Crab Curry (Goan)
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Crab curry (Caril de caranguejo in Portuguese) is a typical Indian seafood dish and later incorporated by Portugese into their cuisine, to make Indo-Portuguese dish variants from Goa, Daman and Diu, a region along the west coast of today's India which was part of the Portuguese State of India (Estado da Índia). It is also a typical dish from Mozambique, due to the significant population of Goan origin that exists in that country.
As the name implies, it is a curry dish prepared with crab,[1] which traditionally has been found in abundance off the coast of Goa.
In addition to the crab, its ingredients include onion, tomato, piri piri (a cultivar of Capsicum chinense, one of the sources of chili pepper that grows both wild and domesticated), garlic, coconuts and spices which form a yellow curry.
The coconuts are grated, to extract its milk. The crab can be either cut into pieces or shredded. In the first case, it is common to be consumed by hand, to facilitate the extraction of meat. In both cases, the previously cooked crab is placed in a pan to boil with most of the ingredients. After some time the coconut milk is added, boiling the dish for about 30 minutes to rinse it.
It is usually served with white rice, which can be complemented with pickle and papads (paparis).
References
[edit]- ^ Ferreira, Luis. "Caril de Caranguejo (Moçambique) - ReceitaseMenus.net". Receitasemenus.net. Retrieved 10 September 2017.