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Homemade Thai Green Curry Paste

February 1, 2012

Anyone who has ever picked up a Thai cookbook will know what they say: that store-bought Thai green curry paste is but a shadow of the real thing.

Blah blah blah.

I’ve been a green curry fan since sometime in college when I first ate at Sawatdee in Minneapolis with my then-boyfriend Jim — now known as bad-boyfriend Hong Kong-Jim. [He lives there. And no, he’s not Chinese — not that there’s anything wrong with being Chinese. And he was a nice guy, just a baaaad boyfriend. ] Thai food back then was counter culture. Not popular. Dark. Exciting. Amazing. [kind of like Jim at the time…]

But now, Thai green curry is like the much-maligned Merlot. Over-sold. Over-consumed. Beneath the trendy.

I don’t care. I still love it.

Love.

It.

Since discovering Aaroy-D brand, I haven’t felt the tug that I used to — when buying green curry paste — to try making it from scratch. But then, while researching recipes that were not allowed by the New Year’s Board of Directors [see previous post], I came across a video on Rouxbe.com that re-kindled that long-forgotten urge.

So, during my last visit to a grocery store, I picked up the ingredients to make it. Came home, threw them in the ‘crisper’, and forgot all about them for about two weeks.

Because — what would a recipe given here be without the challenge of missing ingredients or ingredients gone bad? Surely there is a psychological name for this tendency of mine to sabotage perfectly good recipes.

But I did it! I made Thai green curry paste. It was so fun to make it all in a mortar and pestle — though a larger one would work better. And it was good! Different than store bought — not earth-shatteringly better — but definitely brighter tasting. Brighter is the right word. Fresher, too, but brighter and more alive would be more accurate.

I don’t think you can watch this video on Rouxbe.com without a membership — which I have and love — but these pictures are sort of a snapshot of the same thing, the main difference being that my ingredients were not as well grinded as theirs. I think this was mostly due to my smaller mortar, but also probably had something to do with two-week old lemon grass and slightly different ingredients.

Ya think? [see ingredient list below for clarification.]

First step was to grind the peppercorns with the salt. So cool how easily this was done and how pretty it looked after:

Then, after toasting the coriander (mine, from the garden, also sport some twigs from the stems alongside the seeds) and cumin seeds

you add them to the mortar and grind them up. Ahh the smell!!

Then, you add your finely chopped lemon grass. I believe nice, fresh lemongrass is a bit more forgiving that two week old, from the grocery store, probably already 3-week old lemon grass. Finely chopping mine was akin to chopping dried cattails, but I did my best to incorporate it…

Then you add chopped garlic. Again, mine was pretty dry compared to juicy fresh. I’m using up my biggest bulbs from last summer. While they still taste amazing, the textures is different.

Then the chopped cilantro stems… The recipe calls for the root of the plant, which is so cool, and which I’d have had NO PROBLEM with during the summer months. And I had the stems all chopped up sitting next to the leaves. For some reason, I accidentally threw in the whole pile of cilantro instead of just the stems. I didn’t realize I had screwed up until my paste no longer looked like paste.

I mashed and mashed and mashed…

And this was the best I could do: Next you add the peppers. Jalapeño if you like spicy. I added the seeds and everything. It was HOT!

The water content from the peppers helped smooth things out considerably:

Lastly the onions:

My mortar was starting to overflow and it was hard to really go after it without slopping over the sides. But it still looked pretty good:

It made enough for two dinner-type recipes. I used half to make Thai Green Curry Coconut Shrimp:

And the rest is in my freezer waiting to be discovered sometime next year.

Thai Green Curry Paste from Rouxbe.com:

  • 1/2 tsp black peppercorns
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 3 tbsp lemongrass [mine was old]
  • 1 tsp galangal [I used ginger]
  • 1 tbsp garlic [mine was old and dry]
  • 2 tbsp shallots [I used onion]
  • 2 tbsp coriander root (can substitute with cilantro stems) [I used leaves and stems]
  • 5 hot, Thai green chilies [I used 3 jalapeños]
  • 5 long green chilies [I used regular green and only 1/2]
  • 1 tsp fresh turmeric (can substitute with 1 teaspoon dried) [I used dried]
  • 1 kaffir lime [I used lime zest]
  • 3/4 tsp shrimp paste [I skipped]
  • 1 cup Thai sweet basil [I used basil paste]
  • 1 tsp coriander seeds [mine had stems]
  • 1/2 tsp cumin seeds [my only unadulterated ingredient!!]

To make the green curry paste, first prepare your mise en place. Finely mince the lemongrass, galangal, garlic, shallots, coriander root and the chilies.

Peel and mince the turmeric. Keep in mind that it will stain your cutting board, hands, and anything it comes into contact with. Gather the kaffir lime, shrimp paste and Thai basil and set aside.

