Green Papaya Salad Phuket Style

Green Papaya Salad Phuket Style
My late husband, Steve adored this salad to be very fiery hot. I prefer it somewhere less fiery than he did. He always grabbed the mortar and pestle to pound this salad gently just bruising to release flavours.

What makes this Phuket Style Som Tam so special is the local smoked dried shrimp which abound in markets in Phuket City. You can use good quality dried shrimp or even dry and smoke your own tiny shrimp in the shell.

This salad is especially wonderful with barbecue chicken (Gai Yang) or as a starter for a full Thai meal. I like using a large clay mortar with a wooden pestle that we bought in Thailand many years ago, but you can make it in a wooden salad bowl.

Green Papaya Salad Phuket Style (Som Tam)

Ingredients
3-6 garlic cloves, sliced
2-10 Thai chiles (prik kee noo or phrik chee fa) diced,*
1/2 cup long beans, cut into 2" pieces
2 Tbls. small dried smoked shrimp
1-2 tsp date palm sugar, to taste
Juice of 1-2 limes, to taste
1 1/2 cups unripe green papaya peeled, julienned
1-2 Tbs. fish sauce (nam plah), to taste
4-6 cherry tomatoes, cut in half
1 Tbs. chopped unsalted roasted peanuts

Place garlic and chiles into mortar and pound with pestle until the mixture forms a smooth paste.

Add the dried smoked shrimp and pound to break them up a bit. Add the date palm sugar, juice of 1 lime, the fish sauce and lightly mix with a spoon.

Add the julienned green papaya. Toss well with the seasonings. Then, pounding with one hand and stirring using the spoon in your other hand, lightly bruise the green papaya until it picks up all the flavorings and seasonings.

Taste and adjust the flavour as needed adding more fish sauce, lime juice or date palm sugar to a balanced flavour. Depending on your palate add additional chiles as this salad should be the hottest part of a Thai meal.

Add the tomatoes at the end, stir and bruise slightly to blend in with the rest of the salad. Place on a serving plate and sprinkle with peanuts.

Serves 2 with a side plate of raw vegetables, as desired for a full Thai meal. We often serve slices of cucumbers, wedges of cabbage, green onions, and tomatoes for a cooling effect as needed by dinners, and Boston lettuce leaves.

Garnish with all or any:
toasted chopped peanuts
sliced green onions
mint leaves
Thai basil leaves (bai Krapoa)

Green papaya is available in most Asian markets, or even already julienned green papaya is available in some Southeast Asian markets. Sometimes the already julienned papaya will contain some carrots-if so just omit the beans. If buying a whole green papaya-pick a firm shinny one. Peel, and julienne.

*Serramos are a good substitution if Thai chiles are not available


If serving as an entree: Serve with sticky rice.

Pointers:
Sprinkle the julienned papaya with salt, and let stand for half an hour, then squeeze and discard any liquid. I usually place the papaya between paper towels, twist to drain off the liquid.

The Isan style to eat this dish is place a small spoonful of the som tam in a lettuce leaf and eat out of hand. Then take a bite of sticky rice that you roll into a ball and eat. You alternate the sticky rice, som tom, cabbage, etc. Great finger food with beer on a hot day!





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This content was written by Mary-Anne Durkee. If you wish to use this content in any manner, you need written permission. Contact Mary-Anne Durkee for details.