Pok Pok – Khao Man Som Tam

  4.5 – 4 reviews  • Fruit
Level: Advanced
Total: 2 hr 30 min
Active: 45 min
Yield: 2 to 4 servings, with leftovers

Ingredients

  1. One 5-ounce portion Muu Waan Sweet Pork, recipe follows
  2. One 5-ounce scoop Coconut Rice, packed flat, recipe follows
  3. 1/2 order Papaya Pok Pok, recipe follows
  4. 1 cabbage wedge, shredded
  5. 1 tablespoon shallots, fried
  6. 1 small handful cilantro, picked
  7. One 12-pound pork butt
  8. 2 cups sweet soy
  9. 2 cups thin soy
  10. 2 tablespoons medium-fine ground white pepper
  11. One 16-ounce package palm sugar, such as Golden Chef
  12. 7 to 8 cups water
  13. 1 3/4 cups (14 ounces) Fresh Coconut Milk, recipe follows
  14. 6 tablespoons superfine sugar
  15. 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  16. 8 cups jasmine rice, rinsed with 1/4 teaspoon lime paste and drained
  17. 10 to 12 cups water
  18. 2 1/2 cups coconut cream
  19. 9 tablespoons superfine sugar
  20. 3 teaspoons kosher salt
  21. 12 cups jasmine rice, rinsed with 1/4 teaspoon lime paste, drained
  22. 3 to 6 chiles, coarsely chopped
  23. 3 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped
  24. 1 packed scoop palm sugar
  25. 6 to 8 dried shrimp, washed
  26. 8 to 10 long beans, cut into 2-inch pieces
  27. 1 1/2 ounces dressing, your choice
  28. 1 cup (about 1 white rice bowl) loosely packed shredded papaya
  29. 6 to 8 halves cherry tomato
  30. 1 heaping tablespoon chopped roasted peanuts

Instructions

  1. Heat the Muu Waan Sweet Pork in microwave for 1 minute 15 seconds in a shallow microwavable dish. Put a scoop of rice on a medium oval plate. Put the cabbage on one end of the oval and put the Papaya Pok Pok salad next to or on top of the cabbage. Put Muu Waan Sweet Pork on top of the rice in a strip and garnish with shallots and cilantro. Repeat with remaining ingredients.
  2. Clean the excess fat and gristle from the pork butt and cut it into 1-inch thick pieces. Cut along the grain of meat so that long strands will form when the meat is shredded. Marinate the pork pieces in sweet soy. Put the pork in a rondeau, or another round straight-walled pan. Add the remaining ingredients and bring to a boil over medium heat. Lower the heat, cover the pot and cook slowly until pork is almost tender. Turn the heat to high and reduce the liquid until relatively dry, leaving more of a glaze than a liquid. Roughly shred the pork with a stiff whisk and spatula. Do not wait until pork is already falling apart to reduce the liquid. This will produce a dry and tough product. If the pork is accidentally cooked all the way before reducing the liquid, remove the meat from liquid and reduce separately, then return the meat to the pot.
  3. Adjust water amount according to the newness of the rice (if the rice is newer then less water will be required). In a rice cooker, combine the water, coconut milk or coconut cream, sugar and salt and mix until the sugar and salt are dissolved. Add the drained rice, and mix thoroughly, making sure the rice is level in the cooker. Cook the rice according to the cooker instructions. 
  4. Fresh Coconut Milk: Thaw grated coconut. Remove the coconut from the bags, and add to a large bowl. Add 3 cups water per 16-ounce bag of grated coconut. Allow to sit until the water is absorbed, about 1/2 hour. Press the coconut twice through a fine strainer, using the milk from the first pressing to moisten the coconut again, then strain for the last time.
  5. Smash the chiles, garlic and palm sugar in a mortar and pestle until the garlic is well ground; do this firmly but not violently. Add the shrimp, mash lightly and then add the long beans. Smash them gently, just to break them up. Add the dressing and the papaya. Combine the ingredients thoroughly without mashing the papaya. Add the tomatoes and crush to release their juices. Stir in the peanuts and combine well. The taste should be sour, salty, sweet and spicy in good balance. The texture should be crunchy and slightly pink in color. Make no more than two servings at a time!

Reviews

Douglas Barker
You can find the complete recipe from the newly published Pok Pok Cookbook on our site along with the Andy-approved ingredients.
Amber Miller
Yummy spices.
Justin Cooper
Good. directions are very “sketchy” and loose. I had to read several other recipes to patch this together. Assumes too much and directs too little. I’m pretty sure that a type of dressing could have been suggested by the author also. But, I would make it again.

 

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