Coconut Soup with Quenelles
Coconut Soup:
2 cups Soup Base, recipe follows
1 cup coconut milk
6-8 Kaffir lime leaves
Salt and pepper
Fresh lime juice, to taste
2-3 teaspoons coconut palm sugar, to taste
Sugarcane Chicken Quenelles, recipe below
Garnish:
1 ounce glass noodles -- soaked in warm water until soft
1/4 cup carrots, cut into juliennes
1/4 cup leeks, cut into juliennes
4 Thai chiles, made into flowers (split into quarters but not through the stem, place in ice water for 20 minutes)
4 Kaffir lime leaves, slivered finely, remove center stem
Soup Base:
2 1/2 cups shellfish stock*
1 tablespoon chile paste
1 lemon grass, cut into 2" lengths
10 fresh Thai basil leaves (bai Horpha)
2 Thai Dragon chiles
*make from stock base mix or from boiling lobster shells
Sugarcane Chicken Quenelles:
4 ounces minced (ground) white fish
1/2 teaspoon garlic, minced
1/2 teaspoon galangal or baby ginger, minced
1 teaspoon mushroom soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon fish sauce (nam pla)
2 teaspoons rice flour
freshly ground white pepper to taste
8 inch stalks of fresh sugarcane
Place cubes of boneless fish into food processor, pulse until meat is minced.
In a mixing bowl, combine the minced fish, garlic, galangal, soy sauce, fish
sauce, rice flour and white pepper. Mix until well blended.
Divide into 8 even portions.
Form the fish quenelle mixture around the end of each sugarcane stick using a cupped hand to press the mixture firmly and smoothly into place.
Set aside
For soup:
Make the soup base, add the coconut milk and kaffir lime leaves. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to barely a simmer.
For Soup Base:
Place the shellfish stock in a saucepan over medium high heat, add the chile paste, lemon grass, Thai basil leaves and Thai Dragon chile and bring to a boil. Reduce until only 2 cups remain.
Taste and adjust seasoning with fish sauce, pepper, lime juice and sugar. Remembering Thai cuisine is about balance. You don't want to taste hot, sweet, salty or sour - just the combination of these Thai flavours.
Add the sugarcane quenelles and simmer until done, about 3 minutes.
Divide the softened glass noodles into 4 soup bowls.
Place two dumplings in each bowl across the noodles but leaning the sugar cane stalks up the side of the bowl.
Divide the soup into the four bowls.
Garnish each bowl with the carrot and leek juliennes, Thai chile flowers and lime leaf slivers.
Serve immediately.
Serves 4
2 cups Soup Base, recipe follows
1 cup coconut milk
6-8 Kaffir lime leaves
Salt and pepper
Fresh lime juice, to taste
2-3 teaspoons coconut palm sugar, to taste
Sugarcane Chicken Quenelles, recipe below
Garnish:
1 ounce glass noodles -- soaked in warm water until soft
1/4 cup carrots, cut into juliennes
1/4 cup leeks, cut into juliennes
4 Thai chiles, made into flowers (split into quarters but not through the stem, place in ice water for 20 minutes)
4 Kaffir lime leaves, slivered finely, remove center stem
Soup Base:
2 1/2 cups shellfish stock*
1 tablespoon chile paste
1 lemon grass, cut into 2" lengths
10 fresh Thai basil leaves (bai Horpha)
2 Thai Dragon chiles
*make from stock base mix or from boiling lobster shells
Sugarcane Chicken Quenelles:
4 ounces minced (ground) white fish
1/2 teaspoon garlic, minced
1/2 teaspoon galangal or baby ginger, minced
1 teaspoon mushroom soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon fish sauce (nam pla)
2 teaspoons rice flour
freshly ground white pepper to taste
8 inch stalks of fresh sugarcane
Place cubes of boneless fish into food processor, pulse until meat is minced.
In a mixing bowl, combine the minced fish, garlic, galangal, soy sauce, fish
sauce, rice flour and white pepper. Mix until well blended.
Divide into 8 even portions.
Form the fish quenelle mixture around the end of each sugarcane stick using a cupped hand to press the mixture firmly and smoothly into place.
Set aside
For soup:
Make the soup base, add the coconut milk and kaffir lime leaves. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to barely a simmer.
For Soup Base:
Place the shellfish stock in a saucepan over medium high heat, add the chile paste, lemon grass, Thai basil leaves and Thai Dragon chile and bring to a boil. Reduce until only 2 cups remain.
Taste and adjust seasoning with fish sauce, pepper, lime juice and sugar. Remembering Thai cuisine is about balance. You don't want to taste hot, sweet, salty or sour - just the combination of these Thai flavours.
Add the sugarcane quenelles and simmer until done, about 3 minutes.
Divide the softened glass noodles into 4 soup bowls.
Place two dumplings in each bowl across the noodles but leaning the sugar cane stalks up the side of the bowl.
Divide the soup into the four bowls.
Garnish each bowl with the carrot and leek juliennes, Thai chile flowers and lime leaf slivers.
Serve immediately.
Serves 4
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