A New Pumpkin Laksa for a Cold Night
The first time I included pumpkin in a coconut-scented laksa was for a Bonfire Night supper in 2004 (see The Kitchen Diaries). The soup had to be sensational to make up for our distinct lack of fireworks (I think we wrote our names in the air with sparklers). Rich, sweet-sour, mouth-tinglingly hot, and yet curiously soothing, it had everything you need in a soup for a frosty night. There is much pleasure to be had in the constant tweaking of a recipe to change not its essential character but its details. And so it has been with this soup. I have since gone on to remove the tomatoes or add some shredded greens as the mood and the state of the larder take me. Such improvisations, many made at the last minute, need to be done with care: you don’t want too many flavors going on. Vietnamese soups such as this are traditionally ingredient rich but should never taste confused. By the same token, to simplify it too much would be to lose the soup’s generosity and complexity and therefore its point. The laksa appears complicated at first but in practice it is far from it. Once you understand the basics, the recipe falls into place and becomes something you can fiddle with to suit your own taste. The basic spice paste needs heat (ginger, garlic, tiny bird’s eye chiles); the liquid needs body and sweetness (coconut milk, rich stock); the finish needs sourness and freshness (lime juice, mint, cilantro). The necessary saltiness comes from nam pla and tamari rather than salt itself. These notes in place, you can feel free to include noodles, tomatoes, greens, sweet vegetables, or meat as you wish. What matters is balance.
Recipe information
Yield
enough for 4
Ingredients
For the Spice Paste
For the Soup
Preparation
Step 1
Peel and seed the pumpkin and cut the flesh into large chunks. Cook in a steamer or in a metal colander balanced over a pan of boiling water until tender. Remove from the heat.
Step 2
For the spice paste, remove the stems from the chiles, peel the garlic, and peel and roughly chop the ginger and lemongrass. Put them all into a food processor with the cilantro stems and leaves and the sesame oil and blitz until you have a rough paste.
Step 3
Get a large, deep pan hot and add the spice paste. Fry for a minute, then stir in the stock and coconut milk and bring to a boil. Let simmer for seven to ten minutes, then stir in the nam pla, tamari, lime juice, pumpkin, and the cooked and drained noodles. Simmer briefly, add the cilantro and mint leaves over the top, and serve in deep bowls.