Marriage Proposal Cilantro-Tamarind Dipping Sauce

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Average: 4.7 (3 votes)

My girlfriend swears that her fiance asked her to marry him because of this sauce. Maybe you will have similar results, maybe not, but I guarantee that you will find this sauce unbelievably tasty!

We use it for everything – as a dip, a dressing, a pasta sauce, etc. But our favorite way to use it is as a sauce for salad rolls – use a lettuce wrapper, and load up the ripe avocado, sliced red peppers, julienned carrots, sundried tomatoes, red onion, sprouts, etc., then slather on a generous portion of this sauce, roll it all up and serve.

This sauce keeps well for about a week, so you can easily double or triple the recipe if you find you like it.

Ingredients: 

2 tablespoon raw apple cider vinegar (or lemon juice)
2 tablespoon tamarind pulp, soaked and pits removed
½ cup raw honey
¼ cup olive oil
½ cup raw cashews
.66 cup fresh cilantro
2 clove garlic, peeled
2 green onions or scallions
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 teaspoon ground cumin
¼ teaspoon sea salt
1 pinch tumeric

Preparation: 

Place all ingredients in a food processor and process until combined. Keep refrigerated.

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DivineMissEm's picture
DivineMissEm wrote 1 year 40 weeks ago

This is super yum. I left out the nuts completely, used lime juice instead of acv and only used 1 tbsp of oil. I´m eating it now over some carrots, cucumbers and bok choy. I hope it´s like the original.. I can see how the cashews would make it super creamy and yummy but i´m trying to cut back!

artwings's picture
artwings wrote 1 year 42 weeks ago

yum, sounds good. And I love reading what everyone has tried with it!

sabriya's picture
sabriya wrote 1 year 45 weeks ago

I am going to try this tomorrow and dip it with dried plaintains!

lilmzmoyer@yahoo.com's picture
lilmzmoyer@yahoo.com wrote 1 year 50 weeks ago

OMG! I've died and gone to Heaven........well, okay but close! I remember my mom having a recipe when I grew up called "Better than Sex Cake" ....well, move over, look out! Cuz, this tops them all!!!! Oh My Gosh!!! My family can't get enough of it!!! No wonder your girlfriend's boyfriend married her!!! I would too!! ;) Thanks soooooo much for sharing!!! :)

carrie6292's picture
carrie6292 wrote 1 year 51 weeks ago

This is a nice, light sauce - i left out the nuts completely... next time, i'd 1/2 the ACV. I'm not sure what flavor Tamarind is supposed to add, but i pretty much just tasted the cilantro and ACV. I still liked it a lot - my veggies are marinating in it in the fridge for my "veggie rolls" for tomorrow ;) Oh, yes, and I did use Agave instead of honey as well... My sauce came out thick, so i just put some veggies in a container and then dolloped some sauce ontop and shook them up... tomorrow i'll put the veggies in an endive leaf and roll it up!

Hippie Chick's picture
Hippie Chick wrote 2 years 6 weeks ago

Just made this...SO good!
It reminds me a lot of honey-mustard sauce, although I didn't measure exactly. I did add some cayenne pepper because I love it. I used agave instead of honey too.
Just a half batch of this and snap peas in the pod and I was set for dinner!

bailaMariposa's picture
bailaMariposa wrote 2 years 7 weeks ago

This is the greatest! I barely even had all the ingredients and it was still yummy! When I was making it I kept, 'my word, what kind of concoction is this?' But it turned out great. It will definitely be a staple especially since it took about 5 minutes to make. Thanks!

Crisyn's picture
Crisyn wrote 2 years 18 weeks ago

Hi Rawlifestyle. If you soak tamarind in a little water, it will turn to mush. I just break off a piece, put it in a small bowl with just enough water to cover it, then leave it sit for a few minutes. Then I mush it around with a fork, then I make sure there are no pits or bits left. Then I take out 2 tbsp of the mush and add it to the blender. Hope this helps.

 
RawLifestyle wrote 2 years 23 weeks ago

What do you mean by soaked? How much water per tablespoon/cup of tamarind pulp? Also, do you keep the soaked water or do us strain it and only use the pulp? Thanks!

Crisyn's picture
Crisyn wrote 2 years 40 weeks ago

This isn't really a creamy sauce or dip, at least not the way I make it :-) If you are trying to stay away from nuts, you could try the sunflower seed variation juleskess posted above. Or try a half recipe and just leave out the cashews, and maybe you'll be pleasantly surprised!

 
Marichiesa wrote 2 years 41 weeks ago

This sauce sounds great! I have a question though... How do you think it would taste without the cashews? I'm not digesting nuts so well at the moment so I'm looking for creamy sauces/dips that can be made without them.

Crisyn's picture
Crisyn wrote 2 years 48 weeks ago

Juleskess, thanks for posting your variations. I think I will try it with sunflower seeds - yummy!

juleskess's picture
juleskess wrote 2 years 48 weeks ago

Also, if you can't find tamarind, I'll bet a little mango puree with a little extra lemon juice would do the trick.

juleskess's picture
juleskess wrote 2 years 48 weeks ago

I Love this sauce! Listen all of you out there, you will be so happy that you tried this recipe. It is sweet and tangy and spicy all at the same time. It is like a tropical thicker pesto. This sauce has it all: cheap ingredients, easy to make, keeps for days, full of leafy greens, low fat, can be used on everything. I is very versatile. I cannot find decent cashews or raw honey where I live so I used chopped up dates and sunflower seeds instead and I left out the oil and it was still very good. I cannot rave enough. It is a great sauce to have around a raw fridge. Thank you!

joseegonthier's picture
joseegonthier wrote 3 years 4 weeks ago

Crisyn is right about the asian markets - I've seen some today, while shopping. :)

humanimal's picture
humanimal wrote 3 years 4 weeks ago

haha I love the name! :)

Crisyn's picture
Crisyn wrote 3 years 4 weeks ago

You can usually find tamarind pulp in the ethnic foods section of better grocery stores. The one I buy is in the East Indian foods section and comes in a hard brick. I have also seen it as a puree in a pouch. You might also try Asian markets.

I have never tried it, but tamarind pulp has a similar texture to dates, so you might try pureed dates if you can't find the tamarind. Good luck!

hleva's picture
hleva wrote 3 years 4 weeks ago

Where does one find tamarind pulp??

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