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Krabi, krabi-krabi food Frittomisto Villa
THAI
FOOD
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Traditional
Thai cooking methods were stewing and baking, or grilling. Chinese
influences saw the introduction of frying, stir-frying and deep-flying.Culinary
influences from the 17 th century onwards included Portuguese, Dutch,French
and Japanese. Chillies were introduced to Thai cooking during the
late 1600s by Portuguese missionaries who had acuquired a taste for
them while serving in South America. Thais were very adapt at 'Siameseising'
foreign cooking meathods, and substituting ingredients.
r Thai meal should consist of a soup, a curry
dish with condiments, a dip with accompanying fish ans vegetables.
A spiced salad may replace the curry dish. The soup can also be spicy,
but the curry shuld be replaced by a non-spiced item. There must indicidual
dishes and the entire meal.
|
|
|
|
 |
| ABOUT THAI FOOD
|
|
|
Big cuts
of meat were shredded and laced with herbs and spices. Traditional
Thai cooking methods were stewing and baking, or grilling. Chinese
influences saw the introduction of frying, stir-frying and deep-flying.Culinary
influences from the 17 th century onwards included Portuguese, Dutch,French
and Japanese. Chillies were introduced to Thai cooking during the
late 1600s by Portuguese missionaries who had acuquired a taste for
them while serving in South America. Thais were very adapt at 'Siameseising'
foreign cooking meathods, and substituting ingredients.
The ghee
used in Indian cooking was replaced by coconut oil, and coconut milk
substituted for other dairy products. Overporering pure spices were
toned down and enhanced by fresh herbs such as lemon grass and galanga.Eventually,
fewer and less spices were used in Thai curried, while the use of
fresh herbs increased. It is generally acknowledged that Thai curried
burn intensely, but briefly, whereas other curries, with strong spices,
burn for longer periods. Instead of serving all at once, permitting
diners to enjoy complementary combinations of different tastes. A
proper Thai meal should consist of a soup, a curry dish with condiments,
a dip with accompanying fish ans vegetables. A spiced salad may replace
the curry dish. The soup can also be spicy, but the curry shuld be
replaced by a non-spiced item. There must indicidual dishes and the
entire meal.
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|
|
| Chiang Mai |
: |
Food Festival |
| Date |
: |
Dec 16-20 |
| Place |
: |
Tha Pae Gate,
Chiang Mai |
| Description |
: |
An annual festival
of Chiang Mai's delicious cuisine featuring demonstrations
of fruit carving,traditional desserts and charming Lanna cultural
shows.
|
| Chiang Mai |
: |
Winter Fair |
| Date |
: |
Dec 26 - Jan
11 |
| Place |
: |
Chiang Mai
City Hall |
| Description |
: |
An annual festival
featuring a variety of hand-crafted goods.The event is highlighted
by the Miss Chiang Mai Beauty Contest.
|
| Chiang Mai |
: |
Bo Sang Umbrella
Fair |
| Date |
: |
Jan 15-17 |
| Place |
: |
Bo Sang Village,
Chiang Mai |
| Description |
: |
Held on the
main street, this fair celebrates the traditional skill of
umbrella painting, and features an exhibition andvending stalls
of umbrellas and other handicrafts. A highlight will be the
Miss Bo Sang Beauty Contest.
|
| Chiang Mai |
: |
Tawai Village
Wood Carving |
| Date |
: |
Jan 29-Feb
4 |
| Place |
: |
Bo Sang Village,
Chiang Mai |
| Description |
: |
Tawai Village,
Amphoe Hang Dong, Chiang Mai An event featuring demonstrations,
contests and the sale of wood carvings and local handicrafts,
as well as folk performances and a procession highlighting
an entire range of northern woodcrafts.
|
| Lumpang |
: |
Winter Fair |
| Date |
: |
Dec 28 - Jan
3 |
| Place |
: |
Amphoe Muang,Lampang |
| Description |
: |
An annual event
presenting an array of Thai-made products and food, with special
music and cultural performances.
