Grilled Fish Hanoi Style
- Ready In:
- 3hrs 30mins
- Ingredients:
- 16
- Serves:
-
2
ingredients
- 2 cod fish fillets, cut into thick pieces
-
Galanga mixture
- 1 tablespoon water
- 100 g galangal, peeled and finely chopped
-
Turmeric juice
- 50 g turmeric
- 1 tablespoon water
- 1 dash lemon juice
-
Shrimp mixture
- 2 tablespoons shrimp paste
- 3 tablespoons fermented rice
-
Rest of marinade
- 3 tablespoons cashew oil
- 5 tablespoons oyster sauce
- 2 tablespoons sugar
-
Frying fish
- 200 g fried chives, sliced in 6cm pieces
- 6 bunches dill, sliced in 6cm pieces
- 150 g roasted peanuts
- 2 tablespoons dried onion
- 900 g bun noodles
directions
- Peel the galanga and cut into pieces, then process in a blender with a tablespoon of water.
- In a blender, combine turmeric with a little water and a dash of lemon juice, press and strain.
- Strain the shrimp paste together with the fermented rice to collect the juice.
- Mix together the galanga, the turmeric juice, the shrimp paste and rice mixture and the cashew nut oil.
- Season with oyster sauce and sugar.
- Marinate the fish in the mixture for at least three hours.
- Arrange the pieces of the fish on a grill. Grill on a cast iron plate with oil with a little dill, white parts of chives, peanuts and dried onion on top – turn continuously.
- Serve hot with the “bun” noodles and a Vietnamese dipping sauce.
- P.S. If you're going to Hanoi, I really recommend this course ! http://www.hanoi-cooking.com/tip.html.
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
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Me at Christmas , eyeing the mince pies , muaharhar.
I'm sixteen years old and love to cook. Seriosuly , I always bug my mum when she's coming home - " Can I boil an egg ? Do you want me to put on the pasta ? " etc - and I have little tradition where I cook a complete dinner once a fortnight. Thats' generally what I review recipes for as I don't get a chance to cook the rest of the time :(
Since I live in Hong Kong, I don't have access to a lot of the stuff most Recipezaar-ers in the US do , so I spend a lot of time filtering out refrigerated buttermilk biscuits , frozen pie shells, pastry flour and all those instant mixes >< Its' not just that I live in Hong Kong though , my pantry (physically impossible in a two-bedroom flat, but there in mind and spirit) is small.
What I always have in the kitchen : plain flour, self-raising flour, sugar, cocoa, pasta, canned beans, canned tomatoes, fresh tomatoes, garlic, onion, some kind of cheese, low-fat yogurt, low-fat milk, water, frozen berries, muesli.
I guess a love of food is born in as I'm half-Italian. I go to Sicily every summer and its so different from here - there is this ...respect for food. I LOVE IT
The other half of me has an ex-baking grandma ( she stopped after she had no-one to fatten up ) and I think I got a bit of that too , I absolutely ADORE making cakes, cookies,muffins but I hate having them around the house . I mulled over the idea of selling my baked stuff but in the end decided I'd probably get arrested for hawking and no-one would know what I was doing anyway.
My rating system -
***** Perfect. this is for whatever the recipe claims to be, i.e. if a recipe a simple,quick, economic stew I won't give it *** for not being finicky or delicate. These are often foolproof, too :)
**** Almost perfect, but there was something missing.
*** All right . Not a bad recipe, but I didn't like it.
** Not enjoyable, but with some spark or facet with merit.
* Godawful. SORRY !
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