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Eat with Your Hands
Eat with Your Hands
Eat with Your Hands
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Eat with Your Hands

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Inventive, flavorful recipes from an acclaimed chef and restauranteur, featuring tips on techniques plus drinks & music for while you cook.

From Zakary Pelaccio, founder and owner of Fatty Crab and Fatty ’Cue, comes a gorgeous, groundbreaking cookbook of Southeast Asian–inspired, French– and Italian–inflected food that celebrates getting your hands dirty in—and out of—the kitchen.

Eat with Your Hands takes readers on a tour of the outrageously flavorful and wholly original food that has made Pelaccio a star, in a cookbook that’s as irreverent, high-spirited, and deeply iconoclastic as the chef himself.

Combining a punk rock ethos with a commitment to producing exquisitely imagined and executed food, Eat with Your Hands brings together Pelaccio’s eclectic influences in wildly inventive recipes that showcase his innovative blending of Asian flavors, sustainable local ingredients, and American gusto.

Full of highly opinionated suggestions for both what to drink and what to listen to in the kitchen, paeans to the joys of the mortar and pestle and fermented condiments, charming sidebars on kitchen techniques, and an unbridled love for real food, Eat with Your Hands is a celebration of no-holds-barred cooking from a chef who is redefining the American culinary landscape.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 15, 2012
ISBN9780062096869
Eat with Your Hands

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    Eat with Your Hands - Zakary Pelaccio

    Eat with Your Hands

    Zakary Pelaccio with JJ Goode

    Dedication

    TO JORI AND HUDSON

    Contents

    Cover

    Title Page

    Dedication

    INTRODUCTION

    A FROG

    Frog Leg Clay Pot

    FISH

    Fish Head Curry

    Grilled Sardines with Celery Root Puree and Leaf-Lard-Poached Raisins

    Sardine Tea Sandwiches

    Fish Cooked in Coconut Milk with Fire Chili

    Steamed Loup De Mer

    Sea Trout with Mussels, Sausage, and Fermented Tofu

    Tuna Belly with an Approximation of a Classic Sauce Dugléré

    Roasted Turbot with Garlic Parsley Paste, Sweet Pepper Puree, and Clams

    SHELLFISH

    Parcooking Lobster (For Easy Shell Removal)

    Lobster Wontons

    Lobster Wonton Mee

    Lobster Club Sandwich

    Grilled Langoustines with Bacon Vinaigrette

    Chili Crab

    Whole Shrimp with Guanciale and Preserved Lemon

    Steamed Live Shrimp with Green Chili Vinegar

    Razor Clams with Pickled Chilies

    Singapore Black Pepper Mussels

    Cockle Salad

    Treasures of the Sea with Dynamic Spicy Broth

    Oyster Lettuce Cups with Bacon and Kimchi

    NOODLES

    Pan Mee

    Caramel Pork with Hong Kong Noodles

    Assam Laksa

    Pasta Con Sarde

    Anelli Con Ricci Di Mare

    Garganelli with Braised Goat or Lamb Heart

    POULTRY

    Turmeric-Rubbed Chicken with Celery Mostarda

    Chicken and Clams with Agretti

    Crispy Chicken Salad

    Curry Leaf Fried Chicken

    Chicken Clay Pot

    Whole Poached Chicken with White Fungus and Preserved Black Beans

    Chicken and Lardo

    Squab with Sichuan Pepper Glaze and Amaranth Salad

    Fatty Duck

    BUNNY BUNNY

    Fried Rabbit with Chili Shrimp Sauce

    Roasted Rabbit with Creamed Corn and Dates

    LAMB AND GOAT

    Goat’s-Milk-Braised Goat Parts

    Smoked-Chili-Rubbed Goat Shoulder

    Goat or Young Lamb Leg with Salted Chilies

    Lamb Ribs with Braised Romaine and Sheep’s Milk Cheese

    Lamb Shoulder with an Arbois and Green Garlic

    Braised Lamb Shoulder with Rigatoni

    Lamb Burgers

    For the Love of Fermented Tofu

    PORK

    Whole Smoked Pig (The Guy)