|
| Ayutthaya |
: |
Ayutthaya World
Heritage Site Celebrations |
| Date |
: |
Dec 30-Jan
3 |
| Place |
: |
Ayutthaya Historical
Park |
| Description |
: |
Ayutthaya,
an ancient Siamese capital, was designated a World Heritage
Site by UNESCO in 1991. This event features historical exhibitions,
traditional cultural processl . ons and performances, along
with light and sound presentations centred in the city's ancient
ruins.
|
| Ayutthaya |
: |
Bang Sai Arts
& Crafts Fair |
| Date |
: |
Jan 12-Feb
21 |
| Place |
: |
Bang Sai Royal
Folk Arts & Crafts Centre |
| Description |
: |
This fair showcases
products of H.M. the Queen's SUPPORT FOUNDATION, along with
exhibitions, demonstrations of local goods, and folk entertainment
performances.
|
| Nakhon Pathom |
: |
Nakhon Pathom
Food and Fruit Fair |
| Date |
: |
Jan 14-20 |
| Place |
: |
Phra Pathom
Chedi, Amphoe Muang |
| Description |
: |
Thailand's
largest Buddhist monument, Phra Pathom Chedi is the centre
of this annual event featuring a wide range of fruit and food
products, handicrafts and cultural performances
|
| Suphan Buri |
: |
Don Chedi Memorial
Fair |
| Date |
: |
Jan 23-Feb
1 |
| Place |
: |
Don Chedi Memorial |
| Description |
: |
In 1592 at
Don Chedi, King Naresuan the Great won a famous elephant-back
duel against the leader of an enemy force, an historic event
that led to-the liberation of the Kingdom from foreign occupation.
This fair commemorates this momentous event with an historical
exhibition and outdoor entertainment.
|
| Buri Ram |
: |
I-San Kite
Festival |
| Date |
: |
Jan16-17 |
| Place |
: |
Huai Rat Stadium |
| Description |
: |
This annual
event showcases various forms of traditional Thai kites and
competition.
|
| Nakhon Phanom |
: |
Phra That Phanom
Homage-Paying Fair |
| Date |
: |
Jan 26-Feb
1 |
| Place |
: |
Phra That Phanom
Temple |
| Description |
: |
Located on
the banks of the Mekong River, Nakhon Phanom is the site of
the famous Phra That Phanom, which enshrines Lord Buddha's
relics, and is regarded as the symbol of northeastern Thailand.
This seven-day fair attracts a large number of devotees paying
homage at the shrine, while enjoying numerous forms of entertainment.
|
| Ubon Ratchathani |
: |
Kachad (Red
Cross) and New Year Fair |
| Date |
: |
Dec 27-Jan
4 |
| Place |
: |
City Hall |
| Description |
: |
This annual
event features handicrafts, local products, and cultural performances.
|
| ABOUT THAI FOOD
|
 |
| |
|
|
|
Thai food is internationally famous. Whether chilli-hot or
comparatively bland, harmony is the guiding principle behind each
dish. Thai influences harmoniously combined into something uniquely
Thai. Characteristics of Thai food depend on who cooks it, for whom
it is cooked, for what occasion,and where it is cooked. Dishes can
be refined and adjusted to suit all palates.
Originally, Thai cooking reflected the characteristics of a waterborn
lifestyle. Aquatic animals, plants and herbs were major ingredients.
Large chunks of meat were eschewed. Subsequent influences introduced
the use of sizeable chunks to Thai cooking. With their Buddhist background,
Thais shunned the use of large animals in big chunks.
Big cuts of meat were shredded and laced with herbs and spices. Traditional
Thai cooking methods were stewing and baking, or grilling. Chinese
influences saw the introduction of frying, stir-frying and deep-flying.Culinary
influences from the 17 th century onwards included Portuguese, Dutch,French
and Japanese. Chillies were introduced to Thai cooking during the
late 1600s by Portuguese missionaries who had acuquired a taste for
them while serving in South America. Thais were very adapt at 'Siameseising'
foreign cooking meathods, and substituting ingredients.
