Sri Lankan fish curry

Stephen Mangan's Sri Lankan fish curry

Tempered rice & coconut sambal

Sri Lankan fish curry

40 mins

Not Too Tricky

serves 2

About the recipe

Cricket super-fan and actor Stephen Mangan’s love of the game has seen him journey to far-flung corners of the Indian Ocean, so I’ve cooked up a traditional Sri Lankan dish to remind him of his travels. It’s a deliciously dry curry, with all the flavour coming from the paste. I’m serving it with an easy yet super-tasty yellow rice and a gorgeously fresh coconut sambal – give it a go!


nutrition per serving

705

Calories


26.3g

Fat


19.2g

Saturates


11.3g

Sugars


2.4g

Salt


48.4g

Protein


72.4g

Carbs


8.4g

Fibre


of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Jamie and Jimmy's Friday Night Feast

Jamie and Jimmy's Friday Night Feast

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

35g goraka or 2 tablespoons tamarind paste

1 clove of garlic

2cm piece ginger

½ a pandan leaf

1 large pinch of ground cinnamon

½ a teaspoon ground black pepper

20 fresh curry leaves

300g yellowfin tuna, from sustainable sources

2 banana leaves

optional: dried red chilli flakes

SAMBAL

2 ripe tomatoes

1 fresh green chilli

½ a fresh coconut

2 limes

RICE

½ an onion

1 clove of garlic

1 small knob of unsalted butter

2 pandan leaves

10 curry leaves

1 small pinch of ground turmeric

1 builder’s mug basmati rice (150g)

Method

  1. Boil the goraka in a pan of boiling water for about 20 minutes, or until softened.
  2. Peel and roughly chop the garlic and ginger, and roughly chop the pandan.
  3. Place the softened goraka (or tamarind paste), garlic, ginger and pandan in a pestle and mortar, along with the cinnamon, black pepper, curry leaves and a good pinch of salt. Give it a good bash until everything has broken down.
  4. Add 3 tablespoons of boiling water and muddle to make a smooth paste.
  5. Cut the tuna into 6 even chunks, rub all over with the paste, then leave to marinate for 20 minutes.
  6. Meanwhile, for the rice, peel and finely chop the onion and garlic, then place in a shallow pan on a medium heat with the butter. Roughly chop the pandan and add to the pan. Tear in the curry leaves, then give everything a good stir and cook for 8 minutes or until softened, but not coloured.
  7. Stir in the turmeric, add the rice and cook for a few minutes more.
  8. Pour in 2 mugfuls (300ml) of boiling water, season with a good pinch of sea salt, then pop the lid and cook for 8 to 10 minutes, or until all the water is absorbed. Turn off the heat and leave it to steam for a further 10 minutes.
  9. Line a lidded clay pot or a small cast iron pan with a piece of banana leaf. Pop the fish in the bottom in a single layer, then cover with another piece of banana leaf, and the lid. Place the pan on the hob over a low heat and cook for 10 to 15 minutes, or until just cooked through.
  10. To make the sambal, deseed and finely chop the tomatoes, and trim and finely slice the chilli (deseed if you like). Scrape out the coconut with a fork (about 100g) and combine in a bowl with the tomato and chilli. Finely zest over the limes, then squeeze in the juice and season to taste.
  11. Line 2 plates with banana leaves and arrange a little bit of everything on each. Garnish with extra shaved coconut and chilli flakes, if you like.

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