Oh my word, friends! This is one heck of a retro recipe! And I love it - such fun:=) Here is a recipe from one of my fave authors Roald Dahl; he and his wife Felicity (Flick) put together a cookbook called Memories with Food At Gipsy House, published in 1991. It clearly has a 1980s vibe though! I remember making "coconut milk" this way, by soaking dessicated coconut in boiling water. Crikey, this sounds like something from the Ark :=) Well, it makes me sound like a deckhand from the Ark.
I may have mentioned my story before, about making several different types of curry, and lugging the big pots to a local park (back in our younger days). We invited heaps of friends, and had "Curry in a Hurry" in the park's rotunda. Luckily, the local police were understanding of our madness :=)
Oh, I nearly forgot to mention a fave recipe from this book - Rose Petal Sorbet. I used to "borrow" lots of rose petals from the old couple next door's garden, to make it! Yep I was a naughty gal back then! He was Dutch and had fought in the Second World War, and she was the daughter of the fellow who owned the local stables waaay back in the day (I'm thinking turn of the century). We still had the old horse troughs buried in our yard (we shared a boundary line with them). And mysteriously, our backyard was (very) full of ashes - perhaps the dead horses? :=)
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| throw on that coriander |
Marinate this overnight, folks (or at least 8 hours)!
Serves 6:
ingredients:
Marinade:
6 Tbs dark soy sauce
2 Tbs ground cummin
3 Tbs hot Madras curry powder
1 Tbs turmeric
3 cloves garlic, crushed or chopped finely
4 Tbs sweet chilli sauce
3 sticks lemongrass (or use 3 tsp of lemongrass paste from a tube!)
150 mL/5 fl oz oil (I used olive oil, but use a neutral oil like grapeseed if you please)
1.6 kg/3.5 lb chicken breasts, chopped or (large) diced see Notes
The Sauce:
5 Tbs crunchy peanut butter
85g./3 oz dessicated or shredded (unsweetened) coconut, soaked in 180 mL/6 fl oz boiling water
1 bunch fresh coriander leaves, chopped or torn (by hand)
Garnish:
230g./8 oz bean sprouts (who cares? No need to measure these)
more coriander leaves, if you wish
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| guess?! |
Method:
Grab a large non-reactive bowl (glass or ceramic), and throw in the marinade ingredients
Give it a good stir, and then add the chopped chicken pieces - and let it marinate overnight (I forgot and only gave it 9 hours the next day - in fact, I'd suggest if you buy the already-chopped chook, the shorter marination time is fine and dandy)
The next day, in a large and heavy-based frypan, saucepan or skillet, cook up the chicken pieces till they turn opaque, then add the peanut butter and the coconut and soaking water
Cover and simmer very slowly for 15-20 minutes till the chicken is tender, then add some of the coriander leaves
Serve with rice or rice noodles, and add plenty of the bean sprouts and more coriander leaves
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| add plenty! |
Notes:
I wish they had given a weight for the chicken! I looked it up, and Google says a chicken breast can be anything from 170g.-250g. I just based it on 200g./7 oz per breast; the recipe says to use 8 breasts
I bought diced chicken breast that is already chopped into large chunks - saved so much time and mess :=)
My (and Mr P.'s) suggestion is to add less chicken, but bung in some eggplant and capsicum - it was a bit too meaty for us
Also I reckon a good big slurp of tinned coconut milk at the end would be a splendid thing! And probably some chilli flakes (I only had a mild Madras curry powder, so extra chilli was needed)
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| lemongrass stalks |
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| (most of the) ingredients gathered |
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| the marinade |
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| chuck in the chook! |
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| some more ingredients |
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| 9 hours later - I started cooking ... |
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| and in go the peanut butter and coconut |
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| and on goes the coriander |
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| add the bean sprouts to your bowl |
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| Mr P. bought me this one - mm yep just a few years ago :=) |
(Joining in with Jo from BKD Cookbook Club for her monthly link-up! This month we are focusing on an "oldie but a goodie" cookbook in our collections.)



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