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Cookbooks Food Articles Ingredients - 1/2 lb. medium-size shrimp
- 4-6 Thai chillies, cut into thin rounds
- 1 1/2 - 2 tsp. roasted chilli
paste (nahm prik pow); recipe for roasted chilli paste
- 1-2 Tbs. fish sauce (nahm bplah), to taste
- 1 1/2 - 2 Tbs. lime juice, to taste
- 1-2 tsp. granulated sugar, to taste
- 1 stalk
lemon grass
- 1 shallot, halved lengthwise and sliced thinly crosswise
- 1-2
Tbs. coarsely chopped cilantro, sawleaf coriander, or parsley
- 3-4 Tbs. coarsely
chopped mint leaves
- 3 cups boiling water
Shell, devein and butterfly
the shrimp. Give it a saltwater bath to freshen. (See below.) Then rinse
thoroughly with plenty of water and drain. Mix the Thai chillies with the roasted
chilli paste, fish sauce, lime juice and sugar. Taste and adjust to the desired hot, sour,
sweet and salty combination. The sauce should be intense in all respects. Trim off and
discard the woody bottom tip of the lemon grass and 2-3 of the loose, fibrous outer layers.
Slice stalk from the bottom end into very thin rounds, to yield roughly 3 Tbs. Place in a
mixing bowl with the sliced shallots, coarsely chopped cilantro and mint leaves.
Blanch the shrimp in boiling water for 20 seconds, or until they turn pink on the outside but
are not completely cooked through. Drain. The shrimp will be further cooked by the lime juice
in the sauce. Toss the shrimp while still warm with the herbs and the chilli-lime
sauce. Stir well to coat the shrimp. Transfer to a serving plate and garnish with mint sprigs.
Place them in a bowl and
add sea salt and water to barely cover. For each pound, use one generous teaspoon of sea salt
and half a cup of water. Mix with your hand for a few seconds to dissolve the salt and gently
massage the shrimp. Set aside for five to ten minutes. The water will quickly turn grey and
murky. Then rinse thoroughly in plenty of cool water to remove all the salt. Drain well. For
stir-fried dishes, make sure they are not wet when you are ready to cook; if they are, pat dry
with a clean towel. Soaking the shrimp in their own element – sea salted water –
helps perk them up, giving them a fresher smell, and when cooked, a crisp, succulent texture.
Some that really have been dehydrated by prolonged freezing may even grow in size.
Kasma's Notes and Pointers: Hot-and-sour salads lie at the heart of Thai cuisine. There are
so many different ways to make them, and even though they are essentially hot with chillies and
sour with lime juice, the balance of flavor can be such that each is distinctly unique. In this
book, I have included several of these spicy and limy salads – from fish to crustaceans to
mollusks. In this recipe, the sauce combines a subtle roasted dimension from the
roasted chilli paste with the heat of fresh chillies and the sharp sour of lime juice.
Undercooking the shrimp helps them retain their natural sweetness and gives them a tender,
moist texture. For a special, refreshing touch, slice a sour tangerine and toss in with the
shrimp, herbs and sauce. For a variation using jumbo-size prawns: butterfly the prawns
in their shell and grill over hot coals until they turn pink, are slightly charred but a little
undercooked. Arrange on a serving platter. Toss the herbs with the sauce and spread on top of
the grilled prawns. Likewise, the seasoned herbs can be used on grilled lobster. Try
this recipe also with squid, scallops, shelled mussels and clams and firm fish, or a
combination of seafood. It is delicious with sea bass.
Recipe is Copyright © 2000 Kasma Loha-unchit in Dancing Shrimp. All rights reserved.
This recipe is found on pages 184 to 185 of
Dancing Shrimp: Favorite Thai Recipes for Seafood by Kasma Loha-unchit. Published by
Simon & Schuster, 2000. Options:
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