The ghee used in Indian cooking was replaced by coconut oil, and coconut
milk substituted for other dairy products. Overporering pure spices
were toned down and enhanced by fresh herbs such as lemon grass and
galanga.Eventually, fewer and less spices were used in Thai curried,
while the use of fresh herbs increased. It is generally acknowledged
that Thai curried burn intensely, but briefly, whereas other curries,
with strong spices, burn for longer periods. Instead of serving all
at once, permitting diners to enjoy complementary combinations of
different tastes. A proper Thai meal should consist of a soup, a curry
dish with condiments, a dip with accompanying fish ans vegetables.
A spiced salad may replace the curry dish. The soup can also be spicy,
but the curry shuld be replaced by a non-spiced item. There must indicidual
dishes and the entire meal.
|
|
|
|
Introduction
::Eating
& Ordering Thai Food
::What
Comprises a Thai Meal ::Regional Thai Cuisine
::Thai Recipes
::Thai Desserts
::Fruits
::Herbs |
Introduction
Thai food is internationally famous. Whether chilli-hot or comparatively
blands, harmony is the guiding principle behind each dish.
Thai cuisine is essentially a marriage of centuries-old Eastern
and Western influences harmoniously combined into something uniquely
Thai. The characteristics of Thai food depend on who cooks
it, for whom it is cooked, for what occasion, and where it is
cooked to suit all palates. Originally, Thai cooking reflected
the characteristics of a waterborne lifestyle. Aquatic animals,
plants and herbs were major ingredients. Large chunks of meat
were eschewed. Subsequent influences introduced the use
of sizeable chunks to Thai cooking.
With their Buddhist background, Thais shunned the use of large
animals in big chunks. Big cuts of meat were shredded and
laced with herbs and spices. Traditional Thai cooking methods
were stewing and baking, or grilling. Chinese influences saw the
introduction of frying, stir frying and deep-frying. Culinary
influences from the 17th century onwards included Portuguese,
Dutch, French and Japanese. Chillies were introduced to Thai cooking
during the late 1600s by Portuguese missionaries who had acquired
a taste for them while serving in South America.
Thais were very adapt at 'Siamese-ising' foreign cooking methods,
and substituting ingredients. The ghee used in Indian cooking
was replaced by coconut oil, and coconut milk substituted for
other daily products. Overpowering pure spices were toned down
and enhanced by fresh herbs such as lemon grass and galanga. Eventually,
fewer and less spices were used in Thai curries, while the use
of fresh herbs increased. It is generally acknowledged
that Thai curries burn intensely, but briefly, whereas other curries,
with strong spices, burn for longer periods. Instead of serving
dishes in courses, a Thai meal is served all at once, permitting
dinners to enjoy complementary combinations of different tastes.
A proper Thai meal should consist of a soup, a curry dish with
condiments, a dip with accompanying fish and vegetables. A spiced
salad may replace the curry dish. The soup can also be spicy,
but the curry should be replaced by non spiced items. There must
be a harmony of tastes and textures within individual dishes and
the entire meal.
Eating
& Ordering Thai Food
Thai food is eaten with a fork and spoon. Even single dish
meals such as fried rice with pork, or steamed rice topped
with roasted duck, are served in bite-sized slices or chunks obviating
the need for a knife. The spoon is used to convey food to
the mouth.
Ideally,
eating Thai food is a communal affair involving two or more
people, principally because the greater the number of diners the
greater the number of dishes ordered. Generally speaking, two
diners order three dishes in addition to their own individual
plates of steamed rice, three diners four dishes, and so on. Diners
choose whatever they require from shared dishes and generally
add it to their own rice. Soups are enjoyed concurrently with
rice. Soups are enjoyed concurrently with other dishes,
not independently. Spicy dishes, not independently. Spicy dishes
are "balanced" by bland dishes to avoid discomfort.
The ideal Thai meal is a harmonious blend of the spicy, the
subtle, the sweet and sour, and is meant to be equally satisfying
to eye, nose and palate. A typical meal might include a clear
soup (perhaps bitter melons stuffed with minced pork), a steamed
dish (mussels in curry sauce), a fried dish (fish with ginger),
a hot salad (beef slices on a bed of lettuce, onions, chillies,
mint and lemon juice) and a variety of sauces into which food
is dipped. This would be followed by sweet desserts and/or
fresh fruits such as mangoes, durian, jackfruit, papaya, grapes
or melon.
