The best part of this dish? The sauce. This stuff is the Mother Of All Flavour Bombs! Any Singaporean will tell you the sauce is the beating heart of Singapore Chilli Crab. It’s an explosion of seafood flavour, less spicy than the name suggests, subtly sweet, deeply savoury. Sauce excellence at its finest!
Singapore Chilli Crab
You’ve heard about it all your life, you might’ve even tried it on its home turf in Singapore. It is probably the most iconic crab dish in the world. It’s grand, it’s bold, it’s fun, and it’s an occasion. And of course, utterly delicious! It’s a fact that crab, especially live, is expensive. So if you’re on the fence about why you should make this, here’s one reason: We think this recipe is miles better than any chilli crab we’ve tried even here in Sydney! I know that is a pretty bold statement, nor am I one to blow my own trumpet. After all, Sydney is a food-lover’s playground, brimming with superb restaurants showcasing many of the world’s best cuisines. But the RecipeTin team AND my family have searched high and low, travelling far and wide to try Singapore Chilli Crab at well-known establishments around the city. And yet, every single one has somehow fallen short of our expectations. Not the crab mind you – live crab cooked fresh is hard to get wrong, after all. No, it’s the sauce. Any Singaporean will tell you the sauce is the beating heart of Singapore Chilli Crab. Yet the sauce at every Chilli Crab place we tried was either too sweet, lacked the requisite flavour kick, or just didn’t taste quite right. So if there’s one thing I will stand behind in this Singapore Chilli Crab recipe, it’s this: The flavour in the sauce is extraordinary. Deeply complex, mildly spicy, with a perfect balance of sweet and savoury, this stuff is the Mother Of All Flavour Bombs. The Singapore Chilli Crab sauce is so good in fact, that words fail me. And that’s saying something!! 😂
What you need for Singapore Chilli Crab
There’s 3 parts to Singapore Chilli Crab:
1. The crab
Live mud crab is the first and most traditional choice for the ultimate Singapore Chilli Crab eating experience. Known for their fearsomely large claws full of sweet, juicy meat, live mud crabs are sold in Australia and Asia at fish markets and large seafood shops.
How to clean and cut crab
I’ve written a separate post on how to clean and prepare the crab. The job is far easier than you think, especially when you have someone to hold your hand through the process (that would be me!) Dispatching the crab is not a stress either. You may have terrifying visions of engaging in hand-to-hand combat with a giant crustacean desperately fighting for its life, legs flailing and claws snapping. But I assure you it’s as simple as popping the bound critter into the freezer to until it sleeps.
After cutting the crab
Once the crab is cut up, you will end up with:
Crab cutting service – special request
Also, I just found out just today that some seafood shops will cut the crab up for you on request, such as Claudio’s at the Sydney Fish Markets. Handy! If the seafood store offers a service to cut the crab up for you, make sure you request the “tomalley” (“Crab mustard”) from inside the crab be reserved as this is one of the secret ingredients that’s make the sauce so incredible! See above for more information about tomalley.
Best crab for Singapore Chilli Crab
As noted above, the traditional crab used is a mud crab, around 1.5kg / 3 lb. Generally, bigger is better. Larger crabs are prized for their grandeur as well as ease of eating! But the dish can be made with any large crabs, such as:
Australia: Blue swimmer (smaller than mud crab, but the shell is softer so it’s easier to extract the meat), spanner crab (very little meat in the claws, but lots in the body)America/Canada: Blue crab, dungeness crab, rock crab, stone crabUK : Brown crab, spider crab
Here’s a photo of Singapore Chilli Crab made with blue swimmer crabs. Because they are smaller, I used 2 large crabs which totalled around 1.5kg/3lb. They taste is just as great as mud crabs, but they’re more fiddly to get the flesh out because they’re smaller!
Fresh vs frozen crab
In order of preference: I’m sorry to say pre-cooked crab (whether fresh or frozen) is not on the list. I’ve been disappointed far too many times in the past at the quality in Australia at least, lulled by big promises from fish mongers that don’t deliver. Also, the sauce really needs the crab juices that leach out as it cooks, it’s an essential part of the flavour!
Crabs not suitable for Singapore Chilli crab
Small crabs – You could but it’s a lot of work to extract not much meat!King crab – This is a premium crab with sweet, incredibly meaty leg meat. While in Sydney you can buy uncooked king crab legs, I tend to think the strong flavours of this chilli sauce may overwhelm the delicate flavour. Feel free to try!Snow crab – The flesh of this crab is quite delicate and crumbly, so I don’t think it would be suited to use in this dish.
If crab isn’t within your reach, make this recipe with prawns/shrimp instead. It’s phenomenal!
