined one

  • @cucursayur1653
    @cucursayur1653 5 років тому

    In Sarawak we have our own palm sugar called Gula Apong. Darker color = purest form. They taste slightly different from coconut sugar.

  • @it-ke9od
    @it-ke9od 5 років тому +8

    omg I never knew that my palm sugar is mixed with regular sugar

  • @nvj7959
    @nvj7959 4 роки тому +2

    Thanks for this video!!!

  • @jonblack2281
    @jonblack2281 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you!

  • @deeferan7467
    @deeferan7467 5 років тому +4

    Gula Jawa more in dark brown and the taste more smoky, consistency not so hard. you have to try that Pai.

    • @rafa6222
      @rafa6222 3 роки тому

      In this case, is coconut sugar powder a good substitute for gula jawa? I heard from Pai that the coconut sugar powder version has a toasty, smoky flavour.

    • @wahyuferiyansyah7290
      @wahyuferiyansyah7290 3 роки тому +2

      @@rafa6222 Gula jawa (Indonesian coconut sugar) and gula aren (Indonesian palm sugar) also gula semut (Indonesian powdered palm/coconut sugar)
      The taste of that slightly different, the gula jawa has a deep molasses flavor and gula aren has more complexity, the gula semut has smoky toasty flavor without strong molasses
      My favorite is gula aren because the flavor and aroma so good, even i usually eat it right away with a glass of bitter cofee

  • @DailyLifeandNature
    @DailyLifeandNature 5 років тому

    Nice food , good video, thanks for sharing .

  • @ardemisaguirre8088
    @ardemisaguirre8088 5 років тому

    Wi never tried palm sugar before, it ver interesting to know about 👍👍💐

  • @danielwerger5641
    @danielwerger5641 5 років тому +1

    Thank you Pailin….! I get pretty good Palm sugar from 88 market or T&T, which I believe is the middle one... Cheers.

  • @danieljk115
    @danieljk115 Рік тому

    uncle roger brought me here. ^^
    I didn't know what palm sugar was. so I used white sugar only. but I think I'm gonna buy some palm sugar. It looks so delicious. 😋

  • @So360artist
    @So360artist 4 роки тому +2

    Great video! Thank you for all of the information! Can I substitute palm sugar for white sugar 1:1 equally?

  • @brandon3872
    @brandon3872 5 років тому

    I like to use honey as a substitute for palm sugar. Great video as always.

  • @kitesailor
    @kitesailor 10 місяців тому

    Sawasdee. We are back in the Chumphon district ofThailand for the next 5 months, yeah! I recently purchased some palm sugar at my morning market and did the taste test to see if it was grainy. It was nice and soft and smooth, with a melt in your mouth texture.
    My question is: is refined cane sugar added to palm sugar in Thailand?

    • @PailinsKitchen
      @PailinsKitchen  10 місяців тому

      Hi Adam here! If that information isn't in the written post, you'll to have to ask her that one directly as she doesn't see the comments on here once the post is more than a week old (as per her note above). You can check out options to get hold of her here hot-thai-kitchen.com/contact . Cheers!

  • @kitesailor
    @kitesailor Рік тому

    I was wondering if the palm sugar in Thailand has cane sugar added too? Do I need to be careful about the palm sugar I buy when in Thailand? I have been living half of the year for the last 17 years, but did not know about cane sugar in the palm sugar. Thank you for bringing it to everyone's attention!

  • @aprilbennett4161
    @aprilbennett4161 5 років тому +1

    The only type I've seen so far is the powdery kind. I love the flavor, though I want to get my hands on the more traditional type. Also, I've used really dark brown sugar in kecap manis substitute recipes. The molasses flavor is intense when tasted straight (particularly since I use blackstrap), but then it sort of "magically" mellows out and sweetens when put on anything.

  • @bluecruiser3790
    @bluecruiser3790 5 років тому

    Great video Pailin

  • @karenbenavente1124
    @karenbenavente1124 5 років тому

    Awesome tips 😊 thank you so much ❤️

  • @cafe80sarigachu
    @cafe80sarigachu 2 роки тому +1

    I came here to know the difference between palm sugar and coconut sugar…and what is the best palm sugar brand in Thai.
    PS: Thank You Pailin for Telling the pure and the fake one.

  • @dddrrr352
    @dddrrr352 3 роки тому +1

    I’m not sure if you tried to keep palm sugar from drying out by storing it with a slice of bread. My brown sugar becomes an impossible hard chunk and after a few days in a zip lock with a piece of bread it’s soft and restored to its original texture. Try it. Let us know. I just bought some today for the first time to make som tum

  • @annhutcheson5770
    @annhutcheson5770 5 років тому +1

    In the questions for Pai video, if there is another, please consider: An absolute hands down favorite dish. As in, last meal favorite. Is it a Thai dish, or something else?

  • @scp-ky1nw
    @scp-ky1nw 3 місяці тому

    I would like to mention that glucose prevents sugar from crystallizing, so the second sample does not necessarily have less sugar.

  • @WNKS70
    @WNKS70 Рік тому +1

    Palm sugar isn’t really easy to make it hardened, that’s why in north of bali where I came from, real palm sugar usually more liquid, when they sold in snapped usually they are mix with sugar because help molding the syrup. In my experience, keeping the palm sugar in the refrigerator help defined percentage of how many granulated sugar has been added. Granulated sugar tend to crystallized and stay at the center of the shaped palm sugar. The whiter they are inside the chance of quantity granulated sugar can be quite visible … this is not proven by any research yet but just based on my experience

  • @User-vz4xm
    @User-vz4xm 4 роки тому

    Thanks for the useful info!

  • @umammy3520
    @umammy3520 5 років тому

    Thank you very much for information, I didn't know that.

  • @mikaolsen7368
    @mikaolsen7368 4 роки тому +1

    11:34 It made a heart! :)

  • @leester9487
    @leester9487 5 років тому +6

    This is great. I know this is blasphemous but I use coconut sugar in curries because I like the toasted flavor.

    • @Jodabomb24
      @Jodabomb24 5 років тому +6

      If it adds something you like to the dish, then nobody can stop you from making food that tastes good to you.

    • @emalinel
      @emalinel 5 років тому +1

      Hey you do you, I like that flavor too except int desserts :)

    • @PailinsKitchen
      @PailinsKitchen  5 років тому +1

      You are the chef, you do whatever you want ;)

  • @ЛогтяДегтя
    @ЛогтяДегтя 3 роки тому +1

    Hello. This topic is very important for me and I wanna ask you to tell me the prices of all the palm sugar you showed in the video. I wanna compare my local prices… And how much is the best real true palm sugar in Thailand ?

  • @FknNefFy
    @FknNefFy Рік тому +1

    I would think light brown sugar and honey would be a good combination if you didn’t have palm sugar… I don’t know though thank you for making this video and explaining all of this to me❤

  • @romload
    @romload 5 років тому +1

    ขอบคุณครับ น้ำตาล น้ำอ้อยก็หวานอีกแบบครับ ร่วมภูมิใจที่อธิบายให้ผู้ติดตามได้เข้าใจ...ที่ไปที่มา สารให้รสหวานที่ผลิตในไทย และกรรมวิธีต่างๆ