Chefs' Recipes

Dandelion: Sour fish soup with elephant ear stem, tamarind and pineapple

Australian Gourmet Traveller recipe for Dandelion's sour fish soup with elephant ear stem, tamarind and pineapple.
Dandelion: Sour fish soup with elephant ear stem, tamarind and pineapple

Dandelion: Sour fish soup with elephant ear stem, tamarind and pineapple

Sharyn Cairns
4
20M
20M
40M

Ingredients

Fried garlic

Method

Main

1.For fried garlic, heat oil in a small saucepan to 160C, add garlic and stir continuously until golden (1-2 minutes), then remove garlic with a slotted spoon and drain on absorbent paper (hot oil can be reserved for another use).
2.Heat canola oil in a saucepan over low heat, add onion and stir continuously until tender (2-3 minutes), add lemongrass and star anise and stir occasionally until fragrant (2-3 minutes). Add pineapple, tamarind liquid, fish sauce, sugar, 3 tsp sea salt and 1.25 litres water and bring to the simmer, then simmer to combine flavours (1 minute).
3.Heat a large non-stick frying pan over high heat, brush lightly with vegetable oil, then add snapper skin-side down and cook until golden (2-4 minutes). Turn and cook until just cooked (1 minute).
4.Strain tamarind broth into a clean saucepan, add okra and baby corn and simmer over high heat until tender (2 minutes), add tomatoes and elephant ear stems and simmer until tender (1 minute).
5.Divide bean sprouts among four large warmed bowls, top with vegetables from the broth, then snapper fillets. Pour broth over, top with rice paddy herb and fried garlic and serve hot.

Rice paddy herb, known in Vietnamese as ngo om, is available from Vietnamese grocers, as is elephant ear stem. If rice paddy herb is unavailable, you can substitute Vietnamese mint.

This recipe is from the September 2011 issue of

.

Drink Suggestion: 2010 Frankland Estate Smith Cullum Riesling. Drink suggestion by Grant Van Every

Notes

Related stories




crêpes Suzette in a cast iron pan with candied orange peel and sauce with flames
Chefs' Recipes

Crêpes Suzette

Prolific restaurateur and chef ANDREW MCCONNELL shares his take on the French classic that sets hearts (and crêpes) on fire at Melbourne’s Gimlet.