    Cooking a Whole Pig’s Head

    Pig Ear Salad

    Pig Cheeks with Champagne Grapes

    Cooking Pig Cheeks without Cooking the Whole Head

    Cooking Jowls without Cooking the Whole Head

    Pig Jowls with Rice Pot Kimchi

    Pig Jowls with Strawberry Salad

    Trotters

    Smoked Trotters with Cured Shrimp

    Smoked Pork Loin with Mackerel Mayo

    Smoked Ribs with Fish Sauce and Palm Sugar Syrup

    Full-Fat Pork Shoulder

    Pork and Cockles

    Pork and Watercress Salad with Egg and Caper Vinaigrette

    The Cuban

    Lardo

    Leaf Lard

    Braised Pork Belly

    Pork Fries

    Fried Pork Belly with Chili Lime Sauce

    Braised Belly with Crispy Shrimp

    Pork Buns

    Crispy Pork and Watermelon Salad

    Pork Tea Sandwiches

    Curing and Smoking Bacon

    Gula Jawa and Sichuan Peppercorn Cured Bacon

    Coriander-Cured Bacon

    Bacon and Beets

    BEEF

    Hanger Steak Salad

    Grilled Rib-Eye Steak

    …With Red Wine, Farro, and Grapes

    …With Anchovy Butter, Arugula, and Roasted Chilies

    Short Ribs with Panzanella

    Beef Rendang

    Fatty Brisket

    Braised Beef Cheeks

    Jori Jayne Burger

    SALADS AND VEGETABLES

    Radish Salad with Bottarga and Poached Egg

    Puntarelle with a Good Basic Dressing

    Brussels Sprouts with Horseradish Cream

    Kerabu Mango (Mango Salad)

    My Green Papaya Salad

    Kerabu Timun (Cucumber Salad)

    Bok Choy with Clams

    Smoky Eggplant and Chicken Salad

    Asparagus Kerabu (Asparagus Salad)

    Kang Kong Belacan

    Nasi Ulam

    Arugula and Boiled Peanut Salad with Chili Vinegar

    SNACKS

    Fried Mortadella Sandwich

    Kielbasa Bruschetta

    Sardine Omelet

    Jámon Ibérico and Shishito Peppers

    Otak-Otak

    Three Little Fishes

    Rouget Sandwiches

    Sardine Sandwiches

    Anchovy Sandwiches

    Oyster Banh Mi

    PICKLES AND PRESERVES

    Pineapple Pickle

    Kimchi

    Salty Oil-Cured Chilies

    Pickled Thai Chilies

    Standard Pickle Solution

    Pickled Ramps

    Celery Mostarda

    Ginger and Papaya Pickle

    Preserved Lemons

    Black Pepper Rhubarb Pickle

    CONDIMENTS

    Sambal Belacan

    Aïoli and Sambal Aïoli

    Sambal Ikan Bilis

    Chili Sauce #1

    Chili Sauce #2

    Pineapple Red Curry

    Fish Sauce and Palm Sugar Syrup

    A Simple Green Curry

    Sweet Cilantro Sauce

    Chili Oil

    Kerisik

    STOCKS

    Master Stock

    Chicken Stock

    Double Chicken Stock

    Simple Fish Stock

    Lobster Stock

    Crab Stock

    DESSERTS

    Glossary

    Sources

    Searchable Terms

    Acknowledgments

    About the Author

    Credits

    Copyright

    About the Publisher

    INTRODUCTION

    I never want to cook the same thing twice, I recently told a friend. He gleefully pointed out that I was working on a cookbook, a process that would force me to cook the same thing twice, three times, maybe more. For a minute I doubted myself. What the hell am I getting into? I thought—but barely a moment passed before I landed on the same reason I’ve made most of the questionable choices in my life: for the experience.

    Sure, let’s do it has long been my guiding principle. I’ve always rolled with the opportunities that come along, though they’ve produced varying degrees of satisfaction. I just can’t shake the nagging desire to peer around the next corner, as if some newfound wisdom or enlightenment will reveal itself with the next move or project. Curiosity and stimulation—overstimulation if you can get it—that’s the Kool-Aid I’ve been drinking for years now.

