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Tony Tan’s pipis with Batak sauce

Fragrant with lemongrass, tingling with Sichuan peppercorn and enriched by galangal and makrut lime leaves, this is a sauce to remember.
Pipis with Batak sauceAlicia Taylor
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“I don’t remember where I got this recipe, probably from a Batak or Mandailing neighbour, but it’s delicious,” says Tony Tan. “Made with torch ginger flower, lemongrass and a member of the Sichuan pepper family, it is aromatic with a mild tingling sensation. The Batak and the Mandailing people originate from Sumatra. Recently, I discovered this preparation is called arsik sauce in Indonesia, which combines similar ingredients and the lemony member of the Sichuan pepper family called andaliman. More tangy and less numbing than red Sichuan pepper, I have used green Sichuan pepper for this recipe. This sauce is particularly good with fish, though just about any seafood is delicious.”

Ingredients

Spice paste

Method

1.For spice paste, blend ingredients to a fine paste in a food processor.
2.Heat oil in a large saucepan over medium-high heat. Add spice paste and fry until fragrant and just golden (2-3 minutes). Add lemongrass, torch ginger, spring onion, lime leaves and turmeric leaf, if using, and stir-fry until soft and fragrant (3-4 minutes).
3.Add 375ml water and bring to the boil, then stir in pipis and sugar, cover tightly with a lid and cook until pipis just open (3-4 minutes). Remove pipis (discard any that haven’t opened), season to taste, top with coriander and serve with rice.

Turmeric leaves are sold frozen in Australia and can be found at select Asian grocers. If you can’t find them, leave them out. Green Sichuan peppercorns are available from Asian supermarkets.

Drink suggestion: Fragrant spicy gewürztraminer. Drink suggestion by Mark Max Allen.

Notes

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