Sunday, January 28, 2018

Thai Shrimp Soup, Spicy or Mild

This is a GREAT soup. If you like "heat," you can add another tablespoon of chili paste, but if you do not like "heat," use just one tablespoon. Thai chili paste or sambal oelek chili paste are available in supermarkets and Asian markets.  

Ingredients:

1/2 pound medium shrimp, peeled and deveined 
1/2 cup rice
1 tablespoon fish sauce
3 cups vegetable stock 
1 can unsweetened coconut milk (13.5 ounce can)
1 red bell pepper, chopped
2 tablespoons Thai chili paste or sambal oelek chili paste
3 green onions/scallions, including most of the green part
1 stalk lemon grass or 1 teaspoon ground/powdered lemon grass (optional) *
1 inch piece ginger, chopped
juice of 1 lime
1/4 cup fresh cilantro leaves

In a heavy bottomed pan, add the broth, the rice, the fish sauce, the red bell pepper, the chili paste, the scallions, the ginger, and the fresh lemon grass (if using, or add ground form in next step). Bring to a simmer over medium heat, then reduce to low heat. Simmer until rice is almost tender. Add the shrimp, the lime juice and the cilantro leaves (also the ground lemon grass, if using). Cook just until the shrimp are about done, then immediately add the coconut milk, stirring well to mix. Let the soup heat up again, and then remove it from the heat. (Note: If the soup gets too thick, you can always add some more vegetable broth, a little at a time, until you reach the desired consistency.)   

* Lemon grass is a plant that grows in long stalks. It is used to some degree on parts of the Indian Subcontinent, but it is used extensively in Southeast Asian cuisine. In more recent times, it is available in some U.S. supermarkets or Asian stores. The outer layers of the stalk will need to be peeled off and discarded, and the more tender interior can be chopped up for use in cooking. It has something of a citrus flavor and aroma; after all, it IS called "lemon grass." It is also available in ground (powdered) form, and it is something you might want to try using, either fresh or ground.


WORD HISTORY:
Slurp-The origin of this word is presumably imitative of sound, and there are similar words in other Indo European languages that have to do with taking in food or liquids. In Old Germanic the imitation produced "slurphan/slorphan," with the meaning, "to sip, drink or eat noisily." This gave Old Low Franconian (the Germanic dialects that became Dutch) "slorpen," with the same meanings, and this then became "slurpen." English borrowed the word from Dutch in the first half of the 1600s. Because of the word originating as an imitative word for sound, there are a number of relatives, with varied spellings and slight variations in meanings: German has "schlürfen" (to sip or drink noisily), but also, "schlurfen" (to drag your foot or feet along noisily when walking), Low German Saxon has "slubbern" (drink noisily) and "slarpen" and "slurren" (drag your feet noisily), Danish "slubre" (slurp), Norwegian "slurpe" (sip/drink noisily), Swedish "slurpa" (drink/sip) and seemingly "slurka" (drink in big gulps).

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