Belacan sauce is a Malaysian-style sambal with dried shrimp, fresh and dried chili, and belacan, a fermented shrimp paste. With strong notes of garlic and shallots, this Malaysian-Chinese condiment is as addictive as some of our best sauces: chili oil, XO sauce, and ginger scallion oil. It may just join the ranks of your must-have condiments!
How To Use Belacan Sauce
We used the belacan sauce most often as a condiment with rice or congee as it’s quite salty. We would also sometimes use it as an add-in for cooking certain dishes. If you can’t find belacan, shrimp sauce also works as a substitute.
I remember having a tablespoon or two with some warm white rice, and I personally think that is the best way to eat it.
You can also mix a healthy dollop in with noodles, which has recently become a favorite of mine for a quick meal or snack!
A Recipe Created from Memory
I grew up eating this dried shrimp belacan sauce. We call it ma lai zan in Cantonese, or mǎ lā zhǎn (马拉盞) in Mandarin.
We used to buy it from a very small Malaysian restaurant on Doyers Street in NYC’s Chinatown. Picking up a small pint of this belacan sauce from the anonymous soda fridge in the corner of the cramped restaurant was a predictable stop after our monthly drive from the Catskills to Chinatown for fresh produce, Chinese packaged ingredients, and dim sum.
Recently, I missed this belacan sauce so much that I finally decided to recreate it from memory. As I set out to develop this recipe, the tricky thing was that sometimes it was made with dried shrimp, and sometimes it was with small dried anchovies. I’ve opted for the traditional shrimp.
It was also cooked, so it definitely shouldn’t be mistaken for a raw sambal belacan, which is usually made by pounding raw ingredients together in a mortar and pestle. It was also saucier than dried shrimp sambal (known as hai bee hiam in Cantonese).
That said, I think this shrimp belacan sauce recipe is very close to what I had growing up. I will probably continue to tweak the recipe into the future, as little taste and food memories might come back to me. For now, this recipe will be preserved for the family archives!
That said, please let us know in the comments if you have ever had something similar, and how it was made! Or if, like us, you were a fan of that little Malaysian restaurant on Doyers Street!
Belacan Sauce: Recipe Instructions
Soak the de-seeded dried chili peppers in 1 cup of warm water for 15-20 minutes.
While the dried peppers are soaking, de-stem and de-seed the Holland peppers, removing the membranes as well. You can leave the seeds in if you like your sauce very spicy. Cut each pepper into 3 pieces. If using, chop the Thai chilies.
Take half of your shallots and finely chop them. With the other half, thinly slice them. (You can also chop them, but I think slices add another textural dimension to the final sauce.
Drain the dried chili peppers, and set aside the soaking water. To the bowl of a food processor or blender, add the dried peppers, Holland peppers, Thai chilies (if using), half of the shallots (i.e. your chopped shallots, setting aside the slices for later), and garlic.
Pulse until the mixture is smooth, or if you prefer, a coarse paste. Use a rubber spatula to scrape down the sides of the bowl to ensure the mixture is evenly processed.
Heat a frying pan or wok over medium heat. Add the oil and chopped dried shrimp.
Fry over medium to medium low heat for 3-5 minutes.
Put the belacan in a mortar and pestle to break it up (you can also put it in a small bowl and break it up with a fork). Add it to the pan.
Cook for 3-4 minutes, until the belacan is melted into the sauce.
Add the sliced shallots.
Cook for 3-4 minutes, until translucent.
Next, add the chili, garlic and shallot paste.
Stir to combine, and add ½ cup of the reserved pepper soaking water. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in the fish sauce and brown sugar.
Continue to cook for another 15 minutes.
Let the mixture cool.
And transfer to a clean jar or other airtight container.
Refrigerate for up to 4 weeks, or freeze (it should last up to 1 year frozen). If you’re looking for other ways to use this sauce, it goes great with stir fried vegetables like water spinach in our Kang Kung Belacan recipe.
Belacan Sauce
Ingredients
- 16 dried Sichuan chili peppers (16 dried peppers = 10g; deseeded)
- 7 holland chilies
- 3 Thai chili peppers (chopped, optional for added heat)
- 1 1/4 cup sliced shallots (about 6 large, divided)
- 8 cloves garlic (8 cloves = approx. 40g)
- 2/3 cup canola oil (or peanut oil)
- 1 cup dried shrimp (chopped)
- 3 tablespoons belacan shrimp paste
- 1 tablespoon fish sauce (optional)
- 2 tablespoons light brown sugar
Instructions
- Soak the de-seeded dried chili peppers in 1 cup of warm water for 15-20 minutes.
- While the dried peppers are soaking, de-stem and de-seed the Holland peppers, removing the membranes as well. You can leave the seeds in if you like your sauce very spicy. Cut each pepper into 3 pieces. If using, chop the Thai chilies.
- Take half of your shallots and finely chop them. With the other half, thinly slice them. (You can also chop them, but I think slices add another textural dimension to the final sauce.
- Drain the dried chili peppers, and set aside the soaking water. To the bowl of a food processor or blender, add the dried peppers, Holland peppers, Thai chilies (if using), half of the shallots (i.e. your chopped shallots, setting aside the slices for later), and garlic. Pulse until the mixture is smooth, or if you prefer, a coarse paste. Use a rubber spatula to scrape down the sides of the bowl to ensure the mixture is evenly processed.