    My first restaurant, the funky Chickenbone Café, was an early American version of a gastropub, with more focus on the gastro than the pub. We served kielbasa bruschetta and braised goat on a deserted stretch of street in then relatively undeveloped South Williamsburg (this was back in late 2002–2003, before there was a cheese shop and a record store on every corner of Bedford Avenue). My next adventure? 5 Ninth. 5 Ninth was one of those projects that had a lot of promise, a lot of potential, but in the end it just wasn’t the right restaurant in the right place at the right time. We were smack in the middle of the meatpacking district in the heyday of the heavy nightclub and partying scene there. Waifish models did not want to eat whole fish with chili and ginger, and geeked-out partiers weren’t into sharing a roasted baby goat shoulder for two. My mission and the mission of the neighborhood were deviating, to say the least … so with one of my partners, I moved on.

    In 2005, I opened Fatty Crab, a small, rollicking restaurant in the West Village. Fatty Crab was born when my business partner Rick Camac leased a tiny old laundromat on Hudson Street and asked me if I wanted to open a smaller, café-type restaurant in the space. I walked into the space one day and blurted out, We should cook Malaysian-influenced food! It’ll be cool, spicy, loud, rock ’n’ roll, with great products and great flavors. I’ll bring my crew from the Chickenbone … it’ll be our party. Our party, and everyone will be invited! (My Chickenbone crew were all creative rockers, writers, and illicit distillers who were totally out to lunch—like me.)

    I was elated. I knew exactly what I wanted. A grubby storefront restaurant where, as soon as you walked in, you knew that you were going to drink more than you should and where new flavors, pungent profiles, and entertaining textures would bombard your mouth and completely fuck all your food-centric preconceptions. I sold Rick on the idea in a machine-gun-fire moment of inspiration. It was a combination of Eureka! and Duh! Why the hell wasn’t I doing this before? Rick’s verbatim answer was That sounds great, but what’s Malaysian food? Still, he put some faith and some money into that little joint, and we went ahead, building it entirely on our own, fueled by the spirit of the project, cheap beer, and the reality that rent was coming due.

    To this day, the Fatty world has managed not just to hold my scatterbrained attention but to stimulate it as well. Everything Fatty has kept me so engaged that I’ve finally been able to commit to just one restaurant (Okay, a few incarnations of one restaurant idea). For the first time in my life, I can slow down and enjoy cooking, eating, and simply living. These days, playing Frisbee with my son, Hudson, and planting chilies with my fiancée, Jori, tops my list of interests. And seeing those chilies used at Fatty Crab and Fatty ’Cue is incredibly satisfying.

    In the Fatty world—two Crabs, one ’Cue, and more to come—I’m incredibly fortunate to be working with good friends I get to see every day. Building this new, nonblood family has become the most satisfying part of my career. While putting this book together I’ve discovered that writing down all the thoughts and recipes that have been simmering in my head has brought me even closer to the food and lifestyle I’ve been so passionate about, reminding me how lucky I am to have eaten so well over the years, to have grown up with fresh food prepared in an Italian style, to have had the good fortune to travel and live in many different places throughout Europe and Asia. So, yes, these days I’m cooking the same thing twice (or at least teaching someone to do it) and enjoying it.

    Before I was a chef and restaurateur, I was a kid who ate a lot. I was raised on an Americanized approximation of the Roman diet. My folks lived in Rome for five years before I was born and returned to 1970s Westchester with a taste for prosciutto and Parmigiano-Reggiano. My mother made a great carbonara and always served salad after the main course. My father would stop at Arthur Avenue in the Bronx on his way home from work in the city, restocking our suburban cupboards with the makings of a good Italian pantry—thus saving my mother from full-scale cultural depression. So even though the produce sold at Mr. Green’s on Post Road (an early iteration of the gourmet market) was sorry looking, and the absence of decent arugula was almost too much for my mom to bear, she raised me on food made almost entirely from scratch at a time when the microwave and ordering in were all the rage. My parents also encouraged me to ransack the fridge and concoct my own meals using whatever ingredients I could find, in whatever ways I wanted.

    They instilled in me a tireless curiosity and a love for food that ultimately inspired me to head off to Southeast Asia, where I developed a firsthand understanding of the palate and techniques of Malaysian cuisine. In Malaysia I fell hard for lip-scalding chilies, unbelievably funky fermented condiments, and freshly made coconut milk. Over the years Malaysian cooks have integrated distinct Chinese, Portuguese, Indian, and Indonesian influences into the cuisine, especially in the urban centers and port cities. I felt a kinship with the motley cuisine, in part because it reminded me of the culinary mutt I was becoming, but also because Malaysians love to, as I’ve done since I was a kid, eat with their hands.