2. Singapore Chilli Crab chilli paste (sauce base)
Here’s what you need for the chilli paste which forms the base of the sauce:
Taucu paste – This is a fermented yellow soy bean paste used in Indonesian, Malaysian and Singaporean cuisine. Believe it it or not, you can even get it at large grocery stores in Australia such as Woolworths (see here). It tastes a bit like miso paste and plays a similar role, adding deep savoury flavour to food. Substitute with Miso paste + a touch of sugar;Fresh chillies – By using large red chillies, we get great chilli flavour in the sauce and colour without making it blow-your-head-off spicy. These are cayenne peppers. Singapore Chilli Crab is not meant to be insanely spicy! Feel free to reduce according to your taste. If you want to be conservative, shoot for a small amount as you can always beef up the chilli factor later by adding some chilli or hot sauce;Eschalot – Also known as French onions, and are called “shallots” in the US. They look like baby onions, but have purple-skinned flesh, are finer and sweeter. Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call “shallots” ie the long green onions. Substitute with red onion; andGinger and garlic – Essential aromatics in Asian cooking!
3. Other Singapore Chilli Crab sauce ingredients
In addition to the chilli paste, here are the other ingredients required for the sauce:
Roasted belachan shrimp paste – There’s no hiding it: this stuff stinks. It’s stinky out of the packet, and phenomenally stinky when you start cooking it. You may want to warn your neighbours. But once cooked, the offensive smell all but disappears and it adds an incredibly deep, savoury flavour into anything you use it in. Available even at grocery stores here in Australia (such as Woolies, Coles) and at Asian stores, it’s a key secret ingredient in this dish. There really is no substitute that will achieve the same result, but the best alternative is shrimp paste;Ketchup – Yes, ketchup (tomato sauce to us Australians) is used in authentic Singapore Chilli Crab! Singapore is a melting pot of East meets West, and these influences are frequently embraced in the food. It’s another secret ingredient, used to add sweetness as well as rich tomato and spice notes. Don’t skip it!Sweet chilli sauce – Just your stock-standard Asian (eg. Thai) sweet chilli sauce from any grocery store. It adds further sweetness and some gingery warmth to the sauce;Tomato passata or puree – Not to be confused with tomato paste which is a thick, concentrated and sour paste, tomato passata is pureed, strained pure tomatoes. Sometimes labelled Tomato Puree in the US (here’s a photo of Mutti Tomato Passata sold at Walmart). Readily available in Australian supermarkets nowadays, alongside pasta sauces;Egg – Whisked egg is mixed into the simmering sauce at the end to create an attractive marbling effect from the cooked egg, a signature of Singapore Chilli Crab;Vinegar – A sour dimension is the third flavour pillar together with sweetness and savouriness. It’s essential for balance in Singapore Chill Crab sauce; Green onion and coriander / cilantro – For garnish.
How to make Singapore Chilli Crab
The actual cooking part is phenomenally straightforward. In fact, people in my team who have made this recipe all comment on how it takes more effort to eat this dish than to make it!!!
Part 1: Making the sauce
Part 2:
Part 3: Finishing the sauce
And you’re done! Now it’s just time to plate up!
Part 4: Plating up
How to serve Singapore Chilli Crab
Singapore Chilli Crab is a dish made for sharing. Gather your nearest and dearest (nobody else is deserving! 😉), roll up your sleeves and get stuck in with your hands. There’s no two ways about it, you’re going to get messy – very messy! (Wait until you see the eat scene at the end of the recipe video!! 😂) Traditionally in Singapore, Chilli Crab is served with a stack of golden mantou buns. These steamed and fried, fluffy Chinese buns make the perfect vessel for mopping up all that lip-smacking sauce. These can be hard to source though, so a baguette, crusty loaf or even soft dinner rolls are perfectly good alternatives. Though if you want the best, make homemade brioche. Think – soft buttery bread dunked in hot spicy flavour loaded sauce…. her needs buckle at the mere thought! Rice naturally also pairs perfectly well, but you’ll find your chopsticks get slippery pretty quickly!
This recipe is a big deal!
Ending on a serious note though, this is probably one of the most iconic “big deal” recipes I’ve shared on my website since I started it 6 years ago. Initiated because I just couldn’t find great Singapore Crab anywhere in Sydney, and this sort of food is me on a plate. Bold flavours, messy food you eat with your hands. When I set out to do this, I had never handled a whole crab before. And certainly never tackled a live mud crab before. It’s been a labour of love, learning how to clean and prepare crab, developing what I think is the ultimate Singapore Chilli Crab recipe, but most of all, the time consuming process of documenting it. Videos, photos, writing. That I can show people from all around the world how to make my favourite dishes, this is what gets me out of bed every day, that motivates me to do the very best I can in every facet of what I do. Sounds corny? Perhaps. Though actually, I’m just trying to explain, perhaps to myself, why I’ve put so much effort into one single recipe! I truly hope you give this dish a go one day. It’s epic! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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