Recipe

SPICY GREEN PAPAYA SALAD (Som Tum)
Ingredients
- 1 cup Napa cabbage sliced horizontally (across) into thin ribbons
- 1 cup carrots grated with medium sized grater
- 2 cups green papaya grated or cut into long, thin matchsticks (or using Kiwi Pro Slicer)
- 9 green beans cut into thin matchstick-sized strips and then into 2 inch lengths
- 6 cherry tomatoes cut into quarters lengthwise
- ¼ cup cilantro chopped
- ¼ cup peanuts dry roasted and crushed
- 2-3 large garlic cloves minced or pressed
- 4-5 fresh Thai chiles top removed*
- 3 tablespoons fish sauce soy sauce or tamari (if gluten free)
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- Juice of 1 small lime freshly squeezed
Instructions
- Combine cabbage, carrots, green papaya and green beans in a bowl and toss.
- Add garlic to mortar (hard cup like receptacle used to mash or grind by hand with a pestle, the rounded stick), mash into a paste with pestle.
- Add the de-stemmed whole chilies to the mortar. Mash them until the outside of chile is paper thin and the contents of the chiles have been released from the skin. Remove the chile skins*, scraping off any pulp or seeds into the mortar.
- Add fish sauce/soy sauce/tamari, sugar and lime juice to the mortar. Stir to dissolve sugar and fully combine dressing.
- Pour dressing over the greens and toss to combine. When serving place tomatoes, some cilantro and peanuts on the top of the salad.
Alli says
The Kiwi slicer is such a great invention…I must get one asap! Loved the green papaya addition to the salad…looks so refreshing!
Mario says
The salad looks incredible. The photos are spectacular. The spicy chile is….well HOT! Great post.
Monique says
You definitely found your inspiration on this; outstanding swap. And I can't wait to find one of these pro slicers- looks like it could take the place of my often used mandolin in many instances!
Karen Harris says
Interesting post! I had no idea that you couldn't leave Thailand with the image of Buddha. The cocktail looks delicious good as does your salad. Beautiful photos.
Personally I love digging through old cookbooks and updating the recipes. I recently found a couple of unused Better Homes and Gardens Cookbooks from 1962 so I bought them both. So much fun using the recipes as inspiration for new ones.
kita says
This post was awesome! As far as uninspired recipes go, I would say you made the best of things. I love the salad – the ingredients- the new kitchen gadget I must find and reading about your adventures through Bangkok.
Boulder Locavore says
Thanks all for your generous comments!
Jacqueline: I DID follow through and turn the Buddha over to the requesting friend. 'Painful' would not begin to describe the hand off!
Anonymous: See above; sadly no photo to share! I will say every time I look at a Thai Buddha I hear Yeo's voice critiquing the physicality of it! I learned a lot.
Barb: There are Buddhas in many Asian countries and they all are handled differently. In Thailand many of the Buddha’s have artifacts sealed inside them. Also this one was an antique so that may be the nature of it. When my Buddha was delivered it had been excavated as there was a patch. This import regulation may have changed or really only be for notably older Buddhas which could house treasures considered ‘holy’.
Toni (BL)
Anonymous says
please post a photo of the perfect buddha!!
Carolyn says
Sorry your recipe exchange left you feeling uninspired…but I think you did something delicious that was still within the spirit of the original dish. And bring on the cocktails!
Barbara | Creative Culinary says
I love the transition from hot to heat…and one I might have tried as well but you know my story and I'm sticking to it.
Love the story of the Buddha and learned something as well. Does make me wonder how Buddha's find their way here for sale. Could you find that out please? 🙂
Colleen says
I can't wait to try this. The pictures are inspiring me – once I got over laughing about the X's on the eyes of the muse like a cartoon character!! Thank you so much for the perfect dish for transitioning from summer into fall with style and panache.