Thai pepper garlic prawns recipe
by Ross Dobson |
1 comment |
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The flavour combo of coriander, garlic and fish sauce is very Thai—using all the coriander, from roots to crown. This could be used with whole fish or chicken drumsticks. Cutting deep slashes into the thicker parts of the fish or chicken drumstick will ensure more even cooking. The trick to a well-cooked prawn is not to cook it until it’s well done. As soon as the prawn has changed colour and is curled up it is ready.
At a glance
- Cuisine Australian
- Recipe Type Barbecue
- Difficulty Easy
- Preparation time 15 mins
- Cooking time 5 mins
- Serves 4 people
Ingredients
- 1 bunch coriander (cilantro)
- 4 garlic cloves, chopped
- 1 tbsp white peppercorns
- 2 tbsp brown sugar
- 2 tbsp fish sauce
- 16 raw large prawns (shrimp), peeled and deveined, leaving the tails intact
- 1 cup vegetable oil, for cooking
- 1 handful lime wedges, to serve
Step-by-step
- Cut about 3–4 cm (1¼–1½ in) from the root end of the coriander. Rinse the roots, then finely chop and put into a mortar. Roughly chop the coriander leaves and set aside.
- Add the garlic and peppercorns to the coriander roots and, using a pestle, pound to a paste. Tip the paste into a bowl. Stir in the brown sugar and fish sauce. Add the prawns and toss to coat with the paste. Set aside at room temperature for 30 minutes or cover and refrigerate for 3–6 hours.
- Remove the prawns from the fridge 30 minutes before cooking.
- Heat the barbecue hotplate to high. Drizzle the vegetable oil over the hotplate to grease. Add the prawns and cook for 2 minutes each side, until pink, curled up and aromatic.
- Serve with the reserved chopped coriander leaves sprinkled over and the lime wedges on the side.
Recipes and images taken from More Fired Up by Ross Dobson (£17.99), published by Murdoch Books.
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Comments
by DAMillar | on 15 June 2012
One cup of vegetable oil to grill 16 prawns! Surely you mean one tablespoon?
I also think two tablespoons of sugar is too much - but maybe some have a sweeter tooth.
Otherwise sounds good. It is hard to buy coriander with all the roots one but Indian groceries often have it.
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