Posts Tagged ‘Thai-green-curry-paste’
Thai Cooking Demonstration and Dinner
Last week a group of 7 gathered at my house for a Thai cooking demonstration and dinner. As they sat around the dining table nibbling on prawn crackers I demonstrated several dishes whilst they followed what I was cooking on their copies of my recipes.
I provided them with information on buying their ingredients, all of which are available in Cheltenham. I gave them details of equipment that I find useful, provided tips on techniques to use and shortcuts to take if time is limited. I also answered any questions that they had as we went along.
This culminated in a delicious dinner of all the dishes cooked and a dessert that I had prepared earlier. Here is a copy of the recipes and photos.
THAI GREEN CURRY PASTE
THAI GREEN CHICKEN CURRY (Keaw Wan Kai)
STEAMED RICE
GREEN PAPAYA SALAD (Som Tam)
THAI STIR FRIED VEGETABLES (Phad Phak)
COCONUT ICE CREAM
SPICED BERRIES


THAI GREEN CURRY PASTE
Making your own curry paste produces such a fresh tasting curry as well as lending to a wonderful colour. This is my own version of the recipe as kaffir lime zest; an ingredient used in green curry paste in Thailand is unavailable in the UK.
Makes approx. 200g (8-10 tbsp)
2 tsp coriander seeds
1 tsp cumin seeds
6 big green chillies – deseeded if you do not want the paste to be too spicy
1 stem of lemon grass, finely sliced
5 cm piece of galangal, sliced thinly
5 kaffir lime leaves
30g coriander root and 10cm of stem, roughly chopped
1 tbsp coriander leaves
3 large cloves of garlic, roughly chopped
60G (3) shallots, roughly chopped
2 tsp shrimp paste
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
3 tbsp oil
Toast the cumin and coriander seeds in separate batches in a pan. Grind in a pestle and mortar.
Blend chillies, lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime leaves, coriander root, stem and leaves along with the ground coriander and cumin seeds.
Add the rest of the ingredients and continue to blend until smooth.
THAI GREEN CHICKEN CURRY (Keaw Wan Kai)
Thai green curry is one of the most popular dishes in Thailand. This is probably one of the most authentic recipes you will find. It is a slight adaption of a recipe that I learnt whilst at the Blue Elephant cooking school in Bangkok.
Serves 1
1 tbsp vegetable oil
1tbsp green curry paste
½ tsp roasted ground cumin seeds
½ tsp roasted ground coriander seeds
150ml coconut milk
50ml water or stock
70g-100g chicken, sliced finely
2 small Thai aubergines, quartered
10 pea aubergines
2 kaffir lime leaves
3 Thai sweet basil leaves
1 tbsp chopped coriander
1 tsp caster sugar
1 tbsp fish sauce
Heat the oil in a wok until hot. Add the curry paste, cumin and coriander and fry for around 2 minutes until an aroma develops. Lower the heat and add half of the coconut milk a little at a time. Allow to simmer for 2 minutes, add the chicken and cook until cooked through, and then add the other half of the coconut milk. Gradually add the water/stock until the curry has reached the desired consistency.
Add the green aubergines and the pea aubergines, the sugar, fish sauce, kaffir lime leaves and basil. Simmer for 5 minutes.
Sprinkle with the coriander.
STEAMED RICE
Serves 1
100ml-150ml Thai rice- measured in a measuring jug
100ml-150ml water-equal volume to the rice
Wash the rice well in a sieve until the water runs clear.
Place rice and water in a rice cooker and press the ‘cook’ button.
If cooking in a pan, place the rice and water in the pan and bring to the boil. Simmer gently until the water has reduced to the level of the rice. Then place the lid on and cook on the lowest heat for 15-20 minutes or until cooked.
Fluff up with a folk before serving.
GREEN PAPAYA SALAD (Som Tam)
Green papaya salad is a delicious traditional raw salad with mildly spicy, sweet, sour and salty flavours. Green papaya is totally unlike the fruit that we know. The texture of the green papaya is like a white crunchy vegetable.
Serves 1
70g green papaya, peeled and grated into long thin strips
½ -1clove garlic
½ -3 green birds’ eye chillies
30cm yard long beans, broken into 3cm pieces
1 tbsp roasted unsalted peanuts
1 tbsp dried shrimps
3 cherry tomatoes cut in half
2 tbsp palm sugar
1 tbsp fish sauce
1 tbsp lime juice
Pound the garlic and chillies in a pestle and mortar.
Add the dried shrimps and pound until crushed. Add the beans and peanuts and pound.
Add the sugar, fish sauce and lime juice and stir together. Then add the tomatoes and press with a pestle.
Finally add the papaya and stir until well mixed in.
Serve at room temperature.
THAI STIR FRIED VEGETABLES (Phad Phak)
Serves 1
Stir fried vegetables are a great accompaniment to eat alongside all Asian dishes. Or for a healthy meal, eat the dish on its own with steamed rice.
1 tbsp vegetable oil
1 garlic clove, finely sliced
40g baby corn, halved
40g Chinese cabbage, coarsely chopped
50g broccoli florets
40g carrots, julienned
25ml vegetable stock
2 tsp soy sauce
2 tbsp oyster sauce
½ tsp sugar
40g beansprouts
Heat the oil until hot. Add the garlic and fry for a couple of seconds, then immediately add all the vegetables except the beansprouts, stir fry for 30 seconds to 1minute, or until the vegetables are cooked to your taste. Add the stock and the sauces and sugar. Mix well. Toss in the beansprouts just before serving.
COCONUT ICE CREAM
Serves 4
2 sheets of gelatine
560ml tinned coconut milk
250g caster sugar
Soak the sheets of gelatine in cold water for 15 minutes. Dissolve the sugar in half the coconut milk in a pan over a low heat. When the sugar has dissolved, remove the mixture from the heat and add the gelatine. Mix to allow the gelatine to dissolve.
Stir in the rest of the coconut milk and set aside (put in the fridge once the mixture is cool enough) until the mixture is completely cold.
Freeze in an ice cream machine or put it into a container in the freezer. If making it in the freezer, after an hour of freezing take it out and beat by hand or use a food processor, repeat this process again after another hour, and repeat until it is smooth and evenly frozen.
SPICED BERRIES
Serves 4
400g mixed berries
200g sugar
225ml water
1 cinnamon stick
1 star anise
Put the berries into a bowl.
Put the sugar, water, cinnamon stick and star anise into a pan and bring slowly to the boil, stirring until the sugar dissolves. Boil for just 2 minutes.
Cool for 4-5 minutes then pour the hot syrup over the fruit and allow the flavours to infuse for several hours in the fridge.
NB If using frozen berries, pour the boiling syrup straight onto the berries rather than allowing it to cool.

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