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Burmese Dry Chicken Curry

Type: Poultry
Courses: Starters and appetizers
Serves: 1 people

Recipe Ingredients

2   Onions - rough chopped
5   Garlic - rough chopped
1 1/2   Fresh root ginger peeled and chopped
2   Lemon grass - roughly chopped
2   Red chilies seeded and chopped habaneros or Thai chilies
1 tablespoon 15mlFish sauce - (nam pla)
1 teaspoon 5mlGround turmeric
4 tablespoons 60mlVegetable oil
3 lbs 1362g / 48ozChicken - cut into 8 curry pieces
4   Green - (or two black) cardamom pods
2 tablespoons 30mlRough chopped coriander/cilantro leaf
  Salt and fresh ground black pepper

Recipe Instructions

*Curry pieces: cut off both legs and thighs together taking as much meat as possible from the carcass at the top of the thigh, separate legs and thighs. Cut down along breast as far as wing at side of breast bone to expose ribs, cut through ribs at top along length of breast bone, cut through ribs at bottom of breast as far as wing, cut wing at joint with body and remove breast and wing as one piece, cut into two approximately one third along breast from wing.

Grind the first 7 ingredients (i.e. up to and including the turmeric) together into a smooth paste (food processor/pestle and mortar etc). Heat oil in wide frying pan or wok and add paste, stir-fry until moisture has evaporated and paste has started to brown. Add chicken pieces and stir well, scrape bottom of pan to prevent sticking. Cover tightly and simmer for 35-45 minutes - there should be enough liquid given off from the chicken during cooking but check now and then and stir. If chicken does get too dry and starts sticking/burning (and it's never happened to me) add a tablespoon or so of water and stir in, scraping residue off bottom of pan.

Shortly before chicken is ready slit open cardamom pods and extract seeds, crush seeds in pestle and mortar and add to chicken with coriander leaf, stir and simmer for a further minute or so, taste and adjust seasoning.

Serve with plain rice or coconut rice.

Drink beer: Singha, Bintang or Tiger beers are excellent, Pilsner Urquell is good too.

Ken Hom has a similar recipe but he omits the Nam Pla and adds 1 tbs dry sherry and two tbs soy sauce just before the simmering which makes it much more like a Straits Chinese or Nonna dish.

Source:
Sophie Grigson's Meat Course, Network/BBC Books, London, 1995, ISBN: 0 563 37173 0, an excellent book for all sorts of meat cooking)

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