In a small fry pan, toast the coriander and cumin seeds until they release their aroma and start to brown slightly.

To make the paste, use a mortar and pestle. Grind the spices, peppercorns and salt into a fine powder.

Next, add the lemongrass and pound until you reach a smooth paste, scraping down the sides as needed. Add the galangal, followed by the turmeric, making sure each is fully incorporated before adding the next. Add the garlic, cilantro stems, chilies and shallots.

Zest and add the kaffir lime, followed by the shrimp paste. Finely chop the basil and add it to the mortar and pestle, pounding everything into a smooth paste.

The paste can be kept in the refrigerator for a few days or frozen for a few months.

_________________

For the coconut curry recipe, I basically made the same one I usually do, found HERE, but I also added 1 tablespoon of fish sauce and — my newest very favorite trick:

Separating the cream from the milk in canned Thai Coconut Milk:

Usually I shake the can of coconut milk to incorporate everything together and then add it all at once, and if I have the time, cook it down a bit to thicken. But in Rouxbe.com’s recipe, they advise scooping the cream off the top and adding that to your protein and stir-frying over medium high heat until the cream separates from the oil. Frankly, mine never did this, but it did get shiny and different looking. THEN you add the watery milk and it all melds together. I really liked the consistency and it didn’t get that sort of curdled look that it can sometimes take on.

 

Filed Under: Food Tagged With: fresh, fun, mortar and pestle, homemade thai green curry, coriander root, roux be.com, cumin, jalapeño, bright

RIP Ringo the Chinchilla

January 26, 2011

I hate “RIP.”

It seems so callous. And yet.

I bow to convention.

Something you won’t see very often from me. I could only do it in the context of Chin, because I know he wouldn’t mind. We never once called him ‘Ringo’ even though that was his name.

He was Chin.

Original, I know.

I’d like to give you the dates of Chin’s life, but alas, I do not know them.

He was an enigma.

Not really. I just don’t know them.

He was the easiest of pets. The sweetest of pets. The most easy-going of pets. I sing the praises of chinchillas!

He didn’t make noise, didn’t smell (unless his cage was going on month two without cleaning, and even then it was IT and not HIM), didn’t bite (ever! not even once!), never made waves, got along with everyone (the cats, the dogs, even Dave!).

The most trouble he ever gave me was that one time he jumped into the uncovered heating duct when we were finishing off the bonus room. Yes, that was some trouble.

I spent about six hours tracing his movements throughout the addition knowing that with one false jump he was gone for good. Well, unless I was willing to dismantle our actual furnace and even then it was not guaranteed.

We left trails of raisins (his favorite). Hoping to lure him out.

I sat, unmoving, with a fishing net in my hands as he popped his head out of the hole in the floor only to disappear if I so much as moved a muscle.

It was then that I knew Chin had an agenda beyond his exercise wheel.

It was to bust out.

To be free.

But I had promised not to set him free like I did with Scooter the spotted fancy mouse and — I don’t remember the names of– the bunnies. There is just something I can hardly stand about an animal in a cage. And I rationalize that two days of freedom during a Minnesota summer before being killed by a hawk or a raccoon or a fox or a coyote or a — god forbid — house cat is better than years in a cage at the Menkes.

But I promised.

So I didn’t.

And I came to love that stupid chinchilla. And he came to love us (I think. Course, it all could have been a big act…). Though I know in that tiny peanut of a brain he was always just scheming his way back down into that mecca of heating and cooling pipes.

Sadly, we had to put him to sleep last weekend after feeding him with a syringe for over a week. He finally stopped accepting it and we were too sad to let nature take its course since he was obviously in a lot of pain. (His teeth grew outward which prevented them from being worn down by chewing like they should’ve naturally. Without that opposition, the roots of the teeth started to grow backwards and into his lower jaw and eye socket area. Not good.)

It all happened really fast.

And I still stop by his cage to give him a raisin or a scratch.

But he’s not there. And we will miss him.

(that’s me. aren’t I so cute? I’ve been using this amazing skin cream and my wrinkles are gone!)

No, actually it’s my darling niece Megan, who also loved Chinny. Hi Megan!

Filed Under: Animals Tagged With: sweet, chinchilla, tooth problem, stopped eating, smells strange, put to sleep, pets, fun

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Jen menke

I’m a mostly-retired, pretend graphics and web developer (but don’t judge my skillz by THIS site!). We sold our dream home in Watertown, MN and downsized to a “Villa” in Excelsior, MN and built a home in our dream location of Eagle, CO and now split our time between the two states. It is truly a dichotomous life of absentee gardening and getting together with friends & family while in MN and playing hard and hermitting while in CO. I’ve let the blog go but a trip to Alaska has me resurrecting the Road Warriors series. My beloved brother is my biggest fan and I am doing this just for him.

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