Burmese Meat Curry |
The process is pretty simple and all the ingredients are readily available. Pieces of meat are marinated in a coarse paste of onions, garlic, tomatoes and paprika or soaked dried chilies. I used a pressure cooker to tenderize the meat for half an hour, but it can also be simmered on the stovetop for 2 hours. If a pressure cooker is used, it should be removed from the heat and left undisturbed (after the half hour of cooking) to de-pressurize naturally, which takes 15-20 minutes. After all the steam dissipates and depending on how much liquid remains, the curry needs to be simmered to reduce the gravy until the oil resurfaces.
Ingredients
2 lbs. beef, lamb or pork, cut into bite-size pieces
1/2 tsp. turmeric powder
1 tsp. paprika or chili powder
1 Tbsp. fish sauce
salt to taste
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1 large onion, peeled and sliced
1 large onion, peeled and quartered
8-10 garlic cloves, peeled
1 large tomato, diced
2 green chilies, minced
1/2 tsp. roasted and ground cumin seeds
1/2 tsp. sugar or to taste
1 handful cilantro, minced
2 cups water
Directions
- Rinse meat thoroughly until water runs clear.
- Bring water to a boil and blanch quartered onion and garlic for 4 minutes until softened.
- Drain onions and garlic, leaving blanching liquid to simmer over low heat for later use.
- Using a blender or mortar and pestle, make a coarse paste of blanched onions and garlic, tomatoes, green chilies and sugar.
- Stir fish sauce, turmeric powder, paprika powder and cumin powder into paste and rub paste into meat pieces.
- Add half the oil to meat, mix thoroughly and set aside.
- Place pressure cooker or skillet over medium-high heat.
- Add oil and fry sliced onions until translucent.
- Add marinated meat and stir well to combine.
- Stir-fry for 8 - 10 minutes to lightly sear the meat.
- Add simmering liquid and stir.
- Bring to a boil, cover and cook over medium-high heat for 5 minutes.
- If using a pressure cooker, reduce heat to medium and simmer for 25 minutes, remove from heat and de-pressurize naturally. Remove cover and simmer for 15 minutes or until oil resurfaces.
- If cooking on stovetop in a skillet, reduce heat to medium-low and simmer for 2 hours or until meat is soft and oil resurfaces. Stir periodically to prevent gravy from sticking to the bottom of skillet.
- Adjust salt to taste, remove from heat and garnish with cilantro.
Best served over a mound of hot, steamed rice.
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