Sunday, February 26, 2012

Anyone have a good recipe for chicken curry "Thai style"? And spicy?

Yellow Curry Paste Ingredients



12 dried thai chilis

2 tsp sea salt (or coarse salt)

2 shallots, peeled

4 cloves garlic, peeled

1 thick slice fresh galangal (or dried galangal soaked in water until softened)

1 stalk lemon grass, sliced crosswise (discard tough outer leaves and the root end)

1 thick slice peeled ginger root

1 tbsp coriander seeds

1 tsp cumin seeds

2 tsp curry powder

1 tsp shrimp paste (kapee)

Preparation



Dry roast corinder seeds and cumin seeds until fragrant over low flame in a heavy bottom pan (be careful not to burn). Set aside. (See a more detailed explanation of dry roasting spices).



Pound in a mortar and pestle or process in a small blender/food processor container in the following order: dried chiles, sea salt, shallots, garlic, galangal, lemon grass, and gingerroot. Process or pound until smooth but some small pieces can still be seen.



Now add the roasted spices and curry powder. Process or pound again until the seeds are completely broken up into powder and the paste is blended through. Last add the shrimp paste and gently blend in, using the mortar or processer.



Yellow Curry with Chicken (Gaeng Ka-Ri Gai) Ingredients



3 tbsp yellow curry paste (either from the recipe above or from a can like MaeSri brand)

1 lb chicken, cut into 2 inch pieces (cut through the bones with a sharp cleaver if using chicken with bones)

2-3 small red potatoes, scrubbed and cut into 2 inch pieces

1/2 tsp sea salt

1/2 can (16oz) coconut milk, shake before opening to mix seperated milk

2 tbsp fried shallots (available ready-made in a plastic jar), optional

1 tsp fish sauce, to taste (Golden Boy brand is recommended)

Preparation



In a small bowl mix the curry paste with 1 Tbsp. of water to dilute. Add to the coconut milk in a medium sized sauce pan. Stir to mix. Add the chicken and potatoes, and 1/2 tsp of sea salt. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Cook until the meat and potatoes are cooked through, not simmering on low heat, but let the curry roll on a low boil.



At the end of cooking, taste and add fish sauce to adjust the saltiness. Cook a minute longer. Remove from heat. Garnish with fried shallots (available ready made in a plastic container), if desired. Serve with Thai jasmine rice.Anyone have a good recipe for chicken curry "Thai style"? And spicy?
10-20 dried red chillies

1 T ground corriander seed

1 t ground cumin

1 t ground cinnamon (from fresh bark)

1 t gound cloves

1 t ground star anise

1 t ground cardamom

1 t ground white pepper

4 T chopped shallots (i.e. the small red skinned onions)

4-6 T chopped garlic

2 2" pieces of lemon grass stalk, sliced into thin rounds

a cube about half an inch on a side of galangal root, roughly chopped

1 T "kaffir" line skin (ordinary lime skin will do if you can't get it)

1 T "kapi" (preserved shrimp paste - note this smells awful until after

you cook it, but it is quite essential to the flavor)



To this you add a little salt: preferably about 1-2 t of fish sauce.



The galangal is roasted before use. The ground spices should preferably

be fresh, in which case you should briefly toast them in a wok without

any oil to bring out the flavor before grinding them.



The ingredients are blended to a fine paste (traditionally in a heavy

granite mortar and pestle, but you can use a food processor just as

well, and with far less effort). Note if you can get fresh red chillies

you can usefully use them instead of the dried ones.



The curry

---------



about 1 pound of shicken (you can also use pork or beef), cut into the

usual "bite sized pieces"



3 cups of coconut milk.

2 T roasted peanuts (unsalted of course)

5 peeled, but whole, small onions.

5 small potatoes, peeled and partly boiled.

3 bay leaves,

5 roasted cardomom fruits (i.e. the whole pod)

a small piece of roasted cinnamon bark

3 T palm sugar (you can use a light brown sugar instead if you can't get

palm sugar)

3 T tamarind juice (this is the "sour" ingredient - you can use white

vinegar instead if you can't get tamarind juice. The juice is made by

soaking tamarind paste in a little water then squeezing it out, and

running it through a seize to extract the juice from the pulp).

3 T lime juice

1-3 T of the curry paste (above).

about 1-3 t crushed garlic. (optional)



Allow the coconut milk to separate and you will have about 1 cup of

thick "cream" and two cups of thin "milk". In a small saucepan bring the

milk to a simmer and add the chicken or pork. If you are using beef you

will need another two cups of milk. simmer the meat until it is

beginning to become tender (beef takes longer, hence the additional

milk).



Put the coconut cream in a wok and bring to a boil, add the massaman

paste and "stir fry" until the flavor is brought out and maximised. The

coconut oil will seperate out and can be skimmed off with a spoon or

ladle. (this removes much of the vegetable cholesterol or whatever it is

called, and makes the dish much less trouble for those watching their

weight or heart).



Add the remaining cream and curry paste to the meat.



Add teh peanuts. taste and adjust the flavor until it is (just) sweet

(by adding sugar), sour and salty (by adding tamarind juice, lime juice

and fish sauce).



Add the remaining ingredients and cook until cooked.



Note : the potatoes we use are a yellow fleshed sweet potatoe of the

type sometimes called a yam in the US. Western style potatoes can be

used, but absorb less of the sauce and flavour. The potatoes act as a

"moderator" to reduce the heat of the curry, and should not be left out.



You can either serve it on a bed of rice, or double the amount of

potatoe and serve it alone.



Accompany it with a dressed green salad and a bowl of pickled cucumbers.

The traditional Thai table also offers chillies in fish sauce (Phrik nam

pla) cillies in vinegar (phrik nam som or phrik dong), powdered chilli

(phrik phom - not to be confused with the powedered chilli mix sold as

chilli powder in the US - it only contains chillis), sugar, and often

MSG. You can if you wish add about a teaspoon of MSG to the above recipe

to bring out the flavors, but I personally don't think it is necesary.



And finally a word of warning to those who burn their tongues on the

chillies: chilli/curry cooked this way is oily - drinking water does not

alleviate the burn, it spreads it around your mouth and throat. You

should use a sweet effervescent beverage such as Coke, Pepsi or 7 UP to

wash the burn away as quickly as possible. If you do not suffer the

burn, I suggest you accompany the meal with a beer Singha is

traditional, but any strong flavored lager stype beer will do), or a

robust red wine.



Enjoy...
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