Recipe: Prawn and Crab Cake Num Pang
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Recipe: Prawn and Crab Cake Num Pang
This blogger shares a delicious-looking Cambodian recipe for those who like to make their own food.
Recipe: Prawn and Crab Cake Num Pang
February 29, 2020
I’ve just returned from a work trip to Cambodia – a tough job but someone had to do it etc. My piece will be published in Food & Travel magazine later this year so I’m just here to tell you about Cambodian sandwiches, or num pang. As you might expect, num pang is very similar to the Vietnamese banh mi although considerably less well-known. Which came first? Well, they probably developed around the same time since both countries were part of French Indochina, formed in Cambodia and Vietnam in 1887.
Recipe: Prawn and Crab Cake Num Pang
(makes around 12-14 cakes so you’ll have a few leftover – they work great on top of some instant noodles)
2 soft white sandwich-sized baguettes, crumb scooped out a little to make more room for filling
Kroeung (see recipe below)
Prawn and crab cakes (see recipe below)
Cucumber relish (guess what? Recipe below)
Mayonnaise
Sweet chilli sauce
Red chilli, finely sliced
Thai basil
Coriander
A few leaves of Chinese cabbage, thinly sliced
Crushed, toasted peanuts
For the kroeung paste
3 stalks lemongrass, outer layer removed and sliced
2 shallots, peeled and finely chopped
40g galangal, peeled and finely chopped
30g fresh turmeric, peeled and finely chopped
10 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
8 lime leaves, ribs removed and finely shredded
1 x 3m square thin slice of dried shrimp paste
2 tablespoons fish sauce
2 tablespoons veg or groundnut oil, for frying
For the crab cakes
150g raw prawns (they need to be raw)
100g white crab meat 70g brown meat (I bought a dressed crab for this so the amounts will vary if you do the same)
1 large egg white
50g green beans, thinly sliced
2 generous tablespoons kroeung
Veg or groundnut oil, for deep frying
Cucumber relish
50g sugar
70ml white wine vinegar
2 tablespoons water (I used a ‘splash’ but I’m trying to be more accurate here!)
1 banana shallot, thinly sliced
Half a regular cucumber, seeds removed and diced or sliced
Make the kroeung paste by toasting the shrimp paste in a dry pan over medium heat until dark on all sides (I recommend opening a window as the smell is strong). Crush it to a powder in a pestle and mortar.
Add 2 tablespoons of vegetable or groundnut oil over medium heat, then add everything except the shrimp paste and fish sauce. Cook, stirring until ingredients are just beginning to brown, around 8 minutes. Add the shrimp powder and cook for a further minute or so.
Add everything to a blender with the fish sauce and process to a coarse paste. Store it in a jar in the fridge with a layer of oil on top to prevent it spoiling.
To make the crab cakes, combine the prawns, crab, egg white and kroeung paste in a blender and process until very sticky. This took 5 minutes in my Vitamix but could take longer in a less powerful blender. Stir through the beans.
Form golf ball sized cakes with wet hands, then flatten into round patties and place on greaseproof paper.
Heat oil to 180C and fry the cakes in batches of 3 or 4 for around 30-secs to 1 minute each side, or until golden and cooked through. Drain on kitchen paper.
To assemble the sandwiches, spread one side of the baguettes with mayo, the other with sweet chilli sauce. Top with cabbage, then add the herbs, crab cakes, cucumber relish, red chilli and toasted peanuts. ENJOY! A cold beer works well as an accompaniment.
http://www.helengraves.co.uk/recipe-pra ... -num-pang/
Recipe: Prawn and Crab Cake Num Pang
February 29, 2020
I’ve just returned from a work trip to Cambodia – a tough job but someone had to do it etc. My piece will be published in Food & Travel magazine later this year so I’m just here to tell you about Cambodian sandwiches, or num pang. As you might expect, num pang is very similar to the Vietnamese banh mi although considerably less well-known. Which came first? Well, they probably developed around the same time since both countries were part of French Indochina, formed in Cambodia and Vietnam in 1887.
Recipe: Prawn and Crab Cake Num Pang
(makes around 12-14 cakes so you’ll have a few leftover – they work great on top of some instant noodles)
2 soft white sandwich-sized baguettes, crumb scooped out a little to make more room for filling
Kroeung (see recipe below)
Prawn and crab cakes (see recipe below)
Cucumber relish (guess what? Recipe below)
Mayonnaise
Sweet chilli sauce
Red chilli, finely sliced
Thai basil
Coriander
A few leaves of Chinese cabbage, thinly sliced
Crushed, toasted peanuts
For the kroeung paste
3 stalks lemongrass, outer layer removed and sliced
2 shallots, peeled and finely chopped
40g galangal, peeled and finely chopped
30g fresh turmeric, peeled and finely chopped
10 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
8 lime leaves, ribs removed and finely shredded
1 x 3m square thin slice of dried shrimp paste
2 tablespoons fish sauce
2 tablespoons veg or groundnut oil, for frying
For the crab cakes
150g raw prawns (they need to be raw)
100g white crab meat 70g brown meat (I bought a dressed crab for this so the amounts will vary if you do the same)
1 large egg white
50g green beans, thinly sliced
2 generous tablespoons kroeung
Veg or groundnut oil, for deep frying
Cucumber relish
50g sugar
70ml white wine vinegar
2 tablespoons water (I used a ‘splash’ but I’m trying to be more accurate here!)
1 banana shallot, thinly sliced
Half a regular cucumber, seeds removed and diced or sliced
Make the kroeung paste by toasting the shrimp paste in a dry pan over medium heat until dark on all sides (I recommend opening a window as the smell is strong). Crush it to a powder in a pestle and mortar.
Add 2 tablespoons of vegetable or groundnut oil over medium heat, then add everything except the shrimp paste and fish sauce. Cook, stirring until ingredients are just beginning to brown, around 8 minutes. Add the shrimp powder and cook for a further minute or so.
Add everything to a blender with the fish sauce and process to a coarse paste. Store it in a jar in the fridge with a layer of oil on top to prevent it spoiling.
To make the crab cakes, combine the prawns, crab, egg white and kroeung paste in a blender and process until very sticky. This took 5 minutes in my Vitamix but could take longer in a less powerful blender. Stir through the beans.
Form golf ball sized cakes with wet hands, then flatten into round patties and place on greaseproof paper.
Heat oil to 180C and fry the cakes in batches of 3 or 4 for around 30-secs to 1 minute each side, or until golden and cooked through. Drain on kitchen paper.
To assemble the sandwiches, spread one side of the baguettes with mayo, the other with sweet chilli sauce. Top with cabbage, then add the herbs, crab cakes, cucumber relish, red chilli and toasted peanuts. ENJOY! A cold beer works well as an accompaniment.
http://www.helengraves.co.uk/recipe-pra ... -num-pang/
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Re: Recipe: Prawn and Crab Cake Num Pang
We eat with porridge or rice.
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