Kristang community, Malacca, Malaysia
Karang is the Kristang stuffed crab — whole mud crabs or blue swimmer crabs are steamed, cleaned, and the shell used as a vessel for a spiced, aromatic mixture of crab meat, prawn, shallots, garlic, fresh chili, coconut milk, and egg, which is then returned to the shell and grilled or baked until set. The dish is a direct expression of the Portuguese tradition of using seafood shells as cooking vessels — the Portuguese tradition of 'recheio' (stuffing) applied to the Malaccan crabs of the Straits of Malacca. The crab preparation: live mud crabs are killed humanely (spike between the eyes), steamed for 12-15 minutes until cooked, then cooled. The top shell (carapace) is removed intact and cleaned. All the crab meat is extracted from the body, claws, and legs — the quantity from a medium crab (500-600g) produces approximately 120-150g of meat. The filling is made by frying shallots and garlic in coconut oil until translucent, adding sambal berlado (the chili paste), then folding in the fresh crab meat, chopped raw prawns, coconut milk, and beaten egg. The mixture is seasoned with salt and white pepper, filled back into the cleaned shell, and grilled under a hot broiler or over charcoal for 8-10 minutes until the filling is set and the top is golden. The quality markers: the filling should be moist but set, with visible strands of crab meat rather than a homogenous paste. The shell provides both presentation and a subtle briny additional flavour as it heats. Over-cooking produces a dry, rubbery filling — the precise point between set and rubbery is the critical skill.
Sweet crab, aromatic from the sambal berlado, rich from the coconut milk, with the egg binding giving a savoury depth — the stuffed crab format concentrates the sweet brininess of the crab and amplifies it with the spice mixture. Each bite delivers the full flavour of the sea in a spiced, textured form.
Steam the crab first, extract all meat carefully — the claw meat is valuable and must not be discarded. Filling should contain visible crab strands, not be a smooth paste. Egg and coconut milk are the binding agents — too much egg produces a frittata; too little produces a crumbly filling. Grill until just set — remove immediately; residual heat continues cooking.
Mud crab (ketam batu) is preferred over blue swimmer for karang — denser meat, more flavour, stronger shell for re-stuffing. Adding finely minced preserved lime rind to the filling is a distinctive Kristang variation — the salty-citrus depth complements the crab sweetness. The shell must be thoroughly dried before filling — wet shells produce steaming rather than grilling during the final cook. A small amount of toasted breadcrumb mixed into the surface of the filling before grilling creates a crispy top layer over the soft filling.
Over-processing the crab meat — smooth paste rather than visible crab shreds. Over-cooking during the final grill — dry, rubbery filling. Insufficient cleaning of the shell — residual gills or dark paste in the shell adds bitterness. Insufficient seasoning — the crab meat is sweet and requires assertive seasoning to balance.
Sweet crab, aromatic from the sambal berlado, rich from the coconut milk, with the egg binding giving a savoury depth — the stuffed crab format concentrates the sweet brininess of the crab and amplifies it with the spice mixture. Each bite delivers the full flavour of the sea in a spiced, textured form.
Over-processing the crab meat — smooth paste rather than visible crab shreds. Over-cooking during the final grill — dry, rubbery filling. Insufficient cleaning of the shell — residual gills or dark paste in the shell adds bitterness. Insufficient seasoning — the crab meat is sweet and requires assertive seasoning to balance.