The first time I made this peanut sauce, I omitted one of the ingredients, the
Red Curry Paste.
There is a recipe for the red curry paste, but it calls for about 12 ingredients, including
shrimp paste and lemongrass. And, only 2 tablespoons of the paste is needed for the peanut sauce. There are other recipes, but they call for about a dozen, similar ingredients, or require even more preparation. This one includes some good alternative ingredients, such as the peanut butter,
brown sugar, and lime juice.
I had doubled the recipe, to make sure there was enough sauce.
Also, there are prepared peanut
dipping sauces sold at the Asian markets, but they don't seem to taste very good. We tried one of the jar versions, and it was pretty blah. Not to mention, it can be expensive, especially the ones found at stores like Safeway. It's pretty easy to make this.
The other day at an Asian market, we were finally able to locate a tin of red curry paste.
Last time we tried looking for it in the jarred sauce section of a market, but didn't find it. Instead, it was in the aisle with the dried pickles, salt, pepper, and other spices. So, if you want to add some spiciness to the sauce, you can use the prepared red curry paste from the market.
Spicy Peanut Sauce1/2 cup coconut milk2 tablespoons Red Curry Paste
1/2 cup chunky-style peanut butter
1/2 cup chicken stock
3 tablespoons
palm sugar or brown sugar
2 tablespoons Tamarind Liquid or freshly squeezed lime juice
1 tablespoon fish sauce1/2 teaspoon salt
To prepare the sauce, warm the coconut milk in a small saucepan over medium heat.
Stirring occasionally, heat the milk until it reaches a gentle boil and tiny beads of oil glisten on the surface, about 5 minutes.
Add the curry paste and stir occasionally until it dissolves into the coconut milk and releases its fragrance, about 3 minutes.
Add the peanut butter, chicken stock, and sugar and cook gently until the sauce is smooth, about 5 minutes.
Remove from the heat and season with tamarind, fish sauce, and salt.
Taste and adjust for a pleasing balance of sweet, sour, and salty.
Cool to room temperature.
Thai cooks make their own coarsely ground unsalted peanut butter.
To make your own, dry-fry raw peanuts or toast them in the oven until browned, then pound and grind them to a coarse paste in a mortar with a pestle.
For the
satay sauce, make the sauce up to the point where you add the tamarind, fish sauce, and salt.
Cover and refrigerate the cooled sauce for up to 1 day.
At serving time, warm it very gently, add the seasonings, and serve warm or at room temperature.