International Recipes
Thai, Vietnamese, Cambodian and Korean Recipes
Seua Rong Hai (Barbecued Beef – Thai)
Posted by WingsFan91 at recipegoldmine.com 11/15/2001 4:46 pm
The title of this dish means "tiger's tears" - not because it was originally
made from tiger meat, nor from other felines (as it so often does when "tiger"
is used in the name of an Oriental dish).
In this case the name comes from the noise of the fat dripping from the meat
into the barbecue fire. The dish is also called neua yang (which more prosaically
means barbecued beef), but as the method is different from kai yang (barbecued
chicken), I will keep the colloquial isan (NE Thailand) name.
Take a one pound steak, and cut it into strips diagonally across the natural
grain, about half an inch wide, then cut the strips into bite sized pieces.
Marinade the meat in 3 tablespoons of fish sauce and 3 tablespoons of dark,
sweet soy sauce for about an hour.
Place the meat on a fine metal mesh (typically a 1 centimeter chicken wire
is used here in Thailand) over a barbeque and cook, turning the pieces occasionally,
until done to your taste.
Dipping Sauce:
Two sauces are usual - nam prik narok (posted recently), and the following.
Note that it calls for powdered dried prik ki nu. Normal chili powder found
in bottles in western stores is *much* milder. If you can't find the dried birdseye
chiles to pound up yourself, then I suggest using fresh red chiles (the effect
is not quite the same, but the heat is retained as intended).
1 tablespoon phom prik ki nu (powdered dried red birdseye chiles)
1 tablespoon bai pak chee (coriander/cilantro leaf)
1 tablespoon chopped spring onion (scallion/green onion)
1/4 cup fish sauce
5 tablespoons lime juice
Combine the ingredients the day before required for use.
Vegetables: It is usual to serve barbecued dishes of this sort with a platter
of vegetables - the Thai equivalent of crudites. A typical mixture would include
cucumber slices, basil and mint, swamp cabbage or spinach, and spring onions.
However any mixture you have to hand would be fine.
Special thanks to Muoi Khuntilanont.
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