Ingredients[]
- 6 slices pa ling (a nameapplied to two members of the pangasid family of catfish, one of which, pangasius nasutus)
- 5 dried red chilli peppers-pick off the stems, take out their cores and soak them in water
- 7 sm shallots, peeled
- 1 fully grown coconut, split open, grate the meat and squeeze two extractions of coconut milk from it
- chopped spring onion leaves
- chopped coriander leaves
- kaffir lime leaves
- salt
- fish sauce
- ground black pepper
- pig's bone broth or any other clear soup or meat stock
Directions[]
- Scrape off the mucus from the skin of the fish and cut slices about i cm thick-wash and salt these, fry them in pork fat until they are a good golden colour, then set them aside on a plate.
- Put the first extraction of coconut milk in a wok on the fire and leave it until the cream separates.
- Add the kheuang hom and leave simmering over a hot fire stirring occasionally, until the ingredients give off a good aroma.
- Then add the pig's-bone broth or other clear soup and leave the wok over a low fire until the liquid has reduced somewhat.
- Next, add the fish sauce and a considerable quantity of the second extraction of coconut milk, followed by the fish slices back and forth so that they absorb the liquid.
- Add the kaffir lime leaves and the chopped spring onion leaves.
- Transfer the contents of the pan to a platter, garnish them with ground black pepper and chopped coriander leaves, and serve.
- Sousi haeng should not have much liquid or juice. There should only be enough to keep the slices of moist.
- When dished up, the liquid should cover the bottom of the platter, just enough so that when the platter is tipped the liquid will flow from one side to the other.
- That is called haeng (dry).