Nam Phrik Num (น้ำพริกหนุ่ม Northern Thai Green Chili Dip)

A plate featuring Nam Phrik Num, a green chili dip, accompanied by an array of raw and steamed vegetables, hard-boiled eggs, and various side items.

When I was in Chiang Mai in Northern Thailand, I followed a private cooking lesson, and tried several local restaurants. A dish that featured on the menu of local restaurants that serve Northern Thai food was “hors d’oeuvres”, an assortment of various raw and steamed vegetables, sausage, hard-boiled egg, and pork crackling with “dips”. The second recipe for such a dip that I am sharing with you is Nam Phrik Num, also written as Nam Prik Noom. It was not featured in my cooking class, but we did get this at all of the restaurants. Its main component is roasted green chillies, but it is only mildly spicy. We especially enjoyed it as a dip for various types of (pork) sausage, but it also worked well with the various raw and steamed vegetables.

Use large green fresh chili peppers. If they are not spicy enough, you can add a green Thai bird chili.

Ingredients

An assortment of ingredients for a Thai dip, including fresh cilantro, lime, shallots, garlic, green chili peppers, coarse salt, and fish sauce.

Makes about 250 ml (1 cup)

  • 150 grams medium spicy fresh green chillies
  • 50 grams shallots
  • 25 grams garlic
  • 15 grams cilantro (with stems)
  • coarse salt to taste
  • fish sauce to taste, about 2 Tbsp
  • freshly squeezed lime juice to taste, about 2 tsp

Instructions

An empty, round frying pan with two side handles, placed on a stovetop.

Preheat an oven proof frying pan on the stove. Preheat the broiler.

A frying pan filled with green chili peppers, shallots, and garlic, arranged on a dark surface.

Add the chillies, garlic, and shallots without peeling them first.

A frying pan with charred green chili peppers and whole shallots on a stove.

Place the pan under the broiler at the highest position (closest to the broiling element). Broil until the chili peppers are nicely charred.

You could of course also roast the vegetables on the stove only, turning them as needed.

A glass bowl covered with plastic wrap, containing an assortment of ingredients for a Thai dip, sitting on a black countertop.

Place the chillies, garlic, and shallots in a bowl, and cover with plastic wrap. The residual heat will steam the vegetables.

A stone mortar filled with roasted green chillies, shallots, and garlic, ready for making Nam Phrik Num, a Thai chili dip.

When they have cooled off, peel the garlic and shallots. Remove the stems from the chillies and chop them coarsely. Place them in a mortar and pound with a pestle until you have broken up everything.

A stone mortar filled with fresh cilantro and a pinch of coarse salt, set against a dark background.

Now add the cilantro and a pinch of coarse salt.

A mortar filled with a green chili dip mixture, placed on a dark countertop.

Pound until the cilantro has been incorporated and you have a coarse but homogeneous texture.

Close-up of a stone mortar filled with green chili paste, reflecting the texture of the mixture.

Add fish sauce and lime juice, and stir with a spoon to incorporate. Taste and adjust the seasoning with salt, fish sauce, or lime juice.

A plate featuring an assortment of raw and steamed vegetables alongside a small bowl of green chili dip, known as Nam Phrik Num, garnished with cilantro.

Serve with a selection of:

  • steamed squash
  • steamed eggplant (various types)
  • steamed cabbage
  • raw Napa cabage
  • raw cucumber
  • steamed longbeans
  • raw winged beans
  • hard-boiled egg
  • Thai sausage
  • pork crackling

It is nice to serve with several dips, one more recipe will follow. I already posted a recipe for a pork and tomato dip called Nam Phrik Ong.

4 thoughts on “Nam Phrik Num (น้ำพริกหนุ่ม Northern Thai Green Chili Dip)

    1. Not peeling the garlic and shallots makes it easier to get a roasted rather than burnt flavor. This dip is remarkably similar to a Mexican salsa (just leave out the fish sauce and add some cumin).

      Liked by 1 person

  1. I will try this without the Thai bird chilli as some of my guests found the version I made too fiery. I love nam priks.

    Liked by 1 person

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