Archive for the ‘Cilantro’ Category
* Som Tum – Green Papaya Salad
Posted on April 24th, 2010 by Linda. Filed under Appetizer, Cilantro, Cuisine, Peanuts, Salads, Thai.
I haven’t spent as much time eating/standing/awake in Bangkok as I would like to — during my many trips there when I worked in corporate in Asia, I was either stuck in a conference room, or if there were any free hours, getting heavenly massages at the many wonderful spas there! My company put us up at the Westin Banyan Tree which has an amazing spa and a wonderful buffet dinner spread (yeah, buffets are pretty popular higher end dining in Asia) and I loved walking into the buffet lounge lobby smelling the lemongrass incense and hearing the soft pounding sound of Som Tum being prepared. The green papaya station is always my first stop at the buffet. Ah, Sawadee!
Chef’s tip: Green papayas are essentially unriped papayas. You can get them at Asian food stores. They often times wrap it in newspaper to prevent it from ripening. Other finer points: “Som Tum Thai” has peanuts and dried shrimp mixed in, “Som Tum Bu” has small pickled crabs pounded in, or “Som Tum Lao Sai Pla Ra” has fermented mud fish mixed in it.
Dressing
4 Tablespoons fish sauce
4 Tablespoons palm sugar/ brown sugar
4 Tablespoons fresh lime juice
1 Tablespoon tamarind concentrate
Salad
1 green papaya, peeled – yields 4 cups shredded
2 roma tomatoes – yields 1 cup of sliced roma tomatoes or 1 cup cherry tomatoes
1 handful Chinese string/long beans (or baby haricot vert) – yields 1 cup
4 cloves garlic, peeled
2-4 small Thai red chilies, deseeded, finely sliced – number depending on heat level
2 Tablespoons dried shrimp – presoaked in water
1 shallot, peeled, sliced
½ cup peanuts, roasted
1 cup cilantro leaves
To prepare the dressing
1. Mix together dressing ingredients. Taste. Adjust if needed. Set aside.
To prepare the vegetables:
2. Using a food processor (medium grate) or grater, shred the green papaya flesh
3. Deseed the tomato and cut into long slivers (or if using cherry tomatoes, half them)
4. Cut the beans into 1 ½ inch lengths. Blanch in hot water for 3 minutes or until bright green and quickly plunge into cold water. Drain.
Assembling – make per serving. Divide ingredients into 6 parts.
5. In a mortar and pestle, pound the garlic, chili and dried shrimp into a paste
6. Add the sliced shallots and pound slightly to bruise the shallots
7. Add the long beans and pound to bruise the beans.
8. Add the peanuts and lightly pound again to crush the nuts
9. Add the shredded papayas and lightly pound until it is limp and soft
10. Add sliced tomatoes and press gently to blend
11. Add dressing and toss to combine. Garnish with cilantro.
12. Serve immediately. Repeat per serving.
Serves: 8
* Law Bak Goh – Radish Cake
Posted on February 15th, 2010 by Linda. Filed under Appetizer, Breakfast, Cantonese, Chinese, Chinese sausages, Cilantro, Cuisine, Dim Sum, Dried Shrimp, Entree, Green onions, Rice.
Radish cake is eaten during Chinese New Year as a symbol for togetherness. My friend, Ophelia, made the dish this year again….I wish she lived closer coz I would love to get together and have a slice delicious law bak goh! She shares the secret from her mom — the oil keeps the batter together. In addition, she recipe-tested my recipe and this is what she says: “I added one cup less water than your [original] recipe – I judged it by the consistency … when it looked too watery, I added a little more rice flour. It was 11pm by the time I was done steaming. I decided to put the whole pan outside the door, and by the Monday it was nice and firm, ready to be fried for New Year breakfast! “ Looks like the 2010 Washington DC snowmageddon did come in useful afterall!
Anyways, I promised her if she shared the picture, the recipe will be on the blog forever so she needn’t search high and low for her copy each new year! Here we go! Do note to add more water/ rice flour as needed.
