Southeast Asian
Thai Chinese-Cabbage Salad
Serve this salad with grilled meats; it's especially great with spare ribs.
Grilled Chicken with Thai-Spiced Oil
Chef-owner Neath Pal is known for his fusion of French-Asian and New England cooking. So serve this dish with slender noodles tossed in a purchased peanut sauce. Finish with coconut ice cream.
Shrimp Sambal
Almost any type of seafood, meat, or vegetable is superb cooked in a sambal, the fiery spice mixture that is a mainstay of Malay cooking.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Chicken Curry Soup with Coconut and Lime
Here, lime juice replaces the traditional lemongrass, which can be hard to find. The result is a quick, authentic-tasting Thai-style soup. If coconut milk is unavailable, substitute 1 3/4 cups half and half mixed with 3/4 teaspoon imitation coconut extract.
Bangkok Salad with Miso Dressing
Fermented soybean paste-called miso-is the key ingredient here.
Soy-Lime Dipping Sauce
Nuoc Tuong Pha
This vegetarian dipping sauce can be made with any soy sauce, including the Japanese-style Kikkoman, although the Vietnamese prefer the lighter-bodied Chinese-style products marketed under the brands Kim Lan, Bo De, and Pearl River Bridge. Like dipping sauces made with fish sauce, you can embellish this with different aromatics such as ginger and cilantro.
Cucumber and Watermelon Salad with Hoisin-Lime Dressing
A Vietnamese-style salad that makes a refreshing accompaniment to any kind of barbecued meat.
Beef Sates with Southeast Asian Sauce
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Yam Neua
(Grilled Beef Salad)
The following grilled beef salad has as many versions as there are cooks in Thailand. The success of the dish depends upon starting with good-quality tenderloin and achieving a balance of hot, sour, and salty. Before serving, be sure to sample the salad and adjust the amount of chili, lime, fish sauce — and, if desired, sugar — to your taste.
Vietnamese Beef Soup with Star Anise
This main-course soup is called pho in Vietnam, where it is eaten at any time of day.
Ginger Salad
Gin Thoke
This salad is pungent, crunchy, intriguing, and addictive. Although served as a dessert in Myanmar, it is also a great accompaniment to grilled fish, chicken, or steak.
Fried Rice with Crab
Kao pat Bpuu
Steamed Catfish in Banana Leaves
Hor Neung Pla Duk
Active time: 2 hr Start to finish: 21/4 hr
Thai Chicken Stock
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 4 hr
Vietnamese Shrimp and Crab Fritters with Chili-Lime Sauce
"I'm hoping to get the recipe for a terrific appetizer I tried at Hamiltons' at First & Main in Charlottesville, Virginia," says Sue Carter of Murieta, California. "The seafood fritters came with lettuce leaves (to wrap around the fritters) and a spicy sauce."
Jungle Curry with Pork and Thai Eggplant
Gaeng Pah Muu
Most curries from southern Thailand use coconut milk. This one, from the mountainous north, doesn't, because the climate is too temperate for coconut palms to survive. Don't be intimidated by the start-to-finish time; the curry paste and chicken stock can be made days ahead. Once you have those components at hand, the recipe only takes about 1 hour to put together. If you prefer your food less spicy, use the smaller amounts of curry paste and vegetable oil.
Active time: 3 1/4 hr Start to finish: 7 1/4 hr (includes making curry paste and stock)
Toasted Rice Powder
Kao Kua
Active time: 10 min Start to finish: 25 min
Spicy-Sweet Peanut Dressing
Serve this Thai-style dressing over chilled pasta or mixed raw vegetables.