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| 1 1/2 | pound | fish | weight, cleaned |
| 6 | each | shallots | |
| 1 | large | onion | |
| 2 | cloves | garlic | |
| 2 | teaspoons | coriander | ground |
| 1 | teaspoon | ginger | ground |
| 1/2 | teaspoon | lemon grass | powdered |
| 1 | teaspoon | chili powder | |
| 1 | each | bay leaf | |
| 1/2 | teaspoon | turmeric | |
| 1/2 | cup | tamarind water | |
| 1 | cup | coconut milk | |
| 2 | tablespoons | vegetable oil | |
| 1 | x | salt | |
| 1 | x | cucumber | slices |
| 1 | x | mint |
Heat a little oil in a heavy frying-pan, and carefully brown the fish in it.
Meanwhile, in another frying-pan, fry the chopped shallots (or onion) and garlic until tender.
Stir in the chilli, ginger, turmeric, coriander, lemon grass, salam, salt and tamarind water.
Let this mixture simmer for 10 minutes, then put in the fish.
Cover, and simmer for another 10 minutes.
Add the santen and cook for a further 5 minutes.
Serve hot, garnished with very thin slices of cucumber and chopped mint.
(Alternatively, put the cucumber and mint into the kare itself for the last 2 minutes of cooking.)
Incidentally, the same kare can be made with prawns.
There is no need to fry the prawns separately; but fry them in the mixture of onion, etcetera for a few minutes before you put in the tamarind water.
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General:Cumin (pronounced "come-in") is the pale green seed of Cuminum cyminum, a small herb in the parsley family. The seed is uniformly eliptical and deeply furrowed. ...
I loved the mixture of the parmesan and swiss cheeses in this. I didn't realize I was almost out of rice so I ended up using 1.5c cooked rice and 0.5c cooked couscous. That turned out wonderful! I thought this would be more "tomato-y", and I used 1.5 cups of tomatoes, but it was still tasty. Also, I didn't bother to peel or seed the tomatoes.