2 lbs Chinese white radish, grated
1 cup water + about 1 1/2 cups water
4 Chinese sausages, finely diced
1/4 cup dried shrimps*, soaked in warm water with 1 tablespoon sherry, drain and chopped roughly
2 + 2 tablespoons oil
4 dried shiitake mushrooms, soaked, or use fresh, finely diced
2 cups rice flour
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon white pepper
1/4 teaspoon five spice powder
1 tablespoon cilantro, finely chopped
1 tablespoon scallion, finely chopped
- Peel and grate radish. Place shredded radish in a small pot or saucepan with 1 cup of water. Bring mixture to a boil, than reduce the heat to a low and simmer for 15 minutes or until tender, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat. Transfer to a large bowl. Let cool. Drain radish. Save cooking liquid.
- Pour cooking liquid into a measuring cup. Add remaining water to make 2 1/2 cups of liquid.
- Start a steamer over a wok of boiling water.
- Heat 2 tablespoons oil in wok. Stir-fry sausage, 1 minute. Add the shrimp; fry 30 seconds and mushrooms, 1 minute. Remove from heat. Set aside.
- To the cooking liquid mixture, whisk in rice flour, sugar, salt, pepper, 5 spice powder and reserved radish and mix until consistency of thick oatmeal. You may need to add more water or rice flour. Add remaining 2 tablespoons of oil.
- Add in sausage & mushroom mixture, scallion and cilantro. Mix well.
- Line a 6 inch by 9 inch (or a 9 inch diameter) cake pan with parchment paper and grease with oil liberally. Pour mixture into it. Place on rack in steamer. Steam over briskly boiling water 1 hour. The cake is somewhat gooey at this stage.
- When cold, refrigerate overnight to firm up the cake.
- To serve, slice 1/4 inch thick, 2 inches wide, and 3 inches long. Fry slices in 1 tablespoon canola oil until golden brown. Serve hot.
Serves: 6-8
* Kuku Persian Omelette
Posted on April 4th, 2009 by Linda. Filed under Appetizer, Black Pepper, Breakfast, Cardamom, Cilantro, Cinnamon, Cloves, Cuisine, Cumin, Dill, Eggs, Entree, Green onions, Mint, Parsley, Persian.
I first tasted kuku at my friend’s Tammy’s dinner party. Not knowing what it was called or its origin, I remembered it was absolutely tasty and exploding with herbal freshness. Tammy is my citizen du monde friend — from the Bay Area to Chicago, New York, London and now Paris….like those ad taglines for high end perfume. But it was really from her Persian background, as I found out years later….although I still didn’t know what it was called. In a casual conversion with my Persian neighbor in the laundry room, I learned it was called kuku and eaten during the Persian new year. That’s when the kuku exploration began.
Kuku is essentially a Persian fritata. Many Middle Eastern stores sell a kuku mix, and the advieh mix. But you can make your own from scratch. Just make sure you use all fresh herbs….the dried ones are just not the same.
Chef Tips: Make your own Advieh with this recipe: In a coffee /spice grinder, add 1 X cardamom, cumin, ginger and dried rose petals, 2X cinnamon and 0.5X cloves and grind into a fine powder.
6 eggs
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 tablespoons Persian Advieh
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
1 cup garlic greens, chopped
1 cup parsley, chopped
1 cup cilantro, chopped
1 cup fresh dill, chopped
1/2 cup mint, chopped
2 tablespoons dried barberries, reconstituted
2 Tablespoons clarified butter or olive oil
1 Tablespoon dried fenugreek
1. Preheat oven to 375°F.
2. Break the eggs into a large bowl. Add the baking powder, flour, advieh, salt, and pepper. Lightly beat in the chopped garlic, herbs and barberries.
3. Using a 10-inch oven-proof skillet, melt butter. Add fenugreek until the fenugreek pops. Turn down the heat a bit. Add the eggs and herbs mixture and cook over medium-low heat — gently stir in the beginning then run a spatula underneath the sides of the omelet and tilt the pan so the uncooked eggs slide to the underside. Cook until the eggs are just set.
4. Place the skillet in the oven and bake for about 5 minutes, or until well set and puffy. Remove from oven, slide kuku onto a large plate, cut into wedges and serve.
Serves: 4
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