Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Thai Mussalman Beef Curry


This curry is made in the southern part of Thailand that is close to the border with Malaysia, and is obviously heavily Indian-inspired, the Thai twist here being the lemongrass, galangal and coconut milk.

The ingredient list looks daunting, but most of it can be bought at your friendly neighborhood Asian market. The actual cooking of this dish is incredibly easy and this is one of the most flavorful curries I've ever prepared.

Mussalman curry paste

Dry ingredients:
1 T coriander seeds
1 tsp cumin seeds
3 cloves
10 black peppercorns
2 dried red chilies

Wet ingredients:
1 1/2 T chopped fresh lemongrass
1 1/2 T grated galangal (easiest to do frozen, with a Microplane grater)
2 T minced garlic
1/2 cup minced shallots
6 Thai chilies, chopped finely (optional)
1 T salt

Method:

Dry fry the dry spices in a nonstick pan on medium heat until toasted but not burned. Grind to a powder in a coffee grinder reserved for spices. Combine with wet ingredients.

Main curry

1 cup shallots, chopped finely
4 T garlic, chopped finely
3 T coconut cream (comes in blocks)
3 T ground Spanish peanuts (with skin on)
1 cup unsweetened coconut milk
2 T nam pla (Thai fish sauce)
3 T tamarind paste (comes in a plastic container in the consistency of ketchup)
3 T palm sugar (brown sugar may be substituted)
3 bay leaves
3 cups chicken broth
2 T Thai red curry paste
1 1/2 lbs. good quality top sirloin, cut into 3/4-inch cubes
1 large russet potato, peeled and cubed
Cilantro
Ghee (clarified butter) or peanut oil

Method:

Brown beef in nonstick frypan with ghee (or oil) in two batches. Set aside. In more ghee/oil, sauté curry paste with shallots, garlic, and coconut cream until well combined and cream is melted.

Add meat back to pan. Add ground peanuts. Sauté 10 minutes uncovered, stirring often.

Add coconut milk, nam pla, tamarind paste, palm sugar, bay leaves, chicken broth and curry paste. Stir until well combined, simmer uncovered 15 minutes, stirring often.

Add potatoes and simmer on low, covered, 25 more minutes, or until potatoes are tender. Serve on coconut jasmine rice (see recipe below) with cilantro garnish and cucumber/red onion/tomato/ chile side salad.

Coconut Thai Rice

This subtly spiced rice will just hint of coconut — no need to overpower it.

2 cups Thai jasmine rice
2 tsp ghee or peanut oil

3 cloves
3 cardamom pods
2-inch stick cinammon
1 bay leaf

3 cloves garlic, minced
3 large shallots, finely chopped
1 tsp grated ginger (easiest to do with frozen ginger and a Microplane grater)
1/2 cup coconut milk
1 3/4 cups chicken broth

Method:

Wash rice several times until the water runs completely clear. Soak in cold water for 2 hours, or even overnight (past a certain point, the rice will no longer absorb any water.)

Drain rice in colander. In a large, nonstick frypan with a tight-fitting lid, sauté the cloves, cardamom, cinnamon, bay leaf and shallots in ghee or oil on medium for about five minutes. Add the rice, ginger and garlic, and sauté, stirring but making sure not to break the grains, for about five minutes more. Mix coconut milk and broth and heat in the microwave; add to the rice, stir to combine, reduce heat to minimum, cover tightly (you might want an aluminum foil assist) and steam for about 18 minutes. Turn off heat and wait ten minutes (or as long as you want after that.) Remove hard spices, fluff rice and serve.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Thank You

Thank you for having to get this crash out of the way so everyone on every plane in the world (especially the ones flying them) will have the heebie-jeebies for months to come.

I feel like I dodged a bullet. Let's hope the "It happens in threes" rule doesn't apply.

I fly on an Asian Airline -- the one with the worst safety record -- 60th out of 60 -- of any airline flying today, on July 18th, all the way to Japan.

Wish me luck.

Oh, and by the way, that would have been MY footage of the crash you would be watching over and over again on CNN. I always video my takeoffs and landings.





(You can hear me vaguely above the jet roar saying first "We're awfully close to the mountains . . . I wonder if the pilot knows . . ." [we're nowhere near the mountains] and then in a high-pitched Indian accent "Ve are going to crash into the vater now  . . . ve are going to crash into the vater!") Trust me, you wouldn't want to fly with me.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Overrun

This blog has been officially taken over by a CAT
and
there is
NOTHING
I
can
DO
about it.


My Personal Steve

He's mine . . . and he watches over me.

Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish. Buy overpriced computers.

Am I Insanely Great, or What?

Can't Wait for Bill to Join Me

That's Not a Polar Bear Rug -- That's Foam Core

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Patraits


On Wednesday, my good friend and collaborator on this site (Ironman) drove in from Ottawa and we had a jolly time driving around. We made it to Atwater market, at which I went to Douceurs du Marché and spent a cringe-inducing $78 or so on a bottle of Frantoia olive oil and a bottle of truffle oil. What can I say? These things have to be done.

And afterwards we taxied over to L'Express to delight in what only L'Express can do -- the best steak-frites in North America. NOBODY does it better. Their rare (saignantonglet (hanger) steak is just the beefiest beef in the world.

Don't be fooled by promises of "Kobé" beef (I've said it once, and I will say it again and again until my last dying breath: there is NO KOBÉ beef in North America and there never will be. Any restaurant that advertises Kobé ANYTHING is lying, lying, lying. Even the one that offer "Wagyu" beef are usually lying their hides off). The L'Express steak-frites is about the best steak you will ever enjoy, period.


Anyway, Patrick brought his Nikon rig and did me the honor of taking a couple of "portrait" shots of me, which is extremely rare, as I don't know anyone who is a friend and who lives in Montreal and who is a good photographer, so there are very few portraits of me anywhere.

Patrick took a couple of "Patraits" and I messed with them in Photoshop a bit and here they are, in no particular sequence (as usual, right click on them to open in a new window to get them at full resolution):

At L'Express
Half colored man
Monet man

Thank you, my good friend, for such wonderful records of yours truly. One day I shall return the favor except sans the Photoshop mucking about.

Whipped Cat

I can't believe this kitten actually likes the coffee-flavored whipped cream on the rim of my cup . . .