I love dried chilies. Whether I use them whole to flavour a dish or made into a sambal, dried chilies are so under used.
Large dried chilies have that really earthy, chocolaty flavour to them and when tempered in oil, those flavours just intensifies. Unlike chili flakes which are little more intense in “chili” heat, large whole red chilies are a little more subtle. When you make this type of sambal, you get a really sweet sambal, smooth in flavour with no real, back of the throat chili heat, in fact for those who don’t really eat a lot of chilies, this the best sambal to start on.
Make a heap of it and freeze it, it keeps well in the freezer. You can use it pretty well in every thing. The best way to use it is to oil eggplants then grill them on a really hot grill, cut deep slits into the eggplant then spread this sambal lavishly on top and in the slits and roast at high temp oven until soft, you will love this little creation, especially if your a vego!
If you don’t like seafood replace it with grilled eggplant and zucchini, it is just as bloody good, in fact, I think at times, it’s really hard to decide between the both and I love seafood. Serve both versions with steamed Jasmine rice.
Photo by Jun Pang
Chili Prawns and Calamari
Serves 4
1Kg King Prawns – Cooked – peeled, leave heads on 500gr Squid – cleaned, cut into 1cm strips ½ Cup Wole Dried Medium Red Chilies ½ Brown Onion – finely sliced 1 Fresh Red Chili – finely sliced ½ Bunch Spring Onion – white finely sliced 4 cloves Garlice – finely sliced 1 Thumb of Ginger – peeled and finely grated on microplane 4 Tblspn Chili Sambal – follow recipe ¼ Cup Vegetarian Oyster Sauce 1.4 Cup Water For the Chili Sambal 1 liter Vegetable Oil 5 Brown Onions – peeled, cut into 2cm cubes roughly 500gr Garlic – peeled 5 Cups Dried Red Chili 11/2 Cups Palm Sugar Powder ¾ Cup Vegetarian Oyster Sauce [slideshow] For the Spring onion Curls ½ Bunch Spring Onion Greens – finely sliced lengthways, in ice water Method For the Sambal
Photo by Jun Pang
Sambal – there are many versions of sambal, depending on which country you are in but generally it is a side dish or condiment made from pureed chilies. Very popular in Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka and especially India
Vegetarian Oyster Sauce – used in Chinese, Thai and Vietnamese cooking oyster sauce is made from intense, cooked oysters, water and sugar thickened with corn starch and some with a caramel added to it. Vegetarian oyster sauce is made with mushroom extract usually shitake mushrooms replacing oysters. Very similar in flavour and perfect substitute for oyster sauce.
Comments (3)
frugalfeeding June 27, 2012
Wonderful! It has a great colour. I shall have to get myself some dried chillies – have never used them.
fabulousfannyjr June 27, 2012
Reblogged this on global_food.
dnleslie June 28, 2012
Thanks for the re-blog!