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Tuesday, March 4, 2025

A Get together Appetizer with a Kick

Why It Works

  • Hydrating the batter with puréed corn leads to fritters with most corn taste.
  • Folding complete kernels into the batter creates fritters with juicy corn pockets that burst as you chew into them.

If you happen to like the flavour of traditional Thai fish desserts, it is very probably that you’ll like these little corn fritters as effectively. They’re additionally seasoned with curry paste and makrut lime leaves which were sliced into superfine strips.

You will not get the bouncy, elastic texture of the traditional fish desserts in these corn fritters. However what you get is the crispy edges, the marginally chewy inside, and the distinction of textures between puréed and complete corn kernels. Whereas this can be a meatless manner the lacto-ovo vegetarians amongst us can benefit from the taste of Thai fish desserts, it is also a scrumptious appetizer/snack for these of us who don’t abstain from meat.

Critical Eats / Fred Hardy


The usage of makrut lime leaves on this recipe could make a few of you set free a weary sigh. They’re arduous to seek out, I do know. I reside in huge metropolis with a large Asian neighborhood and lots of nice Asian markets, however I nonetheless discover it arduous to get contemporary or frozen makrut lime leaves regularly. So in the event you can not discover makrut lime leaves, use Thai basil leaves—candy basil, if that is all you could find—and these fritters shall be simply as nice, although barely completely different.

September 2012

Crispy Thai Corn Fritters: A Get together Appetizer with a Kick



Cook dinner Mode
(Hold display awake)

  • 4 ears of corn (2 kilos whole; 907 g) (see notes) 

  • 1 tablespoon (15 ml) Thai purple curry paste

  • 1 giant egg

  • 3/4 cup rice flour (about 3 1/2 ounces; 100 g)

  • 1 teaspoon baking powder

  • 1/2 tablespoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt; for desk salt use half as a lot by quantity

  • 3 makrut lime leaves or 1/4 cup Thai basil leaves

  • 1 quart vegetable oil for deep-frying

  • Retailer-bought or selfmade Thai candy chili sauce

  1. Take away corn kernels from cobs (you must have about 2 1/2 cups kernels). Pour oil to a depth of 1 inch in a wok, small Dutch oven, or giant heavy-bottomed saucepan. Warmth oil over medium warmth to 300°F (149°C). Line a big platter or rimmed baking sheet with paper towels; put aside. 

    Critical Eats / Fred Hardy


  2. Reserve half of corn kernels and place different half in a blender or meals processor together with purple curry paste, egg, rice flour, baking powder, and salt; mix till simply clean and batter is free, about 30 seconds. Switch combination to a medium bowl.

    Critical Eats / Fred Hardy


  3. Stack makrut lime leaves (or basil leaves) and roll them up tightly. Slice the roll crosswise as finely as doable. Fold makrut lime leaf strips into corn batter together with reserved complete corn kernels.

    Critical Eats / Fred Hardy


  4. Working in batches of about 6 at a time, drop 1 tablespoon dimension parts of corn batter very gently into oil. It helps to drop the batter nearer to the oil’s floor to maintain the fritter batter collectively. Don’t over-fill pot. As soon as the fritters float to the highest, proceed to fry, flipping sometimes, till fritters are golden brown throughout and begin to darken across the edges, 3 to 4 minutes. Utilizing a slotted spoon, switch them to the paper towel-lined platter. Return oil temperature to 300°F (150°C) and repeat with remaining batches of fritters.

    Critical Eats / Fred Hardy


  5. Enable final batch of fritters to chill barely earlier than serving them with Thai candy chili sauce.

    Critical Eats / Fred Hardy


Particular Tools

Dutch oven or wok

Notes

Frozen corn kernels will also be used on this recipe. Be certain to thaw them fully and squeeze as a lot moisture out of them as doable.

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