What
Comprises a Thai Meal
| |
::
Titbits These can be hors d'oeuvres, accompaniments, side dishes,
and/or snacks. They include spring rolls, satay, puffed rice
cakes with herbed topping. They represent the playful and
creative nature of the Thais |
| |
Salads A harmony of tastes and herbal flavours are essential. Major
tastes are sour, sweet and salty. Spiciness comes in
different degrees according to meat textures and occasions. |
| |
::
General Fare A sweet and sour dish, a fluffy omelette, and a stir-fried
dish help make a meal more complete. |
| |
::
Dips Dips entail some complexity. They can be the major dish
of a meal with accompaniments of vegetables and some meats.
When dips are made thinly, they can be used as salad designs.
A particular and simple dip is made from chillies, garlic,
dried shrimps, lime juice, fish sauce, sugar and shrimp paste. |
| |
::
Soups A good meal for an average person may consist simply of a
soup and rice. Traditional Thai soups are unique because they
embody more flavours and textures than can be found in other
types of food. |
| |
::
Curries Most non-Thai curries consist of powdered or ground dried
spices, whereas the major ingredients of Thai curry
are fresh herbs. A simple Thai curry paste consists of dried
chillies, shallots and shrimp paste. More complex curries
include garlic, galanga, coriander roots, lemon grass,
kaffir lime peel and peppercorns. |
| |
::Single
Dishes Complete meals in themselves , they include rice and noodle
dishes such as Khao Phat and Phat Thai. |
| |
::
Desserts
No good meal is complete without a Thai dessert. Uniformly
sweet, they are particularly welcome after a strongly spiced
and herbed meal. |
Preparing
Thai Food
>>
Titbits A simple kind of titbit is fun to make. You need shallots,
ginger, lemon or lime, lemon grass, roasted peanuts and red phrik
khi nu chillies. Peeled shallots and ginger should be cut into
small fingertip sizes. Diced lime and slices of lemon grass should
be cut to the same size. Roasted peanut should be
left in halves. Chillies should be thinly sliced. Combinations
of such ingredients should be wrapped in fresh lettuce leaves
and laced with a sweet-salty sauce made from fish sauce, sugar,
dried shrimps and lime juice.
>>
Dips Mixing crushed fresh chillies with fish sauce and a dash of lime
juice makes a general accompanying sauce for any Thai dish.
Adding some crushed garlic and a tiny amount of roasted or raw
shrimp paste transforms it into an all-purpose dip (nam phrik).
Some pulverised dried shrimp and julienned egg-plant with sugar
makes this dip more complete. Serve it with steamed rice,
an omelette and some vegetables.
>> Salad
Dressings Salad dressings have similar base ingredients. Add fish sauce,
lime juice and sugar to enhance saltiness, sourness and
sweetness. Crushed chillies, garlic and shallots add spiciness
and herbal fragrance. Lemon grass and galanga can be added
for additional flavour. Employ this mix with any boiled, grilled
or fried meat. Lettuce leaves, sliced cucumber, cut spring onions
and coriander leaves help top off a salad dressing.
>>
Soup
Stocks Soups generally need good stock. Add to boiling water
crushed peppercorns, salt, garlic, shallots, coriander roots,
and the meats or cuts of one's choice. After prolonged boiling
and simmering , you have the basic stock of common Thai soups.
Additional galanga, lemon grass, kaffir lime leaves, crushed fresh
chillies, fish sauce and lime juice create the basic stock for
a Tom Yam.
>>
Curries To make a quick curry, fry curry or chilli paste in heated oil
or thick coconut milk. Stir and fry until the paste is well cooked
and add meats of one's choice. Season with fish sauce or sugar
to taste. Add water or thin coconut milk to make curry go a longer
way. Add sliced eggplant with a garnish of basil and kaffir lime
leaves. Make your own curry paste by blending fresh (preferably
dried) chillies, garlic, shallots, galanga, lemon grass, coriander
roots, ground pepper, kaffir lime peels and shrimp paste.
>>
Single
Dish Meals Heat the cooking oil, fry in a mixture of crushed chillies, minced
garlic, ground pepper and chopped chicken meat. When nearly cooked,
add vegetables such as cut beans or eggplants. Season with fish
sauce and garnish with kefir lime leaves, basil or balsam leaves.
