Mouthful

What in the world are you eating?

How to make satay

19 August 2009 | 15:02 - By Phil Lees


After last week's repeat of the Malaysian Food Safari, I thought that I'd run through a recipe to show it can be done at home. Malaysian food feels like cheating to me: it tends to influence most of the curries and stir-fries that I subsist on. Then I found this on the SBS satay recipe:

This receipe [sic] failed to progress past the marinade. No quantities are given for almost all of the ingredients and an attempt at guessing quantities provided an unsavory flavour. Also, there isn't a media clip to review the cooking process which may have helped. The one star rating should be negative but this system won't allow a 'no rate' or 'negative rate'

Glenys of Wesleigh on SBS Food's satay recipe.

Glenys, I feel your pain.

The hard part about transcribing most recipes out in the field is that it is rare for many home-cooked foods to have recipes. People tend to know a recipe for satay off by heart and seem to have lost the belief that there is any accuracy to the way that they roughly combine spices and herbs. It takes practice and knowing the right flavour profile for it all to come together.

Satay is also a food that you would pick up in the street in Kuala Lumpur, cooked over coals along a narrow grill that could easily double as a piece of guttering for a roof. You would not necessarily cook it at home at all.

Here is my take on the SBS recipe:

Ingredients

600gm Chicken, skinned chicken thighs into long strip; or beef

Wooden skewers

Marinade

1 stalk lemongrass, chopped
50gm white onions, chopped
3 cloves garlic
1 tsp turmeric powder or 3cm sized piece of fresh turmeric root, skinned
1/2 tbsp ground cumin
1/2 tbsp coriander seeds
1 tsp ground cinammon
1 tsp salt
1/2 cup of white sugar
3 tablespoons of oil

Sauce:

3 tablespoons peanut butter
1 tablespoon peanuts, deep fried and ground

Method:

In a blender, blend lemongrass, onion, garlic, turmeric, cumin, cinnamon, salt and coriander seeds to a fine paste. Alternately, pound in a mortar and pestle, starting with dry/hard ingredients (coriander seeds/salt) and moving through to the wet (lemongrass/garlic/onions).

Add the and oil. Mix then set aside 2 tablespoons of the marinade for the sauce.

Pour remaining marinade over chicken pieces, cover and leave for 1-2 hrs in the refrigerator


Thread chicken onto skewers. Cook on a barbecue over hot coals, turning frequently.

For the sauce:

In a frypan, add the marinade that you set aside (NOT the marinade from the chicken) and fry with a little oil for a minute or two until you can smell the fragrance of the marinade. Add the peanut butter and peanuts. Cook for 10 minutes until sauce thickens. Taste and season if necessary. If the sauce is too thick, add a little more oil and peanut butter.

Share article: 
top

Comments (1)

23 Aug 2009 22:41 AEST

Eurasian Sensation

From: Murrumbeena

You are missing hotness and acidity

Let me say up front that I'm Indonesian rather than Malaysian, so obviously I have a different take on the recipe. But satay sauce as I know it always needs a little acidity for balance. Usually its lime or lemon juice, but tamarind water is also viable. Kecap manis (sweet soya sauce) is also a common ingredient. Secondly, where's the chili? It's essential. For a twist, try adding a couple of shredded kaffir lime leaves to the peanut sauce. The result is not authentic but brilliant nonetheless

Agree (1 people agree)    Disagree (1 people disagree) Report this
 

Join the discussion

You have characters remaining.
Validation (
) :
This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots.

PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.

About this Blog

A blog about what the world eats, when and where it eats it, and why it matters to us all. Only much less ambitious than that sounds and with more excruciating puns.

Phil Lees grew up in rural Victoria, the first generation in his family to not have lived on the farm and thereby not slaughter their own meat.

In 2005 he moved to Cambodia and started the nation’s first food blog, Phnomenon.com, named after the best pun that he has ever made. It turns out that Cambodian food is delicious and unlike the warnings in most guidebooks, is not likely to kill you with any immediacy. Gridskipper called him a “national treasure”. Lonely Planet’s Greater Mekong guide called him “the unofficial pimp of Cambodian cuisine”. The New York Times laughed at a funny hotdog he saw.

Phil makes a mean sausage, a hoppy pale ale, a modest laksa. He owns three barbecues and is in the market for a fourth.

 
ADVERTISEMENT