These miniature cakes are created using a golden pound cake recipe that is fairly straightforward and consistently delicious. To the batter, you can add chocolate chips or anything else.
Prep Time: | 20 mins |
Total Time: | 20 mins |
Servings: | 6 |
Ingredients
- 3 cloves garlic, peeled
- 3 Thai green chiles
- 6 green beans, cut into 1-inch pieces
- 1 large unripe papaya, peeled and cut into thin strips
- 1 tomato, halved and seeded
- 2 tablespoons fish sauce
- 2 tablespoons lime juice
- 1 teaspoon palm sugar
- 2 tablespoons finely chopped unsalted, dry-roasted peanuts
Instructions
- Combine garlic, chiles, and green beans in a mortar and pound roughly with the pestle. Add papaya and pound again to bruise the ingredients. Stir in fish sauce, lime juice, and sugar, then pound again. Add tomato and pound to combine. Stir in chopped peanuts and serve.
- You can use brown sugar instead of palm sugar. Soy sauce can be substituted for fish sauce, although that will change the flavor of the salad slightly.
- If you don’t have a mortar and pestle, you can make a version of this in your blender or food processor. Coarsely chop garlic, chiles, and green beans. Mix in papaya and pulse a few times. Mix in tomato, fish sauce, lime juice, and sugar. Pulse to combine; salad should still have texture. Transfer to a serving dish and stir in peanuts.
Reviews
Taste just like the Thai restaurants!
My favorite salad. I use 2 Thai chili peppers and its perfect spice. A few extras peanuts is. The topping
The bitterness of the green papaya overwhelmed the other ingredients.
Very good
We live in the Pacific Islands I love Green Papaya salads. I am forced to substitute Red Peppers for tomatoes. This is a very easy and fun salad and it looks wonderful. We use fresh Basil also which is really Thai traditional. Lovely salad. I may try it as written when or if I reach the states
Note: Make sure you get the fish sauce that has a clear golden look to it (ex. Squid Brand). Also, Asian food stores sell the small mortar (get clay) & pestal (wooden) for around 5-10 dollars (great to use for all spices, plus it looks great in your kitchen…). I dont recommend using food processor, but to use mortar & pestal for garlic smashing and to bruise 12 halved cherry tomatoes. The salad will have a better texture if you just peel the papaya, then cut in half, lay it cut side down and use a julienne peeler so you have nice, long pieces of papaya in your salad. Referring back to the fish sauce – I accidentally purchased the fish sauce that is Greyish/Cloudy looking, and it was absolutely inedible. I spoke to my friend that turned me on to this salad (she’s Thai) and she said that the fish sauce I purchased was more for the authentic Vietnamese cooked dishes. It will ruin your salad, so be very cautious.
I had green papaya salad recently while visiting Hawaii. There, it was fantastic. I looked at this recipe and thought it sounded the same. I didn’t like it at all. Maybe my papaya was too ripe. The fish sauce was definitely too much. I’ll try to make it again, but next time, I’ll make the salad as soon as I buy the fruit.
Great salad. If you don’t julienne the papaya by hand (ridiculously time consuming), use the shredder in the food processor. I buy the long beans for the recipe and cut them into 1 inch segments and set them aside to toss in at the end. I seed the tomato and toss the “guts” into the food processor with the wet ingredients, and toss the leftover outside wedges of the tomato into the salad at the end, as well. Fresh thai chilis work the best, but remember that you can adjust the heat by not adding all of the peppers’ seeds. If your resulting salad is “ring of fire” hot, just add a bit more sugar to cut the heat.
My estimation is that 2 cups of shredded papaya is about the right proportion for this recipe. Best to use a mandolin board that can properly julienne the fruit into long thin matchsticks, but if all you have is a kitchen grater, use that large holes on the grater and try to get the shreds as long as possible. Easy on the fish sauce. It is very powerful, you may want to start out with half the amount shown and add more if desired. Not everyone is crazy about this flavor, even though it is authentic. I find that cashews work better than peanuts. Also about 5 cherry or grape tomatoes work better than a big tomato. Cut them into halves for bite sized pieces. In most cases, the flavor of a cherry or grape tomato is fuller, fresher, and riper than the bigger ones, at least if you are buying them and not growing your own. For truly authentic texture and taste, bruise the beans a bit. Mortar and pestle are good for this, or you can make do with a rolling pin. Just a slight bruising to release the flavor, since the beans don’t get cooked. If made authentically, it will be hot, but feel free to step down the peppers if your palate prefers less heat. Use thai peppers if possible, or serranos.
perfectly awesome !!
well my dad is from laos which this is wat we eat probably a few times a month. good recipe
Loved the flavor of the papaya in a salad. I added actual lettuce and made it a salad.
The flavor was good, I didn’t use the food processor, but chopped it manually to eat more like a salad rather than a pulp.
This is ok.. It is not great! I made it for my husband because he loves Thia dishes and we have been looking for a recipe on this..this isn’t it.
I liked alot–my husband said it was ok! I made it spicier the next day by adding a serrano red pepper and he liked it better then. I liked it even more!