We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Have you made God smile today?

Vietnamese Chili Sauce (dip)

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Seafood Vietnamese Ceideburg 2, Condiment, Vietnamese 1 Batch

INGREDIENTS

2 Dried red chilies
2 Cloves garlic
1/2 t Sugar
2 T Fish sauce
1 T Vinegar
1 T Lemon juice

INSTRUCTIONS

Mince chilies and garlic finely and place in a mortar.  Mash with the
heel of a cleaver or pestle.  Add sugar and stir until it dissolves.
Add fish sauce, vinegar and lemon juice, stirring between each
addition. This makes enough for 2 to 4 people.  I almost always  double
the recipe just to make sure there's enough.  I've kept it for  long
periods of time but unless you freeze it, it's past it's prime  after a
few days. This is a basic chili sauce used for a dip for  chicken or
whatever.  Variations of this are found in Cambodia, Thailand and other
Southeast  Asian countries.  You can fiddle with it endlessly.  This is
a good  starting point.  The proportions shown here produce what I
consider a  mildly warm dip.  I generally use two to six times as many
chilies,  depending on their strength and how hot I want it.
Variations:  use green serrano chilies instead of dried red ones, lime
juice instead of the lemon juice or palm sugar instead of granulated.
If you make it in a food processor, don't over process.  It should
have small chunks of each ingredient rather than being a homogeneous
liquid.  The taste is sour and hot, very puckery.  It's great with
poached or  steamed chicken, duck or game hens.  Much better with
basically bland  dishes rather than something like curry which has it's
own blend of  spices. Good with Chinese white-cut chicken or Steamed
Ginger Chicken  with Black Bean sauce.  It's truly addictive and I
often serve it  with meals that are not Oriental in origin.  Should be
good with a  firmfleshed white fish or boiled shrimp or crab.  Fish
sauce is a liquid made with anchovies and salt.  It's not really  fishy
tasting.  Look for it in the oriental section of supermarkets  or at
markets catering to Asian clientele.  Tiparos is a good brand  made in
the Philippines.  I prefer Thai or Vietnamese fish sauce, but  they'll
probably be harder to find.  Chinese fish sauce is NOT a  substitute.
Posted by Stephen Ceideburg Dec 8 1989.  File
ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/cberg2.zip

A Message from our Provider:

“God: He holds the future…”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 72
Calories From Fat: 3
Total Fat: <1g
Cholesterol: 0mg
Sodium: 1299.9mg
Potassium: 391.8mg
Carbohydrates: 16.9g
Fiber: <1g
Sugar: 2.5g
Protein: 2.7g


How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?