Nam tok literally means ‘waterfall’ in Thai, but in the context of this dish it refers to the juices released by the grilled duck. Nam tok is a lot like a larb, in the sense that it is a spicy, meaty salad. The big difference is that the duck is grilled rather than simmered or raw (as some larbs are made).

You could make this with grilled beef, pork or chicken, but it’s particularly good with duck as it gives you a lovely texture from crispy skin, and a little of the rendered duck fat mixes with the juices and dressing ingredients to create a delicious coating.

Ingredients

Serves 4, as part of a shared meal

2 duck breasts, around 225g each

1 tbsp uncooked brown rice, glutinous rice, or other raw rice

½ red onion, thinly sliced

2 spring onions, finely sliced

1½ tbsp fish sauce

1½ tbsp lime juice (about 1 lime)

1 tsp dried chilli powder

1/4 tsp caster sugar

½ cup roughly chopped mint and coriander leaves, plus extra sprigs to serve

cucumber, to serve

cherry tomatoes, to serve

Method

Place the duck breasts skin-down in a dry frying pan and place the pan over medium heat. Cook for 6 minutes, then flip and cook for a further 4-5 minutes. Remove the duck to a warm plate to rest for about 5 minutes.

Add the rice to a separate dry saucepan and heat over medium heat, swirling constantly for about 5 minutes until the rice starts to pop and gives off a toasty aroma. Grind the rice with a mortar and pestle to a coarse powder.

Combine the onions, fish sauce, lime juice, chilli powder and sugar in a non-reactive bowl and mix well.

Slice the duck into ½ cm slices and combine with the onion mix, then add the rice powder and chopped herbs and toss well. Serve immediately with extra herbs and raw vegetables.

Key Points