After leaving the watch store we are wondering around the market looking at the many interesting things being sold when we happen into (as if you can walk through the market without running into one) a fruit stand. Out of the many different fruits displayed in front of me one specific fruit catches my eyes, Rambutan. When talking to my sister about her experience in Thaild she said that both her and her husband, Kyle, liked the fruit that looked like a strawberry covered in spikes; the Rambutan fits the description so I ask the woman, who speaks no English, if I can have “nit noi.” The woman retrieves a bag and begins putting handfuls of Rambutan into the bag. I begin to worry that I accidentally asked for her entire stock and that it will cost me more money than I am willing to pay for the nit noi of fruit I am expecting. As she continues to pile Rambutan into the bag I try to communicate that I don’t want anymore and what she has placed in the bag is plenty, but due to our communication barrier I look like an idiot waving my arms in the air. When she finally finishes, I ask her how much she expects me to pay her for the small feast of fruit she has placed in the bag. “One hundred,” is her reply. After calculating the price in my head I hand her the 100 baht ($3), take my kilo of fruit, and we walk back to our apartment...the fruit is delicious.
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5 comments:
Gnaak. My second favorite fruit. Have you eaten mangos and sticky rice yet. Off the street. Nothing like it. Amazing.
What did it taste like?
uh...delicious. I have had only 2 things i just flat out didn't like (3 if you count the piki nu) one of them was a drink and the other a snack...but i have not tried duri yet, it is a fruit that is suppose to taste like rotten onions to most foreigners, but the Thai people love it...i am planning on trying it before we leave.
don't try durian.....and I told you you would like the gnaak
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