Cambodian Lobster and Orange Salad
Serves 4-6.
Ingredients
1 large cooked lobster
2 cups finely shredded Chinese cabbage (wong nga bak)
2 seedless cucumbers, finely sliced
60 g/2 oz bean thread vermicelli
1 tablespoon dried wood fungus,
soaked for 10 minutes
2 tablespoons peanut oil
2 teaspoons finely chopped garlic
125 g/4 oz minced pork
1 tablespoon minced dried shrimp (optional)
5 tablespoons fish sauce
3 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons lime juice
3 tablespoons desiccated coconut
3 tablespoons crushed, roasted peanuts
2 tablespoons shredded mint leaves
3 oranges, peeled and segmented
mint sprigs for garnish
3 whole heads pickled garlic, thinly sliced
Directions
Divide lobster where head and body join. Reserve head and claws, whole, for garnishing salad. Remove meat from the body and shred with fingers. Reserve shell. Combine shredded lobster meat, cabbage and cucumber.
Boil noodles for 10 minutes or until soft. Drain, then cut into short lengths. Trim any gritty parts off wood fungus and divide into small pieces. Add to the lobster, cabbage and noodles.
Heat oil in a wok and fry the garlic, stirring over low heat without browning, then raise heat, add the minced pork and minced dried shrimp and stir-fry until well cooked and brown. Add 1 tablespoon each of the fish sauce and sugar, stir and cook until liquid evaporates, remove from wok and cool.
Combine remaining fish sauce and sugar with lime juice, stirring to dissolve sugar. Pour over the lobster mixture and toss well.
Toast the coconut in a dry pan over medium heat, stirring constantly, until evenly golden brown. Turn out on to a plate at once to cool.
Make a bed of crisp salad greens on an oval platter, pile the lobster mixture in the centre and place orange segments around. Sprinkle with the pork and shrimp mixture, toasted coconut, crushed peanuts and shredded mint. Place head and tail of lobster at opposite ends of the pile of lobster meat. Garnish with sprigs of mint and slices of pickled garlic.
Recipe excerpted from Encyclopedia of Asian Food by Charmaine Solomon (Periplus Editions, 1998)