    My mom’s cooking, along with living and traveling in Asia and Europe, made me aware of the art, beauty, and flavor of great food. And once you know how great artfully made food can be—what an aesthetic and sensory experience it can offer—it’s almost impossible to settle for mediocre grub. And since I didn’t have the cash to finance a life of eating out day after day, I had no choice but to become a cook. To paraphrase the great architect Louis Kahn, Art is not the fulfillment of a desire but the creation of a new one.

    People still call me a chef, and I’m cool with that. But I’m reluctant to call myself a chef. I collect food experiences and ideas and reinterpret them. Sure, I do cook in my kitchens, and train my cooks to learn my taste, but mainly I convert experiences into dishes and into restaurants in collaboration with a team of skilled real chefs and cooks—true warriors.

    Deciding what recipes to include in this book was a challenge, but it was even more difficult to actually write the recipes themselves. Thing is, I don’t use recipes, unless I’m baking. And I never bake. They’re funny things, recipes. They reduce cooking—movement honed through repetition that’s responsive to subtle sensory cues—to words on a page. The blank spaces between words in a recipe shout to me the absence of all the subtlety I wish the recipe had been able to communicate and the heady memories I wish it could evoke. Recipes are form—not food, not cooking. Sixteen years ago, in the Aeolian Islands, for instance, I watched a long-haired Sicilian dude scarf down the sauce from rigatoni alla norma that I had just cooked. He was eating only the sauce, because the pasta was gone. I had oversauced the pasta. I never wrote this down. I never updated some recipe for the dish I had scribbled in some notebook. Instead, it remained a memory, and that particularly vivid memory is still how I judge the amount of sauce I mix with pasta. As far as I’m concerned, that is a recipe—a vague, proportionless, experiential recipe.

    But until we harness the technology contemplated in the movie Brainstorm (come on, people: made in 1983, starring Christopher Walken and Natalie Wood), which lets us tap into one another’s mind with some cables and a good pair of headphones, recipes are the best way I’ve got to share my taste memories and get my food on your dinner table.

    I like to think that the recipes in this book are a glimpse into my mind, synapses firing wildly. I’ve included recipes from different phases of my life—from my restaurants, some still kicking, others late and lamented; some riffs on dishes I cook often at home; and others I wish I cooked more often. French-and Italian-inspired food shares the pages with grub from Malaysia and Thailand. There are dishes whose origins are impossible to pin down. Ingredients you may never have met before show up at the party. Don’t give them the cold shoulder. But know you’re going to have to flip to the glossary a lot. And if you must, feel free to substitute. Cooking is art, not science, after all. (Portioning is no science either—all serving sizes in this book are estimates. It all depends on your style of consumption.)

    Some of these recipes you’ll cook; others you’ll simply read. Maybe one component or ingredient or technique will strike you, and you’ll use it in your own way. Maybe you’ll just enjoy reading them. What a concept.

    I eat with my hands today, and not just because it would be a serious shame to let utensils slow me down. It has become a sort of philosophy of mine—a metaphor for life. When discussing life and its struggles, my father always told me to just dig it and I think I initially misheard his wise words as just dig in. That’s what I hope this book encourages and the way I hope you treat this book—unfamiliar ingredients, long cooking, and too much booze be damned!

    Cooking is an intensely personal experience, though it’s not a solo pursuit. Through cooking and eating we connect to the earth, to the seasons, to ourselves, our tastes, our family and friends. So if you’re ready to have some fun, toast to it all and drink a big glass of something good.

    BUYING: A WORK IN PROGRESS

    Mangoes, pineapples, and coconuts don’t grow in New York. No one here makes fish sauce or fermented shrimp paste either—well, not yet. These facts of Northeast living might present a problem for a fanatical locavore. Fortunately, that’s not me. Conscientious, yes, but fanaticism isn’t good for the blood pressure.

    I first heard about the Slow Food movement, with its rejection of fast food and its emphasis on locally grown and raised meat and vegetables, from Patrick Martins, the peripatetic evangelist for the cause. This was the mid-nineties, when Slow Food was just getting started, and I was lucky enough to be in New York City, its American headquarters. As I worked alongside Patrick on the New York Convivium, articulating its early goals and missions, I was also developing my own philosophy about how to buy food responsibly. For most Slow Food converts, the answer was easy: a commitment to buying locally. But for me there was the whole tropical-cuisine-in-temperate-climate challenge.

