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5th Mar 2013, 08:18 PM
#1
Cain's Lair General
Subscriber
Nam Pla Prik (Thai Chile Condiment)
A classic Thai condiment based on fish sauce (Nam Pla) and chiles (Prik). This is great over most anything: rice, noodles, soups, fruits, etc. Note that you might not always see this in a Thai restaurant here in the U.S. More often you would see dried roasted dried chiles in soy bean oil (Nam Prik Pao). There is no exact recipe for this. Some add lime; some do not. My version, which is a small batch, consisted of the following:
5 Fresh Thai chiles (1 to 1-1/2 inch, various colors; adjust number of chiles to your taste)
2 Tbsp fish sauce
1 scant tsp sugar
1 Tbsp water
Juice of 1 medium (real juicy) lime
This will actually mellow out over time, so you can make it ahead of time when you are serving a Thai meal.
namplaprik_01.jpgnamplaprik_02.jpg
Another version, that is strictly a whole lot of chiles and only fish sauce can be seen here.
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5th Mar 2013, 10:08 PM
#2
Ive been making this forever. one of my LONG time faves. I prefer little or no sugar.
again, nice post slaughter!
edit: here in SoCal you see both Nam Pla Prik and Nam Prik Pao in pretty much every Thai restaurant.
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6th Mar 2013, 12:57 AM
#3
Cain's Lair General
The water in the toilet would steam right out after pooping this one out.
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6th Mar 2013, 09:12 AM
#4
Cain's Lair Colonel
Contributer
 Originally Posted by K PhaNTOM
The water in the toilet would steam right out after pooping this one out.
"Why so serious"
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6th Mar 2013, 11:25 AM
#5
Cain's Lair General
Subscriber
 Originally Posted by drunken_chef
Ive been making this forever. one of my LONG time faves. I prefer little or no sugar.
again, nice post slaughter!
edit: here in SoCal you see both Nam Pla Prik and Nam Prik Pao in pretty much every Thai restaurant.
For the restaurants I see without both on the table, I think because the fresh version costs more and is scary to people (like Phantom) they tend to save the fresh chiles for use in the kitchen.
 Originally Posted by K PhaNTOM
The water in the toilet would steam right out after pooping this one out.
It's a good burn.
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6th Mar 2013, 12:25 PM
#6
First in, last to leave
Life Time Member
Man my wife makes quart jars of that stuff, but adds finely sliced garlic to it. Num Num. She makes about 6 different sauces to go on stufff. I like the sweet soy she uses on duck. I put the hot stuff on meat and rice most of the time. Main dish is rice and a soft fried egg with the fish sauce garlic on it for breakfast. She eats a very hot Papaya salad that even I cant eat it's so tough.
I tell you the truth, I've eaten spicy food for so long I think I'm addicted to it. I have a hard time eating just plain american food without putting something on it.
Oh, and our garden is full of thai chilis and garlic right now. But we still make trips to the Asian market to get other things. That other sauce you mentioned with the dried chilis in oil we get there too. I Think it's out of china. I mix that in noodle soups and stuff.
And you're right Slaughter, the sauce you mentioned is so good.
Not everything that counts on the battlefield is countable.
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6th Mar 2013, 11:04 PM
#7
 Originally Posted by {CLR} Cobalt
Man my wife makes quart jars of that stuff, but adds finely sliced garlic to it. Num Num. She makes about 6 different sauces to go on stufff. I like the sweet soy she uses on duck. I put the hot stuff on meat and rice most of the time. Main dish is rice and a soft fried egg with the fish sauce garlic on it for breakfast. She eats a very hot Papaya salad that even I cant eat it's so tough.
I tell you the truth, I've eaten spicy food for so long I think I'm addicted to it. I have a hard time eating just plain american food without putting something on it.
Oh, and our garden is full of thai chilis and garlic right now. But we still make trips to the Asian market to get other things. That other sauce you mentioned with the dried chilis in oil we get there too. I Think it's out of china. I mix that in noodle soups and stuff.
And you're right Slaughter, the sauce you mentioned is so good.
If you drink bloody mary's, take some dry chil's, pack them in a mason jar, and pour vodka over them. Then leave the jar in a warm place for a few months... Once it is spicy enough, you can actually keep topping it off after you take some out for another few months until it start losing potency.
I currently have one with thai chilis, one with poblanos, and one with chipotles. I have some habaneros hanging to dry right now, going to only use one per bottle.
It's great because you can get your bloody mary just right flavor-wise, and get the spice from the vodka, and the spice that you do get seems to dissolve in better.
You can also use the stuff to easily infuse spice into things you are cooking without adding paste/oil/etc. like you would from using hot sauce.
I still have a tiny bit of envy that your wife is able to cook, and an ethnic food at that - my wife is still learning, she was never really taught to cook, so I do all the cooking but am slowly teaching her what I know.
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6th Mar 2013, 11:24 PM
#8
Cain's Lair General
 Originally Posted by NateTheBrewer
If you drink bloody mary's, take some dry chil's, pack them in a mason jar, and pour vodka over them. Then leave the jar in a warm place for a few months... Once it is spicy enough, you can actually keep topping it off after you take some out for another few months until it start losing potency.
I currently have one with thai chilis, one with poblanos, and one with chipotles. I have some habaneros hanging to dry right now, going to only use one per bottle.
It's great because you can get your bloody mary just right flavor-wise, and get the spice from the vodka, and the spice that you do get seems to dissolve in better.
You can also use the stuff to easily infuse spice into things you are cooking without adding paste/oil/etc. like you would from using hot sauce.
I still have a tiny bit of envy that your wife is able to cook, and an ethnic food at that - my wife is still learning, she was never really taught to cook, so I do all the cooking but am slowly teaching her what I know.
I'm going to have to try that. How many chilis do you normally put in the jar? Fill it to the top?
[url=http://www.enjin.com/bf3-signature-generator][img]http://sigs.enjin.com/sig-bf3/1fad512dc784c11c.png[/img][/url]
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7th Mar 2013, 06:50 AM
#9
Game Administrator
Life Time Member
I love this! Om nom nom.
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7th Mar 2013, 03:07 PM
#10
First in, last to leave
Life Time Member
I think in the near future I'll post pics of some of the stuff she's fixed. She likes to take pictures of the specialty dishes she fixes for me.
Yea Juneau, reading these threads flings a cravin on me.
Not everything that counts on the battlefield is countable.
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7th Mar 2013, 05:02 PM
#11
Cain's Lair General
Subscriber
 Originally Posted by {CLR} Cobalt
I think in the near future I'll post pics of some of the stuff she's fixed. She likes to take pictures of the specialty dishes she fixes for me.
Please do!
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7th Mar 2013, 10:03 PM
#12
 Originally Posted by Dead...Again
I'm going to have to try that. How many chilis do you normally put in the jar? Fill it to the top?
In a 750 mL Elijah Craig bottle (I save these because they have a very wide mouth for putting stuff in them) I have about 10 dried chilis if they are about 2-3 inch long ones. For the bigger peppers, less. You really can't go too many, as you can always dilute with more un-infused vodka. Plus, they look great sitting on a shelf with the sun shining through them.
This Sunday brunch if I remember when I make bloody marys, I will take some photos and post in a new thread so I can stop hijacking this one...
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