It is not crazy hot. Just has that magical blend of onion, garlic, chili and fish sauce. Perfect for adding a little zing to so many dishes. Use it with rice. With rice noodle dishes. In soups. Thai chili paste brings a little something to whatever you use it with.

Finding the right chilies for nam prik pao

Lots of Thai recipes call for dried red chilies. Go to your local Asian market and look for the bag that says “dried Thai chilies”. I bet you look for a long time. I did the first time I went looking for them. That’s the thing about Asian grocery stores. They really don’t cater to people who don’t know what they are looking for. It’s a learning curve. I’m still learning. But I’m getting better. It comes with practice. Here’s a tip. Google what you are looking for on your phone. Show that to the guy at the store. Or search the shelves yourself. Look for a match. I do it. I see people doing it all the time.

Flavour over fire for me

I like depth of flavour more than absolute fire. So I don’t always use Thai chilies. Maybe that makes me less authentic. But I don’t live in Thailand. And I don’t always want the top of my head blown off. So I make nam prik pao with chau tian chilies. They’re about the size of Thai birds eye chilies. Nowhere near as hot though. Nice chili flavour. Not stupidly hot. If you can find Thai dried red chilies, use them if you like a bit more heat. They are the real deal for nam prik pao. Both ways are good. Or mix them until you get the heat you want.

Roast your garlic and shallots first

You want a bit of smoky flavour in your nam prik pao. You could try grilling your shallots and garlic over charcoal. I’m told that’s what they do in Thailand. On one of those funky tao clay grills. Or you can dry roast them in a small cast iron pan. That’s easier. And it works pretty well. Just toss the shallots and garlic in a pan over medium heat. Flip them now and then. They get all soft and a bit charred. Perfect for Thai chili paste.

This is a simpler nam prik pao

This is pretty straightforward as far as Thai chili pastes go. Simple list of ingredients. Toasted chilies. Shallots. Garlic. Oil. Fish sauce. Maybe a little sesame oil. That’s it. Be warned though. Grinding nap prik pao is a bit of a pain. You can use a mortar and pestle. That’s authentic. Or you can fight with your food processor. That’s still a pain. But it’s way easier than mortar and pestle. You get a better grind with a mortar and pestle though. Like a real paste. Very hard to do that with a food processor. Up to you. I use a food processor.

Thai chili paste keeps well in the refrigerator

This recipe makes around half a cup. That’s not a lot. Takes up no room in the fridge. So make it. And keep it in the fridge. It keeps really well. And next time you are making khao soi. Or khao pad. Or your pad Thai needs a little something extra. Pull it out. You will be glad you have it.

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