This is Day Two of Coconut Week.
I know next to nothing about Thai cuisine. I have never before purchased any grocery product labeled as a Thai food (other than things like rice that just happen to come from Thailand). I have never before bought any sort of curry sauce.
So why did I get this? Simple: I was looking to increase the number of different kinds of products that I could fit into Coconut Week! See, right there on the label? "A classic Thai curry sauce with coconut & lemongrass...." In fact, coconut milk is the second ingredient, after water, and "organic shredded coconut" is in there, too.
Besides, it has an elephant on the label, and I like elephants. If this stuff is good enough to feed to elephants, it's good enough for me.
I really had no idea how to use it, so I made something up. I took some seitan-based fake chicken strips, put them in a big bowl with the entire contents of this jar dumped in, and let it marinate in the refrigerator overnight. Then at dinnertime, I just let the whole mess simmer until it was clear that the sauce was substantially thickening, and poured it over some rice. (Thai rice, by handy coincidence, is what I had on hand.)
For all I know, the marinating may have added nothing; perhaps I would have achieved the same results without that step. But something was right about what I did, because I liked the results a lot. Or, as they say in Thailand, mucho bueno. It was flavorful but mild; distinctly currylicious, but not painfully so. And get off your high horse--currylicious is TOO a word.
Will I buy it again?
Yes. I am well pleased that I took a more-or-less random stab at a completely unknown part of the food world, and had such a delightful result, with next to no work involved. This is exactly the kind of experience that encourages me to--gasp!--try more new things.
Nina's View
1. Unknown food of unknown flavor and unknown cooking technique.
2. Purchase.
3. Cook.
4. Eat.
5. Enjoy!
6. Repeat.
I cannot tell you how it thrills me that Bob actively derives pleasure from
this. Food is fun!
This is really good mixed with a bag of cooked up TJ's frozen stir fry veggies and any asian style noodle (rice, soba, buckwheat). Don't even have to marinate.
ReplyDeleteNice find!! I bet that would be good with tofu too.
ReplyDelete(PS avoid the frozen vegetarian pad thai at TJs, that's a clunker)
Ttrockwood