
This salad is wildly popular all over Thailand, but it’s a signature dish of the northwestern regions. In Thailand, you can order it in upscale restaurants or, even more traditional and somehow more delicious, order it to go with a street vendor. He or she will wrap it up in plastic bags, accompanied with sticky rice. It’s made from pale green shreds of unripe papaya with a vibrant balance of sour, sweet and hot, hot, hot! “Som” means “sour,” and “Tum” means “to pound.” As an added bonus, papaya is full of good things for your body!
If you want to make the dish the way Thais make it, you’ll need a mortar and pestle and some ingredients from an ethnic grocer. ; ) There are different variations, but this is my favorite version.
INGREDIENTS:
6 fresh “kii noo” - that is , Thai chilies or 2 serrano chilies. I use LOTS more b/c we love it burnin’ hot! Can you handle it?!
1 Tbsp coarsely chopped garlic
1 Tsp coarsely chopped shallot
1 small hard, green, unripe papaya, peeled and finely shredded (about 2 cups). I buy mine pre-shredded at 99 Ranch Market in Clairemont Mesa, which saves a lot of time! A food processor does a good job too.
A little bit of shredded carrot as well to add color to the dish
1 Tsp palm sugar or sugar
1/4 Tsp salt
2 Tbsp fish sauce
1/2 lime, quarter length-wise
7 cherry or grape tomatoes, quartered, length-wise. I prefer grape tomatoes because I think they’re more flavorful.
METHOD:
In a bowl of a large, heave mortar, combine the chilies, garlic and shallot. Grind and pound w/ a pestle until they are broken down, but not completely mushy.
Add the papaya and pound until the shreds become limp and soft. Turn the mixture as you pound. One at a time, add the sugar, salt and fish sauce and mix well. Squeeze the juice from each lime, then add the lime pieces to the mortar as well. Add the tomatoes and pound another minute, releasing some of their juices. Be careful not to squirt the juices at yourself while your pounding!
Taste and adjust the seasonings, which should be a balance of sour, hot, salty and sweet. You’ll know it when it’s good. ; ) Transfer the salad to a serving dish and serve and drizzle the sauce from the mortar. I always serve this with a wedge of cabbage or Nappa cabbage and rotisserie chicken.