Cooked rice or fresh noodles added to the frying would make
this a substantial meal.
|
|
:
Introduction
:: Eating &
Ordering Thai Food
::What
Comprises a Thai Meal
::Preparing
Thai Food
::Regional
Thai Cuisine ::
::Thai Desserts
::Fruits
::Herbs
|
Introduction
Thai food is internationally famous. Whether chilli-hot or comparatively
blands, harmony is the guiding principle behind each dish. Thai
cuisine is essentially a marriage of centuries-old Eastern and Western
influences harmoniously combined into something uniquely Thai.
The characteristics of Thai food depend on who cooks it, for whom
it is cooked, for what occasion, and where it is cooked to suit all
palates. Originally, Thai cooking reflected the characteristics of
a waterborne lifestyle. Aquatic animals, plants and herbs were major
ingredients. Large chunks of meat were eschewed. Subsequent influences
introduced the use of sizeable chunks to Thai cooking.
With their Buddhist background, Thais shunned the use of large
animals in big chunks. Big cuts of meat were shredded and laced
with herbs and spices. Traditional Thai cooking methods were stewing
and baking, or grilling. Chinese influences saw the introduction of
frying, stir frying and deep-frying. Culinary influences from the
17th century onwards included Portuguese, Dutch, French and Japanese.
Chillies were introduced to Thai cooking during the late 1600s by
Portuguese missionaries who had acquired a taste for them while
serving in South America. Krabi hotel, resort in Aonang
Thais were very adapt at 'Siamese-ising' foreign cooking methods,
and substituting ingredients. The ghee used in Indian cooking was
replaced by coconut oil, and coconut milk substituted for other daily
products. Overpowering pure spices were toned down and enhanced by
fresh herbs such as lemon grass and galanga. Eventually, fewer and
less spices were used in Thai curries, while the use of fresh herbs
increased. It is generally acknowledged that Thai curries burn intensely,
but briefly, whereas other curries, with strong spices, burn for longer
periods. Instead of serving dishes in courses, a Thai meal is served
all at once, permitting dinners to enjoy complementary combinations
of different tastes.
A proper Thai meal should consist of a soup, a curry dish with
condiments, a dip with accompanying fish and vegetables. A spiced
salad may replace the curry dish. The soup can also be spicy, but
the curry should be replaced by non spiced items. There must be a
harmony of tastes and textures within individual dishes and the entire
meal. Krabi hotel, resort in Aonang
Eating
& Ordering Thai Food
Thai food is eaten with a fork and spoon. Even single dish meals
such as fried rice with pork, or steamed rice topped with roasted
duck, are served in bite-sized slices or chunks obviating the need
for a knife. The spoon is used to convey food to the mouth.
Krabi hotel, resort in Aonang
Ideally, eating Thai food is a communal affair involving two or
more people, principally because the greater the number of diners
the greater the number of dishes ordered. Generally speaking, two
diners order three dishes in addition to their own individual
plates of steamed rice, three diners four dishes, and so on. Diners
choose whatever they require from shared dishes and generally add
it to their own rice. Soups are enjoyed concurrently with rice. Soups
are enjoyed concurrently with other dishes, not independently.
Spicy dishes, not independently. Spicy dishes are "balanced" by bland
dishes to avoid discomfort.
The ideal Thai meal is a harmonious blend of the spicy, the subtle,
the sweet and sour, and is meant to be equally satisfying to eye,
nose and palate. A typical meal might include a clear soup (perhaps
bitter melons stuffed with minced pork), a steamed dish (mussels in
curry sauce), a fried dish (fish with ginger), a hot salad (beef slices
on a bed of lettuce, onions, chillies, mint and lemon juice) and a
variety of sauces into which food is dipped. This would be followed
by sweet desserts and/or fresh fruits such as mangoes, durian, jackfruit,
papaya, grapes or melon.
|
What
Comprises a Thai Meal
| |
::
Titbits These can be hors d'oeuvres, accompaniments, side dishes, and/or snacks.
They include spring rolls, satay, puffed rice cakes with herbed topping.
