Festive Seafood Curry

This summery (and easy) dish is a must-try this summer – made with our Cape Malay Cooking Sauce it's the answer to cooking for a crowd.

 

Ingredients

This ingredient list is to inspire you, and you can use as much or as little fresh seafood as you like.

For the curry

  • 800 g kingklip
  • 2 Tbsp oil for frying
  • ¼ cup flour, for dusting
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • 1 kg mussels*
  • 1 x Pesto Princess Cape Malay Curry Sauce
  • 100 g mange tout
  • 100 g baby corn
  • 100 g peas

 

For the sambal

  • 1 cup fresh pineapple, chopped
  • ¼ red onion, thinly sliced
  • Chilli, to taste (optional)
  • ¼ cup coconut flakes, toasted
  • 20 g fresh coriander, rinsed and finely chopped

To serve

How to

  1. Cut the kingklip into bite-sized morsels and set aside while heating the oil in a frying pan.

    Pesto Princess © Seafood Curry

  2. Combine the flour with salt and pepper and use to dust the kingklip.  In batches, fry the kingklip until golden and set aside.
  3. To steam the mussels, pour 1 cup of water into a large pot. Bring to the boil, add the mussels and cover.  Reduce the heat to moderate and cook, stirring occasionally, until the mussels open wide.
  4. Heat the Pesto Princess Cape Malay Curry Sauce in a large pot over medium to high heat until gently simmering. Add the veggies (mange tout, baby corn and peas) and cook for 3 to 5 minutes, until just tender. Place the cooked kingklip and mussels into the warmed sauce and give it a gentle stir.
  5. Make your sambal by combining all of the ingredient. Serve with the Festive Seafood Curry along with coconut jasmine rice, fresh coriander and spring onions.

    Pesto Princess © Seafood Curry

* If you’re lucky enough to pick your own mussels (with a permit), be sure to clean them thoroughly before cooking. You may already have your own technique for this (there are lots of different ‘tricks’) but here’s our version: give them a scrub first in clean water; steam them open and set aside to cool. If they’re particularly wild mussels with quite a lot of grit and ‘beards’, rinse out any grit and pull off the beards. This is a good moment to snap off the empty half-shell. If you’re buying mussels that have already been cleaned, you can skip this step.

 

 

 

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