Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Vegetarian Laksa Lemak

In my opinion, if there's one thing that anyone who's lived in Singapore misses once they leave the place, its the food. Although there are some pretty good Thai and Malaysian restaurants in Atlanta, getting authentic Singapore fare is almost impossible.

Some of the best food in Singapore is not available in restaurants, but in hawker centers or food courts. For those unfamiliar with the concept, these are open air complexes, with numerous varieties of food stalls by independent vendors. Here is a picture of Newton Hawker Center in Singapore at 2am! Yes, that's another speciality of Singapore....the city never sleeps and people never stop feeling hungry.

Back when we were undergrads cramming the last week before our exams, we'd just walk down to Fong Seng, a popular NUS hangout on Pasir Panjang Road sometime around 2 or 3 am. Here's a pic of the place I found!! The place gets crowded only wayyy after midnight with everyone turning up for their supper. *Sigh* the good 'ol days!!!












Sorry for the digression, and back to my story. When I started working, I frequented this excellent vegetarian stall in Alexandra village. Every Thursday, the guy sold Laksa - not just any laksa, but one of the best I've had ever (the other was in Orchard Emerald, but sadly its closed down!). Traditionally Laksa Lemak or Curry Laksa contains shrimp, fish ball and chicken (among other things non-vegetarian), but the vendor used to substitute it with mock meat (not just the seitan kind) of everything.

Ever since I've come to Atlanta, I've looked hard for some quality mock meat, but only had moderate success at the Chamblee Farmers Market. Recently we went to this veg restaurant on Monroe called Green Sprouts and I mustered up courage to ask the guy where they got their mock meat from! Yea ...I do things like this and sometimes embarass K...but hey...it was definitely worth it! We found all that we wanted and could ask for at Ranch Market on Buford Highway (there...the secret is out!). K also got a stone mortar and pestle that he's been eyeing for a long time!! Well...the bargain was, he'd make Laksa for me...he kept his side of the bargain and that too very well! Here's K's own creation... Laksa Lemak!

Ingredients

Rempah (for the recipe...click here)
Sambal bajak to taste
3 cups veg stock
3 cups coconut milk (use a combi of normal and lite)
Mock chicken, fishballs and prawns
Deep fried tofu (cut in half to absorb the sauce…yum!)
Hard-boiled eggs - 2
Laksa leaves (aka Vietnamese mint – very important and crucial otherwise you don't get the flavor!)
Rice noodles
Bean spouts (not in the pic)
Salt and sugar to taste

Method

  • In some oil, fry the rempah paste until fragrant, oil separates and color deepens.
  • Add stock and bring to boil
  • Add coconut milk and simmer (The longer the better! )
  • Now add the mock chicken, fishballs, shrimp, fried tofu puffs, salt and sugar.
  • Bean sprouts should be put in 1 min before serving.
  • In a separate saucepan, bring water to boil and blanch the rice noodles until cooked and serve in serving bowl with a bit of sambal bajak. (if you cut the noodles into small spoon-able pieces, its called Katong Laksa)
  • Pour the laksa lemak over the noodles.
  • Garnish with finely chopped laksa leaves and halved boiled egg.
  • There you go....sedap di makan! (good to eat)






11 Responses:

Roopa said...

Hi Smitha
Your curry has a very nice color unlike mine. Waiting for your version

bye
roopa
www.recipeofchoice.wordpress.com

Coffee said...

I am a fan of Laksa!!!!!! Get it up soon!!! :)

BTW..... Nice blog! :)

FH said...

Delicious,can't wait for the recipe:)

Smitha said...

@ Roopa,
Thank you!! I was amazed myself at the rich color. It could be the fresh rempah or the sambal bajak. Do give it a try and see if that makes a difference

@ Coffee,
Oh...glad to meet a fellow Laksa fan! So which is your favorite Laksa haunt? Let me know if you think this recipe is upto the mark! ;). Keep visiting!

@ Ashaji,
I can't make up my mind whether to call you Asha'ji' or Asha, but since you're a GURU in the kitchen...from now on, it'll be Ashaji! Oh...I'm gonna try your jackfruit dosas this weekend :P

Anonymous said...

yyuuummmmmmm looks real neat :DDD and tht too wit the Tiger by its side ;))

Mandira said...

wow, this is delicious. I have to try this... what is sambal bajak?

Smitha said...

@prasad,
It would be incomplete without that added S'pore touch...esp for K. I'm not much of a beer drinker!

@Mandira,
Hey..thanks for the nice words! Sambal Bajak is a spice paste that has tomato paste, sauteed shallots, garlic and red chilies. You could try making it at home, or look for it in the malaysian/indonesian isle of your Asian market.

TBC said...

This dish is new to me. It looks delicious!

Anonymous said...

Hey,
I agree with you. It's hard to get mock meat like in SG. Also, the sort of food we were accustomed to SG. I miss all those heavenly DIVINE food now. And, this recipe from you now motivates me to look for the ingrediants and make laksa this weekend! Thanks, Dear.
Cheers,
Bugs

Anonymous said...

this looks really authentic! i'm currently in singapore for the holidays, but i'm going back to australia soon! so i'm looking for recipes to ease the homesickness when i'm there, and thank god i stumbled across your site! well done! :)

Haritha said...

Hey Smitha, that looks really yummy! But what do you mean by mock chicken etc.? We wanted to try this, but the egg and non veg are deterrents. Any way around it? You should put more recipes than just alluring pictures :( (recent-er blogs, I mean)