- Prep time
- 0:30
- Cook time
- 3:00
- Skill level
- Medium
- Serves
- 10
A hot dish, great for a winter's night.
Ingredients
Spice paste
5 dried red chillies
5 fresh long red chillies
2 habanero chillies if you like your heat
225g onions or shallots, roughly chopped
8 fat garlic cloves, roughly chopped
70g peeled fresh ginger, roughly chopped
Curry
50g shaved dried (not desiccated) coconut, lightly toasted
2 fat lemongrass stalks
70g piece tamarind pulp
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
3 x 5cm cinnamon stick pieces
3 star anise
6 cloves
12 green cardamom pods, lightly bruised
1.5kg oyster blade, cleaned and cut into 5cm chunks
800ml coconut milk
50g palm sugar
2 kaffir lime leaves
Salt to taste for seasoning
Method
To make the spice paste, put dried chillies in a bowl, just cover with boiling water and soak for 30 minutes. Place into a food processor with remaining paste ingredients and process until smooth.
Heat a heavy-based frying pan over a medium heat. Add grated coconut and stir for a few minutes until golden. Remove from pan and cool.
Cut off and discard the top half of each lemongrass stalk. Lightly bruise the remainder with a rolling pin.
Put tamarind pulp into a small bowl and add 100ml of hot water. Work pulp with your fingers until it has broken down and the seeds have been released. Strain through a sieve into another bowl and set aside.
Heat oil in a large, heavy-based pan or flameproof casserole dish over a medium heat. Add cinnamon, star anise, cloves and cardamom and fry gently until fragrant.
Add spice paste and fry for two to three minutes more until mixture smells fragrant.
Add beef, coconut milk, sugar, kaffir lime leaves, toasted coconut, bruised lemongrass stalks, tamarind water and salt.
Bring to the boil, reduce heat and leave to simmer uncovered for two and a half to three hours (remove the kaffir lime leaves after an hour), stirring occasionally at first, then stir more gently and frequently towards the end of cooking, to prevent it sticking on the base of the pan.
Eventually, the sauce reduces so much it clings to the meat. Adjust palm sugar and salt to taste and serve with steamed jasmine rice.