I still enjoy my ham & cheese sandwiches, beef stew, roasts, pastas and the like, but more often than not now I find myself wanting some good Thai food regardless that the frig may be full of supplies from Foodland, Macro, Villa etc.
Many mornings I a crave a good kowpad, either moo gaup or shrimp, with an egg on top, fried easy.

Unfortunately the problem I have now that older is that many dishes are not good without the chili, either dry or wet. It beats my guts to pieces for hours, but I have to add it or the dish simply isn't good. Unfortunately there will come a time (for all of us) where chili is simply off the menu I guess.

Anyway, as all of this has evolved over the years I was thinking why is it happening? Was I subconsciously hoping to turn into a Thai? Was the climate such that the sweet/sour/tart/spicy mixes gave me a high and a feeling of blissful satisfaction? (maybe there's some weed in the recipes?

Or was it simply my body telling me this stuff is healthy for the most part?
For decades the Thai male life expectancy was about 68, and the leading cause of death was heart and high BP. It's now cancer, and the life expectancy may have gone up a year or two but not sure.
Was it the sodium/salt that was causing this? You know fish sauce. Nothing but crushed anchovies, water and salt...high salt. But...how can you have a good kaopad without nahm blah pic on it? The same plagues the Japanese with all of their salty sauces. They have the healthiest diet in the world, except for the sodium.
So am I Thai? No, and never will be. I can do a steady Thai diet but once a week I need a western fix. Thais don't need that unless they went to university in the west.

I'm convinced a Thai diet is healthier, and no intention of taking out the evil sodium or chili....at least not for now. It's probably an offset of healthy vs questionable but if weight decreases or at least stays constant, and I feel good, I'm going to stick with it. Pete