They represent the playful and creative nature of the
Thais |
| |
::
Salads
Krabi hotel, resort in Aonang
A harmony of tastes and herbal flavours are essential. Major tastes
are sour, sweet and salty. Spiciness comes in different degrees
according to meat textures and occasions. |
| |
::
General Fare A sweet and sour dish, a fluffy omelette, and a stir-fried dish help
make a meal more complete. |
| |
::
Dips Dips entail some complexity. They can be the major dish of a
meal with accompaniments of vegetables and some meats. When dips are
made thinly, they can be used as salad designs. A particular and simple
dip is made from chillies, garlic, dried shrimps, lime juice, fish
sauce, sugar and shrimp paste. |
| |
::
Soups A good meal for an average person may consist simply of a soup and
rice. Traditional Thai soups are unique because they embody more flavours
and textures than can be found in other types of food. |
| |
::
Curries Most non-Thai curries consist of powdered or ground dried spices,
whereas the major ingredients of Thai curry are fresh herbs. A simple
Thai curry paste consists of dried chillies, shallots and shrimp paste.
More complex curries include garlic, galanga, coriander roots,
lemon grass, kaffir lime peel and peppercorns. |
| |
::
Single Dishes Complete meals in themselves , they include rice and noodle dishes
such as Khao Phat and Phat Thai. |
| |
::
Desserts
No good meal is complete without a Thai dessert. Uniformly sweet,
they are particularly welcome after a strongly spiced and herbed meal. |
Preparing
Thai Food
>>
Titbits A simple kind of titbit is fun to make. You need shallots,
ginger, lemon or lime, lemon grass, roasted peanuts and red phrik
khi nu chillies. Peeled shallots and ginger should be cut into small
fingertip sizes. Diced lime and slices of lemon grass should be cut
to the same size. Roasted peanut should be left in halves.
Chillies should be thinly sliced. Combinations of such ingredients
should be wrapped in fresh lettuce leaves and laced with a sweet-salty
sauce made from fish sauce, sugar, dried shrimps and lime juice.
>> Dips Mixing crushed fresh chillies with fish sauce and a dash of lime juice
makes a general accompanying sauce for any Thai dish. Adding
some crushed garlic and a tiny amount of roasted or raw shrimp paste
transforms it into an all-purpose dip (nam phrik). Some pulverised
dried shrimp and julienned egg-plant with sugar makes this dip more
complete. Serve it with steamed rice, an omelette and some vegetables.
>> Salad Dressings
Salad dressings have similar base ingredients. Add fish sauce, lime
juice and sugar to enhance saltiness, sourness and sweetness. Crushed
chillies, garlic and shallots add spiciness and herbal fragrance.
Lemon grass and galanga can be added for additional flavour.
Employ this mix with any boiled, grilled or fried meat. Lettuce leaves,
sliced cucumber, cut spring onions and coriander leaves help top off
a salad dressing.
>> Soup Stocks Soups generally need good stock. Add to boiling water
crushed peppercorns, salt, garlic, shallots, coriander roots, and
the meats or cuts of one's choice. After prolonged boiling and
simmering , you have the basic stock of common Thai soups. Additional
galanga, lemon grass, kaffir lime leaves, crushed fresh chillies,
fish sauce and lime juice create the basic stock for a Tom Yam.
>> Curries
To make a quick curry, fry curry or chilli paste in heated oil
or thick coconut milk. Stir and fry until the paste is well cooked
and add meats of one's choice. Season with fish sauce or sugar to
taste. Add water or thin coconut milk to make curry go a longer way.
Add sliced eggplant with a garnish of basil and kaffir lime leaves.
Make your own curry paste by blending fresh (preferably dried) chillies,
garlic, shallots, galanga, lemon grass, coriander roots, ground pepper,
kaffir lime peels and shrimp paste.
>> Single
Dish Meals Heat the cooking oil, fry in a mixture of crushed chillies, minced
garlic, ground pepper and chopped chicken meat. When nearly cooked,
add vegetables such as cut beans or eggplants. Season with fish sauce
and garnish with kefir lime leaves, basil or balsam leaves. Cooked
rice or fresh noodles added to the frying would make this a
substantial meal. |

Resort Hotel in Ao Nang
Krabi offering Family Vacations
Packages .
