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? :=)
![]() |
| 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
![]() |
| 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
![]() |
| 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)
![]() |
| lemongrass stalks |
![]() |
| (most of the) ingredients gathered |
![]() |
| the marinade |
![]() |
| chuck in the chook! |
![]() |
| some more ingredients |
![]() |
| 9 hours later - I started cooking ... |
![]() |
| and in go the peanut butter and coconut |
![]() |
| and on goes the coriander |
![]() |
| add the bean sprouts to your bowl |
![]() |
| Mr P. bought me this one - mm yep just a few years ago :=) |



.jpg)









This recipe sounds amazing. I love looking back at all of my old cookbooks. While so many things have changed and improved with cooking over the years, some of the old recipes really are the best. I hope you're enjoying June.
ReplyDeletethanks Lori. Very retro recipe, but still good. Yep i love a cookbook! June has been an absolute stinker - Mr P. had a huge fall and cracked his neck and ripped open his forehead. I've been having all sorts of medical tests; still awaiting results...
DeleteI am loving all sorts of curry and Thai one is a huge favourite. Yours looks amazing.
ReplyDeletethank you Angie.
DeleteFascinating book! Their daughter Sophie wrote a cookbook that my daughter gifted me. What a talented family!
ReplyDeleteHTTP://www.chefmimiblog.com
Yes i have both of Sophie's cookbooks, and I loved her TV series.
Deleteyum yum
ReplyDeletethanks Hena.
DeleteI love that Dahl and his wife did this. I need to look for the cookbook! David
ReplyDeleteit's such a fun book. So 80s! and so fun.
DeleteYes it's a fun cookbook David!
ReplyDeleteOK! I am older than you and also collected cookery books since about 1959 - Yes, love the Dahl one but > try and get the Vincent and Mary Price one which goes another couple of decades back > he may have been a 'horror' movie actor but was the most elegant and intelligent one on the stage ever and a superb cook . . . I had about 8-900 cookery books but cooked out of his book 3 days a week :) ! Accidentally did come upon your darling husband's face on my current rare visit to IG > oh geez _ hope that improves soon . . .
ReplyDeletewow that is a huge amount of cookbooks Eha!! Thanks re the hubby; he is getting much better now!
DeleteThis sounds like a great meal for a Monday night as I can do the prep on Sunday. Love your picnic in a park story.
ReplyDeletethanks Tandy.
DeleteI have everything but the coconut so I just use some coconut cream. I'll also take your advice and add a few veggies. Karen (Back Road Journal)
ReplyDeleteYes a good idea karen. We did think a few veggies would be a great addition.
DeleteSounds delicious! As much as cooking has changed over the years, when I think of 'comfort food' I always think of these old recipes.
ReplyDeleteAmalia
xo
Thanks so much amalia!
DeleteOh yum! This looks so good and is edible proof that the eighties were the greaties! I love a good Roald Dahl book - so fun!
ReplyDeletethanks Sammie. He was such a fun writer... tho i'm sure his wife would have done most if not all the cooking and the writing of this book!
DeleteThis looks delicious, Sherry! I love seeing classic recipes like this brought back - they're often some of the most comforting meals.
ReplyDeletethanks Ben.
DeleteThis looks delicious, Sherry! I love seeing classic recipes like this brought back - they're often some of the most comforting meals.
ReplyDeleteand thanks again!
DeleteWhat an intriguing recipe! Lately, I’ve been revisiting old cookbooks. I must check out this one.
ReplyDeleteThank you gerlinde. Old cookbooks are fun!!
DeleteThis retro Thai chicken absolutely cracked me up, it’s got that full 80s cookbook charm but still sounds like something I’d happily tuck into right now. The whole “soak the coconut like it’s 1983” moment is gold, reminds me of my granny when I see her with a bag of grated coconut (not dessicated though the fresh ones), I am sure I am the one pressing and extracting the milk out of them 🤣
ReplyDeleteYes it is funny. Such an old fashioned idea.
DeleteOh a good curry is hard to beat, and this one sounds fantastic, Sherry! I laughed at your comment about being a deckhand on the Ark. :-) Keep on rowing!!
ReplyDeletethank you David. Yep i will try to keep rowing :)
DeleteThanks David. Yep that’s how old i feel lately:)
ReplyDeleteMy dad, 99, was trying to name all the ways his mom made chicken when he was a boy. I bet my dad and his family would have loved to have made chicken this way if the family had had access to all the ingredients.
ReplyDeletewow 99? fabulous.
DeleteThis sounds great... but we're with you, we prefer some veg in with our curry too. Plus, I'm a yay on coriander and a nay on bean sprouts. It's not that I dislike them, I'm just a tad "meh" and dislike the smell when you buy them in those plastic bags. Thanks for linking up with the perfect retro recipe.
ReplyDeletei don't normally have bean sprouts around - reminds me so much of the 80s! when i lived with vegans and vegos.
DeleteI had no idea he had written a recipe with his wife. Yes nice and retro.
ReplyDeleteI bet his wife did all the work really!
DeleteThis looks so good. Sometimes I think the simplest recipes are the most tasty and satisfying. I don't cook much thai food though I love to eat it. I may have to try this one.
ReplyDeleteit was tasty even tho not very authentic. Hints of Indian and I don't know what else in the recipe ... :=)
Delete