Steamed Shrimp with Lemongrass-Coconut Sauce
- 2 lemongrass stalks
- 1 tablespoon nam pla (fish sauce)
- 2 limes
- 1 pound shrimp, peeled and, if you like, deveined
- 1 small dried chile
- 1/2 cup fresh or canned coconut milk
- 1 1/2 teaspoons sugar
- Pinch of saffron threads or 1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric or curry powder
- Salt
- Trim the ends from the lemongrass, then bruise one of the stalks all over with the back of a knife.
- Cut it in half and put the halves in the bottom of a saucepan with the nam pla.
- Squeeze the juice of one of the limes into the pot, then throw the lime halves in there.
- Top with the shrimp, cover tightly, and turn the heat to medium-high.
- Cook for 5 to 10 minutes, or until the shrimp are pink and firm.
- Remove the shrimp and chill.
- Remove the hard outer layers from the remaining lemongrass stalk and mince the tender core; you wont get much more than a teaspoon or two.
- Combine this with the chile, coconut milk, sugar, and saffron in a small saucepan over low heat.
- Cook, stirring occasionally, until the mixture is a uniform yellow.
- Remove the chile and chill.
- Cut the remaining lime into wedges.
- Taste the sauce and add a little salt if necessary.
- Serve the cold shrimp topped with the cold sauce and accompanied by lime wedges.
- Although canned coconut milk is perfectly convenient, making coconut milk at home is easy and will contain no preservatives: Combine 2 cups of water and 2 cups dried unsweetened shredded or grated coconut in a blender.
- Use a towel to hold the lid on tightly and turn the switch on and off a few times quickly to get the mixture going.
- Then blend for about 30 seconds.
- Let rest for 10 minutes.
- Pour the milk through a strainer.
- This will be fairly thick.
- If you need more milk, just pour additional water through the coconut, up to another cup or two.
- Press the coconut to extract as much liquid as possible.
- Use immediately or freeze indefinitely.
- Almost all shrimp are frozen before sale.
- So unless youre in a hurry, you might as well buy them frozen and defrost them yourself; this will guarantee you that they are defrosted just before you cook them, therefore retaining peak quality.
- There are no universal standards for shrimp size; large and medium dont mean much.
- Therefore, it pays to learn to judge shrimp size by the number per pound, as retailers do.
- Shrimp labeled 16/20, for example, contain sixteen to twenty per pound; those labeled U-20 require fewer (under) twenty to make a pound.
- Shrimp from fifteen to about thirty per pound usually give the best combination of flavor, ease (peeling tiny shrimp is a nuisance), and value (really big shrimp usually cost more than $15 a pound).
- On deveining: I dont.
- You can, if you like, but its a thankless task, and there isnt one person in a hundred who could blind-taste the difference between shrimp that have and have not been deveined.
lemongrass stalks, fish sauce, limes, shrimp, chile, coconut milk, sugar, ground turmeric, salt
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/steamed-shrimp-with-lemongrass-coconut-sauce-386607 (may not work)