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Red Boat Fish Sauce from the Discoveries Thread
Posted on 3/7/19 at 3:09 pm
Posted on 3/7/19 at 3:09 pm
I don't have any experience with fish sauce but I'm interested. The most asian type food I've cooked myself is hardly true "asian" - the likes of pepper steak, asian wings, a few seafood dishes, etc.
Anyway, give me some ideas as to how you've used fish sauce to improve a dish (asian or not) whether a minor or main ingredient. I want to give it a try.
Anyway, give me some ideas as to how you've used fish sauce to improve a dish (asian or not) whether a minor or main ingredient. I want to give it a try.
Posted on 3/7/19 at 3:28 pm to LSU Wayne
I use red boat in the majority of my savory sauces. Pretty much anything that needs salt/umami.
Posted on 3/7/19 at 3:31 pm to LSU Wayne
I use it in place of some soy sauce in some Asian recipes or in addition to.
Posted on 3/7/19 at 3:58 pm to LSU Wayne
Fish sauce: Smells like arse, tastes like heaven. A couple of splashes adds a lot to savory dishes. Add some the next time you make a pot roast. Italian tomato based sauces also do well with a couple of splashes of fish sauce. Basically, if you will put Worcestershire sauce in something, fish sauce will probably work really well, too. They're both essentially rotted fish juice, after all.
Word to the wise: Don't drop the bottle. If it breaks, you'll have to move.
Word to the wise: Don't drop the bottle. If it breaks, you'll have to move.
This post was edited on 3/7/19 at 4:04 pm
Posted on 3/7/19 at 4:03 pm to TigerstuckinMS
I may or may not slip fish sauce into my gumbo and my rice and gravy.
Posted on 3/7/19 at 4:08 pm to LSU Wayne
Natural msg. Put that shite in anything.
Posted on 3/7/19 at 4:18 pm to LSU Wayne
There is very little I cook that I don't add that stuff in to.
Posted on 3/7/19 at 4:26 pm to LSU Wayne
curry paste + coconut milk + fish sauce + lime juice
Posted on 3/7/19 at 4:57 pm to LSU Wayne
A few drops in a seafood gumbo, shrimp creole, or crawfish etouffee.....
Posted on 3/7/19 at 5:21 pm to hungryone
I've been adding it to my gumbo for a couple years now
Posted on 3/7/19 at 10:03 pm to LSU Wayne
I put a couple drops in just about everything now. Just be careful not to put too much.
Posted on 3/7/19 at 11:53 pm to the paradigm
Old Vietnam vet opened a bbq stand in my hometown when l was in high school. Super nice guy, and always willing to talk.
During one of our visits, I told him his bbq chicken was different than any other I'd had, and really liked it. He told me his secret was fish sauce, which he discovered while overseas. I told him I'd never heard of such a thing, and he responded by telling me it is the worst smelling thing you'll ever come across, but it works.
Later on, l had a friend whose dad was a first generation immigrant. His afternoon snack was fish sauce mixed with chopped hot peppers on saltines.
During one of our visits, I told him his bbq chicken was different than any other I'd had, and really liked it. He told me his secret was fish sauce, which he discovered while overseas. I told him I'd never heard of such a thing, and he responded by telling me it is the worst smelling thing you'll ever come across, but it works.
Later on, l had a friend whose dad was a first generation immigrant. His afternoon snack was fish sauce mixed with chopped hot peppers on saltines.
Posted on 3/8/19 at 6:50 am to LSU Wayne
As others have said, I put fish sauce in damn near everything now.
Just be very careful with the amount. Always start with way less than you think you need and adjust with small amounts and taste, taste, taste. You can always add more, but once you have too much...your dish is ruined.
I've had to move to buying the 64oz mega bottles from Amazon

Just be very careful with the amount. Always start with way less than you think you need and adjust with small amounts and taste, taste, taste. You can always add more, but once you have too much...your dish is ruined.
I've had to move to buying the 64oz mega bottles from Amazon
This post was edited on 3/8/19 at 6:51 am
Posted on 3/9/19 at 12:30 pm to LSU Wayne
Red Boat, lime juice, minced garlic and a little bit of sugar make a great dip for sliced cucumbers.
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