    But there’s nothing like a good challenge to really push creativity, and the results of that dilemma have actually been quite extraordinary—a new cuisine that fuses equatorial gastronomy, local meats and vegetables, and New York City–driven eccentricity. When I started the Chickenbone Café back in 2003, I worked closely with local producers, asking upstate farmers to grow Asian herbs, butchering whole pigs from Violet Hill Farm, serving Brooklyn-distilled underground absinthe. As I explored the city, often led by my dear friend Robert Sietsema, a relentless street rat of the most elegant order, I developed a new take on local. I began to haunt Weinberger Appetizers in South Williamsburg, a Hasidic family-run store with great matjes herring that I served with a chilled shot of Genever gin and a little square of black bread. I trekked to a tiny Bosnian butcher in Astoria to buy suho meso, smoked dried beef, that I sliced thin and served as a side to the Bone Shot, Dave Wondrich’s fiery concoction of rye, simple syrup, Tabasco, and lime Fry the Pork. I bought kielbasa from the oldest butcher shop in Greenpoint and made kielbasa bruschetta. For me, using my purchasing power to support not just farmers but also endangered family-run businesses was a natural part of the buy-local ethos: after all, you can’t get more local than your neighbors. A certain selfishness motivates this too. If they close, I lose them for good. The ethnically diverse mom-and-pop stores are what makes NYC so unique.

    My buying practices are constantly evolving, because I continue to be exposed to more bright ideas and bright people, who tirelessy study the impact and future of our food systems. I’m lucky to have been able to promote one of my cooks to the job of company forager, which entails a constant search for what tastes best, what is local, and what is raised in a manner that dovetails with our philosophy. Our company invested in a huge, awesome commercial rooftop garden program called Brooklyn Grange. Truly local farming. I do buy mangoes and pineapples from Florida and California and import obscure condiments shipped from far-off lands. But I worship local farmers who grow delicious produce and raise animals humanely. I buy tasty things from New York’s unbelievably diverse array of artisans, from old Chinese women making hand-pulled noodles to unsung bakers kneading out loaves of fragrant bread to the young bucks experimenting with mustards and pickles. And I get down on all fours in the soft earth of my upstate garden, where each year we grow and harvest more and more of the produce for the Fatty Crew.

    An American’s Pantry

    I’m 35 percent Italian, give or take, and the rest is Polish, Irish, Dutch, German, and whatever you’d call people from Indiana. In other words, I’m American, a true mutt. Therefore, there are no strictures or tenets of any particular culinary culture to which I have to adhere. Instead, my palate has been influenced primarily by simple, product-driven Italian-style cooking as well as the electric flavors, dynamic juxtapositions, and funky fermented fish products that characterize Southeast Asian cooking. My cooking is the result of a synergistic combo of these styles that might be summed up as high-quality ingredients in highly flavored combinations. Executing this weirdly wonderful kind of cooking means shopping at farmers’ markets to find the freshest, tastiest ingredients. Then there’s the matter of delivering the promised big flavor, which is all about keeping a well-stocked pantry. Storing certain staples is the best way to ensure that, when the urge strikes, you’ll have the resources to create something really tasty. So, what does an American of my hybridization and girth keep on hand? Over many years spent with the fridge door open, I’ve determined there are ingredients that I must always have around. I always have (or at least want) more. I just try not to have less than this:

    Brown rice vinegar

    Sherry vinegar

    Good extra virgin olive oil

    Lard and/or lardo

    High-fat unsalted butter (it has less water and therefore more milk solids, which bring out flavor)

    Anchovies (salt- or oil-packed)

    Sea salt

    Finishing sea salt (fleur de sel or Maldon)

    Fish sauce, preferably the 3 Crabs brand

    Palm sugar

    Granulated sugar

    Good local honey

    High-quality capers (in salt or brine)

    Raisins (dried on the vine or regular)

    Lemons and limes

    Whole dried thai or cayenne chilies

    Heads of garlic

    Shallots

    Yellow onions

    Fresh chilies (thai bird or red jalapeño)

    Ginger (as fresh and delicate as you can find)

    Herbs (always have something fresh: parsley, cilantro, basil, rosemary, thyme)

    Black peppercorns

    Rice (jasmine, short-grain Japanese, or basmati)

    High-quality dried pasta (maybe Martelli, Latini, or Setaro)

    Fresh local eggs

    Cured meat of some kind

    IT’S YOUR PARTY, BABY

    Chefs are not gods—especially not the chef who wrote this book. And they can’t divine absolute deliciousness, because it doesn’t exist. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve tasted something I made, then tweaked the seasoning until I thought it was perfect. And then watched a friend with a great palate squeeze on more lime or shake on more salt. All you can do is cook food that you think is delicious. And let that food convince other people.

