Monday, January 10, 2011

Grilled fish with turmeric and dill (Cha Ca)

I first ate this dish at Dong Que, in Footscray, across from the Footscray Market.  I was totally smitten with it, the combination of the fish, the turmeric and the dill.  I was surprised to find dill used in Vietnamese cuisine.  


I researched some recipes and found that the fish used is catfish, a Vietnamese freshwater fish, also known as Basa.  I haven't cooked too much fish because I've never been too sure  how to cook it and have had some pretty ordinary results.  I found some Basa fillets at Little Saigon Market.  I've also seen Basa fillets in the major supermarkets.  The other main ingredient, dill was a little difficult to find.  I walked around the market and to a couple of stores in the area that sell fresh vegetables, it was Sunday so Footscray Market wasn't open.  In my hopeless Vietnamese I mentioned the dish I was cooking and found out that dill is call thi la.  That helped, a lot.  I was directed to a lady at the back of the market unpacking a box of herbs and there was my thi la.  


Cha Ca
(adapted from The Little Saigon Cookbook by Ann Le)


300g (approx two fillets) Basa (catfish)


Marinade:
3 tablespoons fish sauce
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon minced or grated galangal (some recipes suggested ginger or galangal powder)
2 tablespoons ground turmeric 
1 tablespoon chopped dill
Salt and pepper to taste


Rice flour
Oil for frying
Bunch of dill


Stir fish sauce and sugar together until dissolved.  Add the remaining marinade ingredients.  Add fish, cut into 2 or 3cm pieces to the marinade and leave for about 20 minutes.


Tip rice flour into a shallow dish, then dredge the pieces of fish in the flour to fully coat.


Add oil to a pan, heat and fry the fish pieces.  When cooked, top with dill.  


Marinading fish
Fish pieces coated with rice flour
Cha Ca ready to eat!
I cooked some noodles and made a salad platter to have with my Cha Ca, but not pretty enough to photograph, plus by bun needs some tweaking I think. I will definitely make this again.  Really delicious, really easy and what I couldn't eat for dinner was perfect eaten cold the next day!!


This is my entry to Delicious Vietnam #9, hosted by Indonesia Eats.  Thanks, as always to Anh from A Foodlovers Journey and Hong and Kim at Ravenous Couple who devised this event.  Read Indonesia Eats round-up to see other entries.


More about Delicious Vietnam.



8 comments:

  1. Oh wow! Love this. And adding tumeric gives that nice aroma and colour.

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  2. Wow, that looks great, Deb! I tried the cha ca at Dong Que on Sunday night. Pretty good, I must say. And a darn sight better than the one at Sapa Hills which I (funnily enough) tried the following night.

    Though I reckon yours looks better than them both - all you need is a sizzling plate!

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  3. Thanks Penny, it is such a delicious way to do fish

    Thanks Billy, I did think about lashing out and getting a sizzle plate to serve it on, another time maybe.

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  4. YUum!! Deb, you MUST come to Hanoi one day and try the real thing - Cha Ca La Vong. Nothing beats it! ;)

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  5. Anh, Vietnam is the top of my list. I am hanging out to get there. Every time I watch Luke Nguyen I drool at the food and the locations!!

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  6. Your dish looks great! I may have to try this again soon. :-)

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  7. Seems yummy. Will try it with my wife. Thanks.

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  8. Hi Cookie and Andri, just reading you comments is making me think about the dish again!

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