Amok Trey
Cambodia's national dish, the centrepiece of any Khmer feast and the proper-occasion food across the country
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Cambodia's national dish, the centrepiece of any Khmer feast and the proper-occasion food across the country
A Caribbean-Southern crossover that works because both traditions cook in a similar register: butter, peppers, alliums…
Beef (or goat, or prawns) parboils briefly
A filling of minced pork and chopped prawn binds with coriander root (pounded with garlic and white pepper into the…
Kung pao (gongbao) shrimp is the seafood cousin of the classic Sichuan gongbao jiding, named for the 19th-century…
Ganguo, literally "dry pot", is the dry sister of hotpot
A platter built around fragrant coconut and lemongrass rice, served with a fiery sambal of dried anchovies and…
Bone-in goat (or chicken or catfish, fish takes much less time) simmers in lightly salted water with onion, garlic…
Prik king paste fries hard in oil until aromatic and the oil splits
"Adrak" is Hindi for ginger, and this curry treats the root not just as a base aromatic (where it normally sits in…
A Madras lives or dies by balance
Pathia traces back to Parsi home cooking, where the sweet-sour-spicy triad — usually balanced with jaggery, vinegar or…
Rogan josh ("oily red") comes from Kashmir, where the original is a slow-cooked Wazwan dish of lamb in a deeply spiced…
South Indian cooking leans heavily on the sour register — tamarind, kokum, curd, and lime do work that yoghurt and…
The British curry-house vindaloo descends from Goan vindalho (which itself came from Portuguese carne de vinha d'alhos)…
The trinity (onion, celery, green pepper) softens in butter; garlic, Creole seasoning and herbs join