5.0
(2)
Your folders
Your folders

Export 9 ingredients for grocery delivery
Step 1
In a saucepan, combine the fish sauce and coconut sugar and cook over low heat, stirring, until the sugar is melted and the sauce begins to thicken slightly. Remove from the heat and let the fish sauce syrup cool.
Step 2
Mortar and Pestle Method: Before you start throwing things in the mortar, arrange your mise en place in this order: garlic, chiles, green beans, carrot, green papaya, fish sauce syrup, lime juice, peanuts, and tomatoes. Hold the pestle in your dominant hand and a spoon in the other. Rather than pounding straight down, you’re going to push the pestle down the sides of the mortar. Throw in the garlic and pound until it becomes a rough, pulpy mash. Add the chiles—pound them heavily if you prefer it spicy, or gently if you want it less spicy. Add the green beans, carrots, and green papaya, bruising lightly with the pestle and mixing with the spoon for about 10 seconds between each addition. Add the lime juice and fish sauce syrup, pound, and mix for another 10 seconds. Add the peanuts and tomatoes and repeat. Everything in the mortar other than the chiles and garlic should be bruised but intact. Don’t overpound. If you want to mix a handful of other ingredients you can stir them in at this point, adjusting the seasoning as needed.
Step 3
Bowl Method: Combine the fish sauce syrup, lime juice, garlic, and chiles in a blender or food processor and blend until the garlic and chiles are totally pulverized. This is your som tum dressing and it can be refrigerated until you’re ready to make the salad. In a mixing bowl, combine the papaya, carrots, and dressing. Using your hands, stir, mix, and squeeze the shredded salad to infuse the dressing and mimic the bruising of the mortar and pestle. Lightly crush the peanuts and toss in, along with the tomatoes. Transfer the salad to a plate and serve with sticky rice.
Your folders

707 viewscooking.nytimes.com
5.0
(319)
Your folders
360 viewsen.wikipedia.org
Your folders

76 viewsepicurious.com
5.0
(4)
Your folders

57 viewscarolinescooking.com
Your folders
72 viewscarolinescooking.com
Your folders

239 viewsgourmettraveller.com.au
Your folders

199 viewsinternationalcuisine.com
5.0
(3)
Your folders

238 viewsgrantourismotravels.com
5.0
(1)
Your folders

62 viewsfeastingathome.com
5.0
(1)
Your folders

122 viewshealthiersteps.com
4.9
(15)
29 minutes
Your folders
79 viewshealthiersteps.com
Your folders

121 views101cookbooks.com
3.8
(6)
10 minutes
Your folders

409 viewstaste.com.au
5.0
(2)
10 minutes
Your folders

333 viewsdelicious.com.au
10 minutes
Your folders

247 viewsgourmettraveller.com.au
Your folders

413 viewsfoodandwine.com
Your folders

353 viewsrecipetineats.com
5.0
(29)
Your folders

297 viewsfeastingathome.com
4.8
(8)
20 minutes
Your folders

208 viewsasianfoodnetwork.com
5.0
(1)