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#2056 |
Surfin the alpha waves ~~
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Location: New Jersey
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Pizza, with my last mug of tea for the day.
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#2057 |
Opsimath
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Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
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Without a doubt, the very best Thai Fried Rice with Chicken we've ever eaten!
Stitchawl |
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#2058 |
Opsimath
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Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
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Tamarind Chicken topped with fried shallots, over Jasmin rice.
I am absolutely gob-smacked over how incredibly delicious this dish turned out to be! Perhaps the very best meal I have EVER eaten! Remarkably quick and easy to make, just a few inexpensive ingredients, this will become a regular in this house! Stitchawl |
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#2059 |
Professional Adventuress
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: The Olympic Peninsula on the OTHER Washington! (the big green clean one on the west coast!)
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Recipe?
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#2060 | |
Opsimath
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
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Quote:
Tamerind Shrimp (Goong Pad Makam) 500gm Shrimp (I used three boneless chicken breasts, sliced into 1/2" x 2" pieces.) Fried Shallots for topping: Thinly slice shallots until you have about a cup full, deep fry very slowly. There is a segment of this video on frying chicken for making fried shallots. Make paste (mortar and pestle or food processor) with: Garlic - 4 cloves Prik (Thai Bird's eye chilies) - 2 Cilantro roots - 2 (or stems if you can't get roots) Shallots - 1/2 cup Chicken Broth - 1 cup Tamarind Paste - 3 or 4 spoonfuls (Asian markets will have this) Nam Pla - 1.5 TBSP Palm sugar - 3 TBSP (Very important! Do NOT use white sugar. If you can't get palm sugar, use dark brown sugar. It's not the same, but it's close enough.) Peel and devein shrimp Mash together paste ingredients Fry shrimp lightly in oil. Remove shrimp. Add paste to cooled oil and fry until fragrant. Add chicken broth, Tamarind paste, nam pla, and sugar. Boil to reduce until thick. Add shrimp back in and cook two minutes. Serve over rice with fried shallots as topping. To switch this to chicken, lightly fry the chicken, then after you remove, and add the soup stock, tamarind paste and nampla, and dissolve the sugar, then add the chicken back in to finish cooking as the stock reduces,. Here is another video of the chef making this with shrimp. Good... but the chicken is actually better! Stitchawl |
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#2061 |
Professional Adventuress
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What's the nam pla?
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#2062 |
Opsimath
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Sorry... 'Nam Pla' is the Thai word for 'Fish Sauce.' It's a bottled seasoning that is used in almost every Thai dish. Thai's rarely use salt in their cooking. Instead, they use fish sauce to satisfy that requirement. The stuff stinks REALLY bad when smelled on its own, but in not noticed when added to foods. You can find it in the Asian section of almost any large supermarket in the US. "Tiparos" brand is probably the most popular in Thailand, followed by "Squid" brand, and I've seen both in US supermarkets. There is NO suitable substitute for Nam Pla in Thai dishes, and it's a major flavor component to almost all of them.
Nam Pla doesn't 'age' well. It starts out as a clear, some what dark amber colored, strong smelling liquid, and gets darker and fishier-smelling as it gets older, looking more like dark soy sauce. This can happen in just several weeks. Old Nam Pla really stinks! Buy the smallest bottle you can find. Even fresh and new, Nam Pla does NOT smell good. But... and you'll have to trust me on this one... it works in the dishes. Without it, Thai dishes fall flat. It is THAT important! Vietnamese cooking uses the same stuff, but calls it 'Nuoc Mam.' ![]() Stitchawl Last edited by Stitchawl; 03-13-2015 at 08:59 PM. |
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#2063 |
Professional Adventuress
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Oh, I've used fish sauce actually quite a few times. The brand I'm familiar with is the second from the left end. I hadn't been aware of the age issue. Partially I'm thinking because it lives in a very dark cool cupboard. The other thing may be that I anticipate the searing of the nose hairs and I didn't realize it was turning.
Well I haven't killed anyone with it yet! |
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#2064 | |
Opsimath
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Quote:
Stitchawl |
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#2065 | |
Slobbering Dog
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Quote:
![]() Smell: awful. Flavor added to dish: godly. |
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#2066 | |
Opsimath
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Quote:
In Thai, it's known as 'Ga-pi' or 'ka-pi.' (The first consonant sound is glottal, almost sub-vocal.) English would just call it smelly shrimp paste. It's an important ingredient in several Thai curry pastes. We can buy it fresh (if you can ever call this stuff 'fresh,') in the Thai markets, or in jars in the supermarket. Powerful stuff... half a teaspoon of it can flavor an entire dish made for four people. Stitchawl Last edited by Stitchawl; 03-14-2015 at 05:50 AM. |
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#2067 |
Professional Adventuress
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I can't remember if it was a documentary that I was watching or what, but I have a distinct memory of a couple of fisherman out on the water for a few days. From their very first catch fish heads were put into a large plastic bucket with a lid that sealed and kept in the sun. This was to be their fish sauce. Or so said the commentator. I'm so glad I'd had it before and knew it wouldn't leave me on the toilet for 3 days. Otherwise I would have never touched it
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#2068 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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The Romans has a fish sauce too - garum.
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#2069 | |
Slobbering Dog
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Quote:
![]() However, we use it in the same manner: to add a salty flavor to the dish. |
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#2070 |
Opsimath
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Pasta, with a Basil Pesto, and garlic bread.
Salt played an important role back in the days of ancient Rome. I wonder if their reason for developing a fish sauce was because the value of 'pure' salt was too high for just daily consumption? Roman soldiers were even paid a 'Salarium,' a measure of salt, rather than cash money, which gave rise to our word 'salary.' Every country in S.E. Asia has its own form of shrimp paste, and can be found in most meals in Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines. Each one smells worse than the other... It's remarkable that something that smells so badly can make a meal taste so good! Stitchawl |
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