Archive for the ‘Chili Peppers’ Category
* Dungeness Chili Crab
Posted on September 6th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Chili Peppers, Crab, Entree, Malaysian, Seafood, Singaporean.
The Singaporeans claim the Chili Crab as their national dish. As a good Malaysian, this was ^our^ dish! But since my good friend, Karina Lee, gave me the original recipe for the dish, which I have now adapted to the abundance of this side of the Pacific pond, and she lives in Singapore now, I will gladly attribute this dish as Singaporean.
When you fly into Changi, after a grueling 16 hour flight, your food obsessed Singaporean friends (every Singaporean is a foodie) would say “Let’s go for Chili Crabs” and before you can say no as you struggle with your jet-lag stupor, you are already at one of the outdoor, jumbo seafood restaurants on East Coast Road!
Chili Crabs are finger lickin’ good. With the meaty Dungeness crab, you will have a little bit more crab meat to soak up the wonderful sauce and not be tempted to eat your fingers, too. Serve it with a loaf of baguette or horrors! toasted white wonderbread.
Chef’s tip: You will need live crabs for this dish. Some stores like Wholefoods will take orders ahead, otherwise, many Asian fishmongers carry live crabs.
Ingredients
Sauce:
6 tablespoon Asian sweet chili sauce
10 tablespoon ketchup
4 tablespoon vinegar
2 cups of water
2 egg white, beaten with 1 tablespoon water
3 tablespoon cornstarch mixed with 3 tablespoons water
5 tablespoon canola oil
2 Dungeness crabs (2 ½ lbs each)
10 cloves of garlic, coarsely chopped
10 slices of ginger, julienned finely
4 tablespoon sugar (to taste)
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup of cilantro, cut into 2 inches sprigs
1 cup of scallions, sliced into 2 inches strips
Preparing mise-en-place
1. Mix chili sauce, ketchup, vinegar and water together; set aside
2. Beat egg whites with water; set aside.
3. Mix cornstarch with water; set aside.
Preparing the crab
4. Ask your fishmonger to kill and clean the shellfish for you, but you must cook it within 2-3 hours of killing. Remove gills and innards. Clean and pat dry shellfish. Crabs should be cut into 6 pieces each. Keep the crab roe.
5. Heat 4 tablespoon oil in wok. Fry shellfish including crab roe till bright vermillon red and fragrant. Remove crabs from wok. Do not wash the wok!
6. Using same wok, brown garlic, ginger with the rest of the oil till fragrant; about 2 minutes.
7. Add chili-ketchup sauce mixture. Add more sugar and salt to taste.
8. Add egg white, wait half a minute then stir to get silky threads of whites.
9. Add cornstarch mixture and stir to thicken.
10. Add back the crab. Mix well.
11. Toss in the cilantro and scallions, leaving a small handful for garnish.
12. Serve immediately garnish of cilantro and scallions.
Serves: 6
* Chicken Satay with Peanut Sauce
Posted on September 6th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Appetizer, Chicken, Chili Peppers, Malaysian, Peanuts, Shallots, Street Foods.
Succulent morsels of chicken meat typically grilled over a charcoal fire. In South East Asia, every country’s got their version of satay. This is the Malaysian (or Singaporean) version which is sweeter, and less spicy than the Indonesian’s version. We also use cubed pieces of meat unlike the Thai version which meat is in one strip.
Chef’s tip: To ensure that the meat remains moist, reserve the green stems of the lemon grass and split the lemongrass length-wise, leaving 2 inches uncut. Tie them together to make a brush. Baste the satay as you grill them with a mixture of water and oil. Also, when skewering the chicken, to avoid your fingernails from being dyed yellow by the tumeric, wear a food grade pair of gloves. Your hands will not smell later either.
Ingredients
Marinade:
8 shallots, peeled, sliced
3 stalks lemon grass, white part, cut finely. Reserve green parts.
2 cloves garlic, peeled, smashed
3 tablespoons canola oil
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon ground fennel
1 tablespoon ground tumeric
2 teasspoons kosher salt
5 tablespoons sugar
2 lbs chicken thighs, boneless, skinless, trimmed of fat
1 cup water + 2 tablespoons canola oil
20 bamboo skewers, soaked
Peanut Sauce Spice Paste:
4 large shallots, sliced
2 cloves garlic
4 red fresno chile, deseeded, chopped
3 candlenuts or macadamia
1 inch fresh galangal
1 stalk lemongrass, white part, sliced finely
½ inch fresh turmeric
1 tablespoon belachan
Sauce:
¼ cup canola oil
1 cup water
1½ cup roasted unsalted peanuts, crushed
4 tablespoons palm sugar
1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar/ tamarind paste
1 teaspoon kosher salt
Garnish:
1 english cucumber
1 red onion
To make the marinate and sate
1. In a food processor, grind shallots, lemongrass, garlic and oil together till a fine paste. Add dry spices and salt and sugar and mix together. Set aside.
2. Make cuts lengthwise into the green parts of the lemongrass leaving 2 inches from the leaves uncut. Bunch the stalks together with kitchen twine to make a basting brush. Mix a bowl of water with 2 tablespoons of canola oil and set aside as basting liquid.
3. Trim chicken of fat and cut chicken into small cubes 1 X 3/8 X 1 inch. Marinate chicken in marinade at least 30 minutes. Skewer chicken with the bamboo skewers. Scrape off marinade bits.
4. On a hot oiled grill/broiler on high, grill chicken skewers – about 2 minutes on each side, or more depending on thickness, until nicely browned. Baste with water mix as you grill.
To make the sauce:
5. In a food processor, grind all Peanut Sauce Spice Paste ingredients together
6. In a sauce pan, heat oil on medium high. Saute spice mixture till fragrant and oil separates. Add remaining sauce ingredients and simmer for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally, till mixture is thick.
Serving:
7. Cut cucumber at an angle, avoiding the seeds. Rotate cucumber per cut.
8. Cut onions into small wedges. Serve satay with peanut sauce and cut cucumbers and onions.
Serves: 10
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