ViewsAskew wrote:I wonder if Erik M or anyone would have a greater knowledge of the ingredients used in Thai restaurants that we could have or should avoid. If anyone could help us expand our limited knowledge, I would be extremely grateful. Here's the little we know:
Fish sauce is normally gluten-free, but twice we've run into places that have wheat in theirs. We also avoid soy sauce, check the ingredients in the rice noodles, and know we can't have most rice wrappers. I know that Maggi seasoning has wheat, but I don't know if it's commonly used in Thai food or not. I don't think I've ever asked about it, maybe I should be. We also don't know that status of curries, so never order them. We usually take a small bottle of fish sauce and soy sauce just in case, and have taken rice or tapioca wrappers a few times, too.
Here is what I have to share:
1. The Thai brands of fish sauce which are available for sale in the U.S. most often contain anchovy extract, salt, water, and sugar. The Vietnamese brands, however, most often include hydrolyzed wheat protein in addition to the ingredients listed above.
To be sure, you must ask. At
Sticky Rice, for example, Kritsana cooks all of her Northern Thai specialties with a Vietnamese brand of fish sauce which contains hydrolyzied wheat protein. The greater balance of the cooking, however, is done with Tiparos brand Thai fish sauce which is wheat/gluten-free.
2.
Some soy sauces do indeed appear to be gluten-free, but,
to be sure, you must ask.
3. Maggi brand seasoning sauce is sometimes used in various Thai restaurant kitchens, but more often you will find
Golden Mountain brand seasoning sauce. Like Maggi, Golden Mountain is a soy-based sauce, and one which is not suitable for people on a strict gluten-free diet.
4. Most of the Thai restaurants in town use commercially-prepared curry pastes to fashion their curry dishes, and in the case where these pastes are further enhanced or altered by the restaurants themselves (a common practice), they remain, to the best of my knowledge, gluten-free.
To be sure, you must ask.
5. I am not sure whether you need to concern yourself with frying media, but I will tell you that peanut oils and vegetable (blended) oils are most commonly used in the Thai restaurant kitchen.
5. I am not sure whether you need to concern yourself with the various starch powders/thickeners like cornstarch, rice starch, sweet potato starch, and tapioca starch, but these sorts of things are found in abundance in the Thai resturant kitchen. Many stir-fried noodle dishes, for example, are prepared using a slurry of water and some form of starch. [Wontons, dumplings, etc., are almost always assembled with the aid of the same sort of slurry.]
6. I am not sure whether you need to concern yourself with other soy and bean products besides soy sauce, but soy bean oil and a wide variety of bean products can be found in abundance in the Thai restaurant kitchen. A properly-fashioned
râat nâa ("lard nar"), for example, includes a fair bit of fermented yellow bean sauce. [Commercially available versions of
náam phrík phão, or "roasted chile jam," which is a common element in restaurant versions of various soups, salads, and stir-fries, contains a fair bit of soy bean oil.]
7. Oyster sauce--a very common seasoning sauce in the Thai restaurant kitchen--most often contains wheat flour. Vegetarian oyster sauce, or "mushroom oyster sauce," is likely to be similarly problematic in that regard.
To be sure, you must ask.
8. As for the viablity of rice noodles, rice papers, tapioca skins, etc., for those on a gluten-free diet, I am completely ignorant.
Regards,
E.M.