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On Sat, 04 Jul 2009 21:25:07 +0200, FG wrote:
> Sqwertz wrote: >> This stuff comes in two forms: >> >> Bags: >> http://www.chotnho.com/showthread.php?t=12770 >> >> Plastic jar, frozen and (usually) shrinkwrapped: >> http://nhipcau.hatnang.com/index.php...ist/popup/2215 >> >> After decades of wondering what this stuff is every time I see it at >> the store, I finally bought some. The stuff is not cheap (6oz jar >> is $8). I'm guessing it's fermented, which would explain the color >> and packaging. What is it used for? > > the bag: > > ingredients: oceanic crab meat pure water. no mention anywhere that > it's fermented? > there's cooking instructions in the corner but the text is so small. > 'put crab meat and 500g water in cookpot...' Yeah - I saw that after I posted. But why is it brown and sludgy? I don't trust Asian ingredient lists at all. I thought maybe this was the same stuff, but that just says "crab meat", not whole crabs. So I guess that's something different. > i've seen something similar, which clearly states 'salted'. these > fiddler crabs are tiny, and cured/salted. has a peculiar taste and > smell so be aware. Nothing scares me, foodwise. I have a lot of fermented fish products in the fridge/pantry (mam ruoc, mam tom, mam nem, nuoc mam, belacan, kapi, fermented fish fillets in oil, dried/salted fish, several sambals made with terassi... (did I forget any?), but nothing made from crab. This will round out my repertoire. > delicious in som tom thai [lightly pounded with other > som tom ingredients]. or... mix the lightly crushed crabs well with > lots of lime juice, minced garlic, and pounded chilis, and sliced star > fruits. eaten with cool [as in not piping hot] rice and other little > sides. salted crabs are eaten more in rural thailand/cambodia/southern > vietnam. OK, thanks. I think I saw one of these plastic jars inidcating it was mangrove crab (which I think is the same as mud crab and maybe fiddler). I was wondering about the Vietnamese preps mostly, but I'm sure there's enough here to try everything suggested ;-) -sw |
Posted to alt.food.asian,rec.food.cooking
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![]() "Sqwertz" > wrote in message ... > On Sat, 04 Jul 2009 21:25:07 +0200, FG wrote: > >> Sqwertz wrote: >>> This stuff comes in two forms: >>> >>> Bags: >>> http://www.chotnho.com/showthread.php?t=12770 >>> >>> Plastic jar, frozen and (usually) shrinkwrapped: >>> http://nhipcau.hatnang.com/index.php...ist/popup/2215 >>> >>> After decades of wondering what this stuff is every time I see it at >>> the store, I finally bought some. The stuff is not cheap (6oz jar >>> is $8). I'm guessing it's fermented, which would explain the color >>> and packaging. What is it used for? >> >> the bag: >> >> ingredients: oceanic crab meat pure water. no mention anywhere that >> it's fermented? >> there's cooking instructions in the corner but the text is so small. >> 'put crab meat and 500g water in cookpot...' > > Yeah - I saw that after I posted. But why is it brown and sludgy? > I don't trust Asian ingredient lists at all. I thought maybe this > was the same stuff, but that just says "crab meat", not whole crabs. > So I guess that's something different. > >> i've seen something similar, which clearly states 'salted'. these >> fiddler crabs are tiny, and cured/salted. has a peculiar taste and >> smell so be aware. > > Nothing scares me, foodwise. > > I have a lot of fermented fish products in the fridge/pantry (mam > ruoc, mam tom, mam nem, nuoc mam, belacan, kapi, fermented fish > fillets in oil, dried/salted fish, several sambals made with > terassi... (did I forget any?), but nothing made from crab. This > will round out my repertoire. > >> delicious in som tom thai [lightly pounded with other >> som tom ingredients]. or... mix the lightly crushed crabs well with >> lots of lime juice, minced garlic, and pounded chilis, and sliced star >> fruits. eaten with cool [as in not piping hot] rice and other little >> sides. salted crabs are eaten more in rural thailand/cambodia/southern >> vietnam. > > OK, thanks. I think I saw one of these plastic jars inidcating it > was mangrove crab (which I think is the same as mud crab and maybe > fiddler). > Mangrove Crabs, sometimes called mud crabs are large members of the swimming crab family, with a pair of flippers in place of the last set of legs. The US East Coast Blue Claws are representative of this group. Fiddlers are walking crabs and completely different, not to mention quite small by comparison. M. |
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