Alfred Russel Wallace’s menu
Nasi lauk — central rice and its everyday accompaniment

Camp rice with fish and sambal belacan

EverydayReconstruction🧂 🍄 🌶️moyen45 min

A dome of steaming white rice, a piece of pan-fried fish, some stir-fried green vegetables, and a spoonful of sambal belacan, that fermented shrimp and chili paste that wakes everything up. Salty, deep, spicy: the quintessential working meal.

Nasi lauk — central rice and its everyday accompaniment

A dome of steaming white rice, a piece of pan-fried fish, some stir-fried green vegetables, and a spoonful of sambal belacan, that fermented shrimp and chili paste that wakes everything up. Salty, deep, spicy: the quintessential working meal.

I confess I quickly adapted to the Malay table and found it excellent for my health. They served me rice in a pyramid, and all around small dishes: a river fish, sautéed green leaves, and that brown paste they call belacan, whose smell frightens the Englishman and delights the discerning palate. I learned to eat with my fingers, in the local fashion, and I can assure you that after a day spent with net in hand under the sun, no London dish would have seemed more comforting.
Alfred Russel Wallace
Ingredients
  • White ricea large measure (base)
  • River or sea fish1 per diner (protein)
  • Belacan (fermented shrimp paste)a small block (umami)
  • Fresh chiliesa few (spiciness)
  • Lime1 (acidity)
  • Local green leaves (kangkung)a bunch (vegetable)
How it was made : In the villages where Wallace stayed, cooking was done over a wood fire, rice in a cast-iron pot or bamboo tube, fish grilled on embers. Belacan, dried and fermented in the sun, kept for months and accompanied every meal: it was the salt and umami of tropical daily life.
Sources : Alfred Russel Wallace, The Malay Archipelago (1869)