Article 5VPP2 How to make the perfect pork (or chicken, duck or tofu) larb – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect…

How to make the perfect pork (or chicken, duck or tofu) larb – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect…

by
Felicity Cloake
from World news | The Guardian on (#5VPP2)

Larb, larp, laap, lap ... however you spell it, this salty-sour staple of south-east Asia has myriad versions, which won't stop our resident perfectionist from seeking out the best

Larb, also transcribed as larp, lap, laap, laarp and laab, is a dish that doesn't fit easily into western boxes. A highly seasoned mixture of chopped meat, fish, tofu or mushrooms - Thai food writer Leela Punyaratabandhu clarifies that laab is a verb denoting the mincing of meat" - that, as fellow Thai food writer Kay Plunkett-Hogge observes, can also be referred to as a salad by virtue of its being served frequently in lettuce leaves".

It's not even strictly Thai, though the travel hub of south-east Asia is where most Brits are likely to have come across it; a speciality of the north, it's said to have originated with the Tai people, and variations on the dish are also found in Laos, Myanmar and south-western China. The one you're most likely to be familiar with, though, is laarp isaan, from the north-eastern Thai region of the same name: as Punyaratabandhu explains, the way lap is made varies from province to province, and it is hard to nail down a normative version - if there is one. But this version is the most common in Bangkok and at Thai restaurants outside Thailand. It also happens to be one of the simplest."

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