Herby Pork Laab With Chile
Updated May 29, 2025
- Total Time
- 35 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
3 tablespoons jasmine rice
1 large shallot, thinly sliced into rounds (about 1 scant cup)
2 tablespoons fish sauce
¼ cup lime juice from about 2 to 3 limes, plus more for serving (optional)
½ teaspoon sugar
1 bird’s eye chile, thinly sliced
½ teaspoon red-pepper flakes, plus more to taste
3 scallions, thinly sliced
½ cup torn mint leaves
½ cup roughly chopped cilantro, leaves and tender stems
1 pound ground pork
Kosher salt
Flaky salt (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
In a large skillet over medium heat, toast the rice, stirring frequently, until it starts to smell nutty and turns golden in color, about 4 to 5 minutes. Transfer to a mortar and pestle or clean spice grinder and allow to cool for a minute or two. Grind or pulse the rice until it has a powderlike consistency. You should have about 1 ½ to 2 tablespoons. Set aside and wipe out the pan.
- Step 2
In a large bowl, whisk together shallots, fish sauce, lime juice, sugar, bird’s eye chile, chile flakes, half the scallions, half the mint and half the cilantro. Set aside.
- Step 3
Heat a large skillet over medium heat, and add pork, breaking meat apart with the back of a wooden spoon or spatula. Cook until meat is no longer pink, but not browned, about 5 to 6 minutes.
- Step 4
Remove pork from heat and allow to cool for about 5 minutes. Use a slotted spoon to transfer the pork to the bowl with the chile-herb mixture, add the rice powder and stir together until combined. Season with kosher salt to taste.
- Step 5
Top with remaining herbs and serve. Season with flaky salt and an extra squeeze of lime, if desired.
Private Notes
Comments
Vietnamese food also uses rice powder, ground from toasted uncooked rice, called "thinh". You can get it in small packets in Asian markets, usually located near the spices and the various starches, like tapioca and rice flour. For crispy fried shallots,Trader Joe's sells containers of "fried onions" that tastes just like it. Saves time without foregoing taste or authenticity.
While I was living in Indonesia I learned from my cook to fry dried onion flakes (the kind you find in jars in the spice section) instead of fresh shallots. This yields a toasty brown and crunchy result in seconds and is much less oily than the fresh shallots, which catch oil in all their nooks and crannies. Tastes delicious too.
Loved this recipe! The lime levels are perfect. I added chopped peanuts to it which gave it a nice crunch. Would definitely recommend doing a super fine grind on the rice. COOK THIS NOW.
Delish! I added more cilantro and green onion. As others suggested, next time I’ll skip the powered toast rice, which created a grain
Just stellar. Made as written and wouldn’t change a thing. Yum!
Dont have mint? Use basil! Have Dill? Throw a little in! Make some rice instead of the toasting thing, and for crispy....try some nuts a little chopped. Any kind will do!

