Nam Prik Num
- 4 to 5 fresh yellow chilies or Anaheim chilies, about 5 to 6 inches long (about 1/4 pound)
- 1/4 pound shallots, halved, or if large, quartered
- 6 to 8 garlic cloves, halved if large
- 1/2 pound vine-ripened cherry tomatoes
- 2 to 3 tablespoons packed fresh coriander leaves, washed well and spun dry, and coarsely torn
- 2 tablespoons Asian fish sauce (preferably naam pla)
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- Accompaniments: Thai Sticky Rice , sliced cucumber, and lettuce leaves
- Heat a dry cast-iron skillet over high heat until hot.
- Add chilies and reduce heat to moderately high.
- Dry-fry chilies, pressing down gently on chilies and turning with tongs, until blackened on all sides, 8 to 10 minutes, and transfer to a cutting board.
- Add shallots and garlic and reduce heat to moderately high.
- Dry-fry shallots and garlic, turning once, until softened and blackened, 8 to 10 minutes.
- Transfer shallots and garlic to a bowl to cool slightly.
- Dry-fry tomatoes in same manner.
- Wearing rubber gloves, cut off stem ends of chilies.
- Slice chilies lengthwise, discarding seeds (unless you want a very hot salsa).
- Finely chop chilies, shallots, and garlic and transfer to a ceramic or glass bowl.
- Discard tomato stems and skins.
- Finely chop tomatoes and add with any juices to chili mixture.
- Add coriander to taste, fish sauce, and lime juice and stir until combined (salsa will be chunky and a little soupy).
- Alternatively, all ingredients may be chopped together in a food processor, but the salsa has a more traditional coarse texture when chopped by hand.
- Let salsa stand, covered, 30 minutes to blend and mellow flavors.
- Salsa keeps, covered and chilled, 5 days.
- Serve salsa at room temperature with rice, cucumbers, and lettuce leaves for scooping.
yellow chilies, shallots, garlic, tomatoes, coriander leaves, fish sauce, lemon juice, sticky rice
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/nam-prik-num-14433 (may not work)