Kare Ikan (Fish Curry)
Submitted by Concha
Kare Ikan, an Indonesian fish curry simmered in coconut milk, tamarind and a fragrant spice paste of lemongrass, turmeric, ginger and chili. Finished with cool cucumber and fresh mint.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
30 minREADY
45 minKare Ikan is Indonesia’s take on fish curry, a pot that balances three things at once: the richness of coconut milk, the sour tang of tamarind, and a low, smoldering chili heat.
The fish gets browned on its own first so it firms up and won’t break apart later. Meanwhile a fragrant base of shallots, onion, and garlic fries down before the dry spices go in: turmeric, coriander, ginger, lemongrass, and a salam leaf for that distinctly Indonesian perfume.
Save the coconut milk for the very end and let it warm through gently. Boil it hard and it splits into a greasy, grainy mess.
Then the trick that makes the dish sing: the cooling crunch of thin cucumber slices and a scatter of fresh mint, cutting right through the rich curry.
Chef Tips
- Brown the fish separately and only briefly. It finishes cooking in the sauce, so you don’t want to cook it through twice.
- Add the coconut milk last and keep it at a bare simmer. A rolling boil will curdle it.
- No tamarind on hand? A squeeze of lime brings a similar sour note, though less deep.
- Choose a firm fish like swordfish or salmon that holds its shape in the simmering curry.
Variations
- Make it with prawns instead, cooking them right in the spice base without browning first.
- Stir the cucumber and mint into the pot for the last two minutes for a softer, melded finish.
- Add a halved tomato or a handful of green beans to bulk it out into a fuller meal.
Ingredients
Directions
Heat a little oil in a heavy frying-pan, and carefully brown the fish in it.
Meanwhile, in another frying-pan, fry the chopped shallots (or onion) and garlic until tender.
Stir in the chilli, ginger, turmeric, coriander, lemon grass, salam, salt and tamarind water.
Let this mixture simmer for 10 minutes, then put in the fish.
Cover, and simmer for another 10 minutes.
Add the santen and cook for a further 5 minutes.
Serve hot, garnished with very thin slices of cucumber and chopped mint.
(Alternatively, put the cucumber and mint into the kare itself for the last 2 minutes of cooking.)
Incidentally, the same kare can be made with prawns.
There is no need to fry the prawns separately; but fry them in the mixture of onion, etcetera for a few minutes before you put in the tamarind water.
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