Thai Shrimp Paste Sauce or Namprik Kapi has a pungent fishy smell and lingers on your breath for hours, but it’s truly “authentic” and if you know someone who boasts of being adventurous with food, see if (s)he can tolerate a dish of this.

This recipe is for a very aromatic dipping sauce that is not typically something the American nose will appreciate, but drives the Thai person wild with memories of home. Thai Shrimp Paste Sauce or Namprik Kapi has a pungent fishy smell and lingers on your breath for hours, but it’s truly “authentic” and if you know someone who boasts of being adventurous with food, see if (s)he can tolerate a dish of this.

INGREDIENTS

  • 2 tablespoons shrimp paste
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 5-6 dried shrimp
  • 5-7 fresh Thai chili peppers
  • 3 tablespoons lime juice
  • 3 tablespoons fish sauce
  • 2-3 tablespoons palm sugar
  • 1 tablespoon tiny Thai eggplant

DIRECTIONS

  1. In a mortar and pestle, pound dried shrimp into a coarse powder, remove from mortar and set aside.
  2. Place shrimp paste and garlic in mortar, mash and grind together then add the dried shrimp back into the mortar.
  3. Add Thai chili peppers and eggplant (leaving a few eggplant aside for later).
  4. Pound the mixture together, adding palm sugar, lime juice and fish sauce to suit your taste.
  5. Spoon it into a dish and add a few eggplants for visual appeal, it should look like this.

This can be served in a wide variety of ways. Spoon over fresh steamed jasmine rice, or use as a dipping sauce for fresh or boiled vegetables such as cucumber, string bean, cabbage or bamboo shoot. It’s also a wonderful accompaniment to Lao style vegetable curry.

In Thailand this is very popular to eat with deep fried mackerel fish (pla tu).