MAKAN KAMPUNG

This means ‘eat kampung food’ in Malay. In old Singapore, kampungs (attap hut villages) could be found in all neighbourhoods. Today we can only reminisce while enjoying our favourite Malay food

Nasi Ambeng – a dish the whole family can share together. Items here include fried long beans, assam fish, anchovy sambal, pickles, rendang and lemongrass chicken satay

IF YOU ARE FORTUNATE to get invited for a meal in a kampung house in Malaysia or in Indonesia, you’ll discover how fresh and delicious the food is. Vegetables and herbs are plucked from the backyard; free roaming chickens are bred by the family; milk of freshly grated coconut come from the trees that shade the house; fish and crab caught that morning from the sea; and shellfish collected at low tide. Add to this the recipes that have been handed down generation after generation by the sun-brown Malay womenfolk.

Free roaming chickens provide meat and eggs
A Malay-style kampung house with thacthed roof

As these humble homes rarely have refrigerators the ingredients have to be caught or collected daily. That’s why freshness always characterises kampung food. All you have to do is walk around the garden and you’ll see everything that will go into the cooking. Walk further to the beach, the boats, the fishing nets and the bounty of the sea.

In Singapore, the kampungs may be long gone but the the spirit of kampung cooking remains alive. Only the freshest ingredients are used and are cooked with respect and love following a short prayer.

Rendang – a dry beef curry made with coconut milk, caramelised coconut paste (kerisik), chilli and herbs

TYPICAL MALAY KAMPUNG FARE

KERABU PUCUK PAKU A salad of fern tips with grated coconut, chilli, lime, onion, dried shrimp, ginger bud and sugar.

MASAK LEMAK IKAN BELIMBING Fresh mackerel cooked in a curry of coconut milk, chilli, turmeric and small carambola (belimbing). The carambola gives a hint of refreshing sour.

OPOR AYAM Chicken fried in a reduction of coconut milk, galangal, lemongrass, garlic, peppercorns and shallots.

MASAK KETAM NENAS Fresh Blue Swimmer crab in a curry of pineapple, chilli, coconut milk, turmeric and shallots. The pineapple gives the curry a sweet sour touch.

NASI KERABU Rice with grated coconut, salt fish, shallots and turmeric tossed with shredded herbs (daun ulam). These herbs include mint, pennywort, cashew leaf, coriander leaf, kaffir lime leaf, polygonum leaf (daun laksa), ginger leaf and wild pepper leaf among others.

Homestyle Malay cooking at Hajah Maimunah in Singapore: dishes include sambal cuttlefish, begedel (cutlet of potato), rendang, sambal goreng and tahu goreng

RECIPE BY AZIZAH

SIPUT MASAK LEMAK

Seasnails in coconut gravy

SERVES 4

2 kg sea snails

1 stalk lemongrass, bruised

1 turmeric leaf (daun kunyit)

3 kaffir lime leaves

1/2 tuber sweet potato, peeled and cut into cubes

1 fresh coconut grated for milk

4 cups water

4 tablespoons cooking oil

Pinch of tamarind

Salt to taste

 

 

Blend together:

1 big yellow onion

5 cloves garlic

2 cm fresh turmeric

6 green chillies

1 cardamom pod

Soak the snails in water for 24 hours. Wash thoroughly. Snip off pointed ends of snails. This allows us to get at the fleshy morsel by sucking the other end.

Mix grated coconut with tamarind and four cups of water and squeeze a round of thick coconut milk. In another bowl, repeat process for thin coconut milk. In a wok or pot heat the thick coconut milk for five minutes and add in the blended ingredients. Cook for ten minutes then add salt, lemongrass, turmeric leaf, sweet potato and thin coconut milk. When the sweet potato is half cooked add the snails, cook for eight minutes, dish out and serve. 

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