Ao Nang
Krabi
area,
Land of
ancient Ethnics and
exotic landscapes, are currently the
most
required,
appreciated and
equipped
tourist destination
of
Far
East, able to offer all kinds of
Hotels,
Resorts and vacations.
Our
Hotel Resort offer you
holiday packages able to let you live
magic emotions, they will vitiate you
with the
ancestral culture and with the
kind smile of the
Thai
people.
Frittomisto Villa is a new hotel located in a hilly, panoramic and
quite area, just 600 m. far from the sultry waterfront with noisy Long Tail
Boats and motorbikes, ideal for people looking for a vacation in a
green
relaxing
oasis
without giving up the best comforts, the right place where enjoy an
holiday
with a quality/price relation at the top of the market of
Krabi Ao Nang area.
Family Vacations Packages: We offer and organize many kind of Family Vacations Packages, for all the
wonderful islands and the tropical rain forest.
Enjoy cheap
vacations in
Ao Nang and Krabi,
fragrant tourist centres leaned out on
the
Andaman Sea just 25 Km. far from the
Krabi International Airport, definitely
affirmed as the new
tourist destination of Southern Thailand,
where you can get
cheap holidays by our
Vacation Packages .
The
strategic position of our
Resort in Ao Nang allows to reach very easily sites of strong
tourist interest by our Family
Vacations Packages as :
- * the fabulous 150
islands
raised on the sea, hemmed by
caves and candid beaches, coral reefs and a luxuriant
sea fauna.
The most famous are Railey Beach
(heaven of the Free Climbers), Hong Island ("the island of the rooms" for the
surreal bays) and the cinematographic James Bond Island ("007-The
man of the golden gun"), the sand strip connecting Chicken Island and Tab
Island ("Pirates! ") and the Phi Phi Islands (“The Beach” with Leonardo Di
Caprio). In our garden there are three of the famous and controversial palm
trees, used on the film set in
Ko Phi Phi island .
-
* the
ancient temples and
stately Buddha, between
fizzy falls
and sources,
hidden in an uncontaminated tropical jungle where is still possible to see the
tiger,
free and protected in the
National Parks.
-
* the Royal Palace, sea residence of the Queen of
Thailand, at 3 Km from Ao Nang, leaned out above the sea.
-
* the shopping in the picturesque markets that
offer the most various local handicraft products, and in the many
restaurants and cafe on the beach, first at all our Frittomisto Restaurant, to
taste fabulous cocktails and typical exotic dishes, admiring unforgettable and
purple sunsets
Frittomisto Villa is composed of twenty
Cottages built in an enchanting tropical
garden far just 600 m. from the sea and from Ao Nang centre, attainable during
the day by our free shuttle service. This is
Krabi National park area, so there is no
kind of sun umbrella or deck chairs either on the beach.
Structure: Masonry cottages Hotel inserted in a 14000 sqm palm forest; a total of 66
housing with portico or balcony, all equipped with the best comforts for Family
Vacations: Air conditioned, satellite TV, telephone, safety box, fridge –
minibar and hot water.
Our two
swimming pools Jacuzzi, our Gym corner, our Massage hut, our two bar and our
Frittomisto Restaurant will let you
enjoy in fully
your holiday in
Krabi,
Ao Nang.
Frittomisto Villa is
WWF Member,
Unicef Supporter and
Unesco Friend;
booking holidays or vacations in our
Resort you support directly the activity of these very important Organizations.
For the
lovers of diving, our diving center, organize courses and immersions for every
level, day and night, during your vacations in our Resort directly.
Frittomisto Villa. 3 star holidays
Hotel 20 km from
Krabi
airport; Vacations Resort in
Ao Nang Beach offering
Family Vacations Packages.
Krabi, ao nang Krabi food, FRITTOMISTO Villa
Thai food
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FRITTOMISTO Villa Thai food
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Frittomisto Villa. 90/66 Moo 3 Ao Nang Beach, Krabi, Thailand
Tel. +66.75.637692 - Fax. +66.75.637691
Copyright © 2001 [Frittomisto Villa-A.D.Co.Ltd] All right reserved.
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