Showing posts with label seafood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seafood. Show all posts
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Fried fish with chili sauce (Thai style)
I've been trying a lot of recipes through the net lately but never really managed to update. So this is one of the most recent recipes I tried, and it is good!
In this recipe, I reduced the amounts of ingredients due to only using two fish fillets. I think I shouldn't have skimped on the garlic though!
How I altered the recipe was using 6 cloves of garlic, 10 birds eye chilies, one red chili and a tablespoon of brown sugar with a tablespoon of Thai chili sauce by Kimball. Used the Tamarind paste and fish sauce as directed. Do not alter the fish sauce and tamarind in a Thai dish: it really changes the taste. The same goes for Malay dishes (as for the tamarind). Learnt it the hard way for other recipes.
It may be a tad hot for some (including me :P ), but it hit my hubby's spot.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
My hubby's favourite version of sambal
Sambal, as I know it, has a few main components:
1. Shallots
2. Garlic
3. Dried chillies (Fresh ones don't sound and taste right to me)
4. Tamarind paste
5. Optional: soy sauce or sugar (strictly for beautiful caramel colour)
Therefore my version of sambal is a bit on the hot and sour side. And this does not fit into my hubby's mindset of sambal.
Finally I got it right while cooking for iftar yesterday. While my head was reeling from who won the 2nd season of Australia's Next Top Model (What?? And Alex is not the winner?) I accidentally put two heaping tablespoon of sugar into my squid sambal.
To me it's a tad too sweet, but it hit my hubby's spot.
My hubby may be a Malay-Javanese-Chinese-Japanese, but he's a true blue Kelantanese at heart.
Hubby's favourite version of Sambal
Blended ingredients:
1. Shallots
2. Garlic
3. Dried chillies (Fresh ones don't sound and taste right to me)
4. Tamarind paste
5. Optional: soy sauce or sugar (strictly for beautiful caramel colour)
Therefore my version of sambal is a bit on the hot and sour side. And this does not fit into my hubby's mindset of sambal.
Finally I got it right while cooking for iftar yesterday. While my head was reeling from who won the 2nd season of Australia's Next Top Model (What?? And Alex is not the winner?) I accidentally put two heaping tablespoon of sugar into my squid sambal.
To me it's a tad too sweet, but it hit my hubby's spot.
My hubby may be a Malay-Javanese-Chinese-Japanese, but he's a true blue Kelantanese at heart.
Hubby's favourite version of Sambal
Blended ingredients:
- 5 shallots
- 2 cloves of garlic
- 1 large onion
- 10 dried chillies, previously soaked in hot water for 10 minutes
- 3 fresh chillies
1 teaspoon tamarind paste
Any kind of meats: squid, chicken, prawn, anchovies, eggs
Salt to taste
2 tablespoon of sugar
Method:
Saute the blended ingredients in the wok until it is almost dry, bubbling and oily (What Malays call 'pecah minyak'). Put any kind of meats into your sambal and stir until almost cooked. Put 1 teaspoon of tamarind paste and 1/2 cup of water into the sambal. Stir until it is thick in consistency. Add salt to taste. Then add the sugar.
(My version calls for 1 teaspoon of sugar)
Monday, August 23, 2010
Salmon with Spinach Sauce
This is what I cooked for iftar last week, and hubby was impressed!
2 pieces of salmon
A dash of salt
A dash of black pepper
One small bunch of spinach
1 tablespoon of butter
Half cube of chicken stock
1 cup of water
1 tablespoon of corn flour diluted in small amount of water
1/2 cup plain yogurt
For the salmon:
Sprinkle a dash of salt and black pepper on both sides of the salmon. Pan-fry in a skillet with olive oil. Do not flip the salmon until cooked on one side.
For the spinach sauce:
Melt the butter in a pan and add the spinach until blanched. Add chicken stock with 1 cup of water. Simmer to reduce to amount of liquid to half. Then add plain yogurt. Blend the sauce into a food processor, then pour the liquid into a sauce pan and simmer. Add corn flour as a thickener.
Voila!
Actually the real recipe was to use half of a lemon on the salmon, but I forgot :P. So the slight improvisation was to clean the salmon with some tamarind paste so it won't be too fishy.
2 pieces of salmon
A dash of salt
A dash of black pepper
One small bunch of spinach
1 tablespoon of butter
Half cube of chicken stock
1 cup of water
1 tablespoon of corn flour diluted in small amount of water
1/2 cup plain yogurt
For the salmon:
Sprinkle a dash of salt and black pepper on both sides of the salmon. Pan-fry in a skillet with olive oil. Do not flip the salmon until cooked on one side.
For the spinach sauce:
Melt the butter in a pan and add the spinach until blanched. Add chicken stock with 1 cup of water. Simmer to reduce to amount of liquid to half. Then add plain yogurt. Blend the sauce into a food processor, then pour the liquid into a sauce pan and simmer. Add corn flour as a thickener.
Voila!
Actually the real recipe was to use half of a lemon on the salmon, but I forgot :P. So the slight improvisation was to clean the salmon with some tamarind paste so it won't be too fishy.
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