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Chao Tom
1 lb Shrimp, shelled and deveined 2 ts Salt 2
Garlic cloves 2 Shallots 2 ts Sugar 1/4 ts Black pepper
1 tb Toasted rice powder 1 tb Vietnamese fish sauce (nuoc
-mam) 2 tb Ice water Vegetable oil to oil your -hands Three
6-inch long canned -sugar cane sections 1 Cucumber, peeled and cut
-into thin slivers 1 c Fresh mint leaves 1 c Fresh coriander
leaves Twelve butter or red leaf -lettuce leaves Twelve 8-inch
round dried -rice papers
DIPPING
SAUCE-
4
Garlic cloves 2 Fresh Serrano chiles 2 tb Sugar 6 tb
Vietnamese fish sauce (nuoc -man) 4 tb Fresh lime juice 6 To
8 tablespoons water
The Vietnamese use a
small indoor earthen stove fueled with coal set on the table to
simmer, boil and barbecue. I have broiled this dish in an oven, with
excellent results. Sugar cane makes this recipe visually exciting
and exotic. Its sweetness subtly melts into the shrimp paste. Sugar
cane comes fresh and canned in better Asian markets; the former is
scarce and very expensive. Check with the grocery clerk to make
certain that you are buying the 6- to 7-inch long stalks, not the
cubes. The recipe serves well as a buffet appetizer or as a first
course for a dinner party. Shell and devein the shrimp. Toss with
salt; let sit for 10 minutes. Rinse with cold water; drain
thoroughly. Blot dry. In a food processor, finely mince the garlic
and shallots. Add sugar, pepper, toasted rice powder, fish sauce,
and shrimp; process into a smooth paste. With the machine running,
pour the ice water through the feed tube; process until the shrimp
is light and fluffy. Cover and refrigerate. Pour vegetable oil into
a small bowl. Place a wire cooling rack on a baking sheet; brush
with oil. Cut the sugar cane lengthwise into quarters to make 12
long strips. Dip your fingers into the oil, then take about 2
tablespoons shrimp paste and evenly mold a 1-inch cylinder around a
sugar cane strip, leaving 1 inch free at both ends. Arrange the
rolls on the rack diagonally, and keep them from touching each
other. Arrange the cucumber, mint and coriander leaves, and lettuce
on a platter; set aside. Broil the shrimp rolls about 6 inches from
the heat, turning once, until the edges are bright orange and the
filling feels firm to the touch, 2 to 3 minutes per side. To serve,
take a rice paper sheet and set it on a plate. Dip a pastry brush
into a bowl of water. Brush the entire rice paper generously with
water. Let it sit until the paper is pliable and somewhat flimsy.
Put a lettuce leaf on one end of the paper. Place a cucumber sliver,
mint and coriander leaves on top of the lettuce. Take a hot stick of
sugar cane, break off the shrimp and place it on top of the
vegetables. Begin rolling up the paper to enclose the filling; form
it into the shape of a cylinder. Drip into the nuoc Cham Dipping
Sauce,. and take a bite, then chew on the sugar cane for the
sweetness (do not swallow the sugar cane). NUOC CHAM DIPPING SAUCE:
Grind the garlic, chiles and sugar into a paste in a mortar, blender
or mini-food processor. Stir in fish sauce, lime and water. Strain
into a dipping bowl. NOTE: If sugar cane is not available, use a
skewer or inexpensive bamboo chopsticks. Soak them in water
overnight before wrapping with shrimp paste. Makes 12 rolls or
serves 6. Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; December 13 1991.
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