Kai Kua Sauce: A Mystery in 3 Acts
- February 23rd, 2010
- Posted in kai kua recipe
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I’ve so far tried three different sauces in order to replicate the awesomeness of the sauce I had with my virgin kaikua experience.
And so far I’ve failed three times.
Here they are:
the first was a recipe for a savory thai garlic sauce I found online. It goes like this:
1. savory Thai garlic sauce recipe:
1/3 cup chicken broth
1 teaspoon rice wine vinegar
2 tablespoons light soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
1 teaspoon chili paste (sambal oelek) (optional)
1 tablespoon dry sherry or sake
1 1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil
9 cloves garlic, minced
1 1/2 teaspoons minced ginger
10 Thai chiles, stemmed and left whole (optional)
1 tablespoon cornstarch
3 tablespoons water
In a small bowl, mix together chicken broth, vinegar, soy sauce, sesame oil, chili paste, garlic, and sherry; set aside.
In another small bowl or cup, stir together the tbsp of cornstarch with the 3 tbsp of water and set aside.
Stir the first bowl in with the cooked ingredients, cook for a minute, then stir in the corn starch bowl.
conclusion: this sauce, comprised largely of chicken broth with small minority stakes of soy, fish, and oyster sauces was pretty much flavorless. If anything, I’ double if not treble the soy fish and oyster sauces on my next attempt.
2. guay teow pad se-iew sauce:
1 garlic clove, minced
1 egg, beaten
1 tb cornstarch / cornflour
1 tb wine
1 tb fish sauce (nam pla)
1 tb oyster sauce
1 tb sugar
1 ts oriental sesame oil
1/2 ts white pepper
Mix together all the ingredients and stir into cooked ingredients.
Conclusion: way too sweet, for one thing. but also largely flavorless. Plus, the egg in the sauce really threw the cosistency of my kai kua. Next time, I’d skip the sugar, go heavier on the oyster and fish sauces, heavier on the salt, and skip the egg.
3. Off the Cuff
For the third sauce I thought I’d just wing it and see if I could do any better going with my instinct. Amounts are complete guesses.
3 TB oyster sauce
3 TB fish sauce
3 TB soy.
1 TB garlic
1/3 cup chx broth.
Conclusion: this was in my opinion the best sauce, though my wife thought it overpowered the ingredients. I agree qualifiedly: I think that I’ve been overdoing the soy, which has been giving the kai kua the darker cast than I’ve had in restaurants. Instead of soy next time I’m just going straight for the salt (this is, btw, what I’ve seen in thai cooking video tutorials, it just seemed kinda blasphemous).
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