finally made it again tonite.

this was the first time i used ground roasted rice. i do love that texture.
share your larb stories.
Posted 27 October 2002 - 06:45 PM

Posted 27 October 2002 - 10:33 PM
Priscilla
OCFoodNation.com
Taste of Orange County, Orange Coast Magazine
In the Daily Gullet: Vegetables, in a Soup
Posted 28 October 2002 - 08:43 AM
Posted 28 October 2002 - 08:55 AM
Posted 28 October 2002 - 08:57 AM
Posted 28 October 2002 - 09:18 AM
Inspired by the other thread, I served the larb in endive leaves after forgetting to pick up lettuce. Coincidentally the fisherman just brought me home a huge pile of Jonah crab claws so I’ll try the crab salad as well.not enough lettuce for my taste.
Posted 28 October 2002 - 09:30 AM
Posted 28 October 2002 - 09:50 AM
jasmine perhaps. i have a spice grinder. a mortar and pestle would probably work, although it would take a bit more effort. you don't need much, however.Tommy - what type of rice did you use, and how did you grind it.
Posted 29 October 2002 - 04:35 AM
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
Posted 29 October 2002 - 05:55 AM
Larb is commonly made with Chicken, Beef or Pork. In the Pork version, little cubed peices of pork liver are also added.Seems to me, and I certainly could be, often am, wrong, but: Could the Cham Am larb have been made with beef? And not ground, but thinly thinly sliced? And lots of herbs? And could it have been more than a dozen years ago? Imagine, the places I went as a mere child!
Posted 29 October 2002 - 08:03 AM
Tommy, you're a genius, but the truth must be known!jasmine perhaps. i have a spice grinder. a mortar and pestle would probably work, although it would take a bit more effort. you don't need much, however.
Posted 29 October 2002 - 08:14 AM
my spice grinder works fine. and while we're telling the truth, i used some sort of indian rice because it's the only thing i had.Have they ever made a coffee grinder that's easy to clean?
Posted 29 October 2002 - 08:41 AM
Posted 29 October 2002 - 08:46 AM
rhea, does the rice flour offer the same texture as ground rice?I sometimes add thin cellophane noodles to larb. You pre-soak the noodles, cut them into short lengths and add to the meat while it's cooking. A shortcut to grinding your own rice powder is using glutinous rice flour (Mochiko). Once you toast the powder, it tastes almost exactly like the freshly ground and no messy coffee grinder.
Posted 29 October 2002 - 10:28 AM
Thank you for that, Jason. I am pretty sure, peering back, back, back, through the mists of history, that this was beef. And so so so good.Larb is commonly made with Chicken, Beef or Pork. In the Pork version, little cubed peices of pork liver are also added.
Seems to me, and I certainly could be, often am, wrong, but: Could the Cham Am larb have been made with beef? And not ground, but thinly thinly sliced? And lots of herbs? And could it have been more than a dozen years ago? Imagine, the places I went as a mere child!
Priscilla
OCFoodNation.com
Taste of Orange County, Orange Coast Magazine
In the Daily Gullet: Vegetables, in a Soup
Posted 29 October 2002 - 11:49 AM
It depends on how finely you grind your rice. I usually grind mine very fine, so it ends up the same as the rice flour. Asian markets also sell toasted rice powder and it's the same texture as the home-roasted rice flour but doesn't taste nearly as good. I use home-toasted rice flour in yam neua (sp?), larb and yum woon sen more for flavour than texture. How finely do you grind your rice?rhea, does the rice flour offer the same texture as ground rice?
Posted 29 October 2002 - 03:33 PM
Posted 11 November 2002 - 06:22 PM
Posted 11 November 2002 - 06:47 PM
Posted 12 November 2002 - 04:21 PM
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
Posted 16 November 2002 - 10:57 PM
texture is more important than following rules. rules are for tourists. nicely done.I guess it would ahve been more larb like if I crumbled it but I wanted to make the most of the crispy exterior and the silky smooth insides.
Posted 16 November 2002 - 11:21 PM
Posted 16 November 2002 - 11:23 PM
Posted 16 November 2002 - 11:34 PM
i think tofu is one of the most important aspects of pad thai, to use that dish to bolster our collective thought. when there's not enough, it is missed. when it's there, you find yourself enjoying the dish more (well, i do anyway).Meant to add that even people who profess to "hate" tofu seem to like the deep-fried version. Mouthfeel is exquistly contrasting.
Posted 18 November 2002 - 11:25 PM
Edited by snowangel, 18 November 2002 - 11:25 PM.
Posted 25 November 2002 - 03:33 PM
Edited by Blue Heron, 25 November 2002 - 03:37 PM.
Posted 25 November 2002 - 03:40 PM
Posted 25 November 2002 - 03:41 PM
Posted 25 November 2002 - 03:58 PM
We often ate this style of larb in small towns in northern Thailand. Rather than being mixed with what most people traditionally associate with larb (lime juice, peppers, cilantro, mint, shallots, etc.), this one is actually prepared with a paste that is somewhat akin to curry paste.at Lotus of Siam in Las Vegas last week, I had their "Northern Style" beef larb which is a drier and spicier kind of larb than the "Isaan" style that we eat more commonly in the US. It uses no lime juice at all, but a LOT more chiles, and and lot of mint and cilantro, as well as a lot of other stuff that I cannot easily identify. It does taste quite different.
Posted 25 November 2002 - 10:14 PM
Also, to my taste you can always improve a larb by adding thinly-sliced shallots rather than onion. Like most Thai salads, they key to great larb is seasoning it a lot--plenty of dressing, chiles, and rice powder. This is a really good larb neua recipe: http://www.recipesou...00/rec0054.html.