    To figure out what you think is delicious, you need to taste everything, everywhere you can. That’s how I figured out that I love anchovies and cincalok and fish sauce. Throw your preconceived notions out the window or risk missing out on amazing food.

    And when something you eat is awesome, don’t just inhale whatever it is until you have to unbutton your pants and lie down and your eyes roll back into your head. Ask yourself why that particular combination of elements was so attractive to your mouth. How did your eyes influence what your taste and olfactory senses processed?

    At thirty-seven, I’ve just begun to understand what I enjoy and how to get there. Getting to know your own palate is an ongoing adventure—and sharing food with other like-minded people can only help your quest.

    Since I spend most of my time cooking, traveling, and eating, I’m constantly adjusting, refining, and trying to rearticulate what I like, what works, and what I want to cook. But once I settle down to cook something, I set my own goal, my own expectation for myself. I think you do a disservice to the food at hand when you try to cook without your own unique understanding of your goal. Even if you are working for someone else and have to re-create that chef’s recipe the same way night after night, you should still set your own goal and expectation for that recipe, for the flavors and textures you seek to get out of it. Your own goal is unique … it is your interpretation of the chef’s desire and palate … your own goal is the best YOU can get out of that dish.

    The following is a list of sensations that bounce around in my brain when I eat, look at, cook, or contemplate food. In parentheses after each one, I list an example to provide a little clarification.

    Crispy (nicely fried chicken skin)

    Fresh and crisp (raw veggies and herbs)

    Crunchy (corn nuts)

    Chewy (tendon, jellyfish)

    Tart (lemon, vinegar)

    Roasty (the brown bits on the bottom of a roasting pan)

    Charred (steak from a superhot charcoal grill)

    Slick (sliced lardo)

    Melting (jiggly cooked pork belly)

    Bitter (coffee, bitter melon)

    Viscous (oil)

    Salty (anchovy)

    Funky, stinky, or fermented (cincalok, budu)

    Slimy (sea urchin)

    Sweet (simple syrup)

    Hot (chilies)

    Earthy (black trumpet mushrooms)

    Curry (mixed dry spices)

    Garden (herbs, lavender to marjoram, borage to lemon balm)

    Anise (basil, fennel)

    Peppery (arugula, peppercorns)

    Fuzzy (oregano, nepitella), in texture more than taste—how it rubs against the tongue

    Mellow burn (raw ginger)

    Fruity (fruits)

    Vegetal (vegetables)

    I always work to balance some of these sensations when I think about the food I cook. Rarely, if ever, are all sensations present, and more often than not a few sensations will act as the protagonists while a few others play supporting roles. Look at the pork with watermelon salad (Crispy Pork and Watermelon Salad). The hunks of belly are crispy on the outside and melting within. The fruit is crisp and sweet. Those are the two major players, but they share the stage with supporting—but necessary—players: tart pickle, sour and salty dressing, the mellow burn of ginger, and the heat of raw chili. The combination of flavors is layered and exciting and keeps you paying attention!

    As I learn to manipulate these categories, I begin to refine what I am after and slowly make my way there.

    Ultimately, it’s your party: play the way you want to.

    THE MORTAR AND PESTLE

    Antique brass or copper mortars make really nice shelf ornaments. As for the smooth marble ones, you can use them to crush pharmaceuticals if that’s your thing. But to make these recipes right, get yourself a rough, porous stone mortar and pestle. Ideally yours will be about 8 inches in diameter and will be able to hold about 1 cup of ingredients without ending up so full that the only place the food can go when you pound is up and over the sides. The coarse stone provides friction, which is essential when you’re trying to break up fibrous ingredients such as galangal, lemongrass, and ginger. The pestle should be heavy, because the heavier it is, the more work it will do for you.

    And yeah, I hear you: you can use a food processor, preferably a small one, though I

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