Coconut Fish Curry II

Coconut Fish Curry is a modern Fusion recipe for a Thai-inspired curry of fish in a coconut cream gravy with lemongrass that can be cooked on a braai (barbecue) and which I often prepare for Good Friday. The full recipe is presented here and I hope you enjoy this classic Fusion version of: Coconut Fish Curry.

prep time

15 minutes

cook time

15 minutes

Total Time:

30 minutes

Serves:

4

Rating: 4.5 star rating

Tags : CurryChilli RecipesSpice RecipesFusion RecipesFusion Recipes


This is a Thai-inspired curry that I typically cook on a braai (barbecue) here the original recipe has been adapted to be prepared and served on Good Friday.

Ingredients:

1 tbsp vegetable oil
1 onion, finely chopped
thumb-sized piece ginger, finely grated
3 garlic cloves, crushed
1 tsp shrimp paste
2 birds’ eye red chilli, shredded (reduce by half, deseeded and remove the membranes if you don't like it too hot)
2 lemongrass stalks, split, then bruised with a rolling pin
1 tbsp (heaped) medium curry powder
1 heaped tbsp light muscovado sugar
small bunch coriander, stems finely chopped
400g (14 oz) tin coconut milk
450g (1 lb) skinless hake fillets, cut into rectangles, roughly credit card size
225g (8 oz) king prawns (fresh or frozen)
1 lime, halved

Method:

Heat the oil in a wide, lidded frying pan, then add the onions and soften for 5 mins. Increase the heat a little, stir in the ginger, garlic, shrimp paste, chilli and lemongrass, and cook for 2 minutes.

Add the curry powder and sugar, and keep stirring. When the sugar starts to melt and everything starts to clump together, add the coriander stems, coconut milk and 2 tbsp water, then bring everything to a simmer.

Add the fish to the sauce, tuck the prawns in here and there, then squeeze over half the lime. Pop on the lid and simmer for 5 minutes more or until the hake is just cooked and flaking, and the prawns are pink through.

Taste for seasoning (sweet, salty and sour), adding a squeeze more lime to the sauce if you like. Scatter over the coriander leaves and serve accompanied with rice.