Recipe for Lao Style Beef Salad - (Pra Nuea) 
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Yield:
1
Ingredients:
Amount Ingredient
1/2 lb ground beef
lime juice as needed
2 tbl fish sauce
2 tbl ground dried red chilis - (to 3 tbspns)
1 tsp Thai pepper powder - (to 2 tspns)
1/2 cup shallots very thinly sliced
1 tbl lemon grass bruised and sliced
paper thin
4 x fresh kaffir lime leaves - (to 5) shredded
1 tbl Khao Koor see * Note
Chopped spring onions for garnish
Coriander/cilantro leaves for garnish
Lettuce leaf for serving plate
Instructions:
Instructions: * Note: For Khao Koor, get a medium-sized wok fairly hot, and add a couple of tablespoons of uncooked rice. Keep in movement until the rice starts to turn golden brown. Remove from the heat and allow to cool. Grind to a fairly coarse powder in a spice mill, or a mortar and pestle, or a pepper mill or a good clean coffee grinder (all of these work well but keep in mind that a coffee grinder tends to grind too fine - the powder should retain some "texture").

Place the ground meat in a mixing bowl, and thoroughly mix with fresh lime juice, and leave to marinade for an hour. Take the marinaded meat and knead it, much as you would if making pizza dough, squeezing thoroughly to drive out as much blood and other juice as possible, either in a muslin bag or a very fine seive such as a chinois. Drain thoroughly, and return to the mixing bowl, marinade again in fresh lime juice.

Repeat this process 3 or 4 times, then set aside, covered in a cool place to marinade a final time (it is not kneaded after the final marination - to underline the point it should be kneaded and drained 3 or 4 times, then marinated once more).

At this stage you may, if you wish, stir-fry the meat very briefly (it should still be very rare).

Finally combine the meat with the other ingredients; it should be hot and spicy, but not inedibly so, so add the chili powder in stages, tasting as you go.

Allow to stand for an hour before serving. To serve turn it onto a lettuce leaf on a serving platter.

This dish goes best with sticky rice, which can be used as an eating utensil; form a ball of rice and use it to pick up a little of the spiced meat. The rice and vegetable crudites will ameliorate the heat. Serve with the usual Thai table condiments.

Comments: This dish is similar to the common laab dishes, except that the meat is not cooked (or only very lightly cooked). It originated in Laos (hence the alternative name of laab lao), and is the common form found in rural parts of the Isan (North East Thailand). It could also be made with pork or chicken, and we have succesfully made it with [jumbo] shrimp, crayfish, crab and lobster.

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