- Heat a frying pan or wok over medium heat. Add the oil and chopped dried shrimp. Fry over medium to medium low heat for 3-5 minutes.
- Put the belacan in a mortar and pestle to break it up (you can also put it in a small bowl and break it up with a fork). Add it to the pan. Cook for 3-4 minutes, until the belacan is melted into the sauce.
- Add the sliced shallots, and cook for 3-4 minutes, until translucent.
- Next, add the chili, garlic and shallot paste. Stir to combine, and add ½ cup of the reserved pepper soaking water. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in the fish sauce and brown sugar. Continue to cook for another 15 minutes.
- Let the mixture cool, and transfer to a clean jar or other airtight container. Refrigerate for up to 4 weeks, or freeze (it should last up to 1 year frozen).
I’m Malaysian Chinese and have vivid memories of making this with my aunt when we visited Malaysia. She just used dried shrimp, shallots, and red chillies. Cooked it until it was completely dry. We would sprinkle some calamansi juice on and eat with rice. My mom would also use it in her green bean stir fry – just green beans, garlic, sambal, and oyster sauce. Thanks for posting a Malaysian recipe! I’ll have to try this one.
Hi Jane, thanks for sharing your story. Your aunt’s sauce sounds delicious!
How is the smell when frying the belacan? I’ve avoided doing this in my apartment cause I know toasting belacan by itself has quite a strong, pungent, and pervasive smell?
Hi Marcus, it definitely gets pungent, so turn on the kitchen fan. ;-)
A Malaysian living in SF here. I really enjoy your blog and have been using it to re-create many dishes that I miss dearly from home. Would like to comment that, per my memory from helping my mother in her kitchen, she would add tamarind paste after adding sugar to bring out a bit of tartness to the sauce. I occasionally substitute tamarind paste with lime/lemon juice for the same purpose…. Highly recommend you to experiment with tamarind paste/lime or lemon juice should you find yourself wanting to tweak your version!
Hi Pippuri, thanks for your suggestions – I’ll give it a try!
This sounds divine! Definitely going to make this! Thank you!
OMG! Heavenly!!!!!! So delicious !!!! Thank you! Thank you!
Hi Hearts, it warms my heart to hear you enjoyed it. I can tell from all of the !!s :)
What is a Holland chili? I need to know when I visit my great and good friends at Gold City (Flushing). Thank you.
Hi DB, you can click on the ingredients in the recipe card to take you to descriptions and photos of most items in our ingredients glossary. However, I see the links did not come out in the post, so I just made corrections. Here is the link to the glossary entry for red Holland peppers.
Thank you for this recipe. I have shellfish allergies and sadly that restricts what I can eat at Asian restaurants. I could make some of those dishes at home now if I can substitute shrimp paste in this Belacan sauce. Sometimes I have used fish sauce as a substitute for oyster sauce and the dish tasted decent but perhaps not as authentic. But then I dont have much of a choice.
Would vegetarian oyster sauce be a decent substitute for shrimp paste here?
Hi Ekgta, belacan, shrimp paste, and shrimp sauce have such a unique flavor that it’s really difficult, if not impossible to substitute. I would suggest using more fish sauce in place of the shrimp paste. Though be careful, because it is very salty!
This reminds me of a Burmese Chinese condiment a friend’s mom gifted me. Chopped dried shrimp, sliced garlic and shallots, all fried together wit some chile flakes in oil. It was so delicious over rice and plain noodles! Now with your recipe, I have a use for that solid block of becalan sitting in my pantry
Hi Cyndy, hope you like my version of belacan sauce. :)
The place on Doyers Street makes terrific belacan so if this is even close it will be a godsend.
Is this the stuff you use with ong choy because ong choy with belacan is one of the greatest Asian vegetable dishes.
Hi Jack, yes, ong choy with belacan or the dish known as KongKong belacan is coming shortly!
Hi Bill
I love your belacan recipe but unforttunately here in Toronto Canada we can not get Belacan Paste can I use Lee Kim Lee shrimp paste as a substitute
Hi Gillian, Belacan is the traditional ingredient but the Lee Kum kee shrimp paste should be just fine as a substitute. Also, Toronto is such a food mecca that I bet you can find belacan somewhere ;-).
Where would you suggest one go. After this pandemic of course..
Hi Kali, I am not sure, but my sense is that it can be found somewhere in Toronto Chinatown. Sorry I couldn’t be more helpful.
I live in Mississauga and I buy blocks of Belacan Paste at Btrust Supermarket.
There is a similar condiment in the Philippines called bagoong (bah-goh-ohng).
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.foodrepublic.com/2015/06/18/get-familiar-with-bagoong-the-stinky-secret-weapon-of-philippine-cuisine/amp/
Hi Neslie, yes, it’s in the same class of fermented seafood pastes :)
Love Balacan sauce .. I’m Malaysian residing in the UK, this sauce can be used for boiled eggs sambal and nasi lemak – coconut rice with pandan.. yummy 😋 I definitely be making some now .. thanks
You’re welcome Indy, thanks for the added advice!