Post by Gus65 on Sept 30, 2014 9:34:35 GMT 10
This recipe is unashamedly copied from the Spice Trip TV show which has aired a few times and is available freely on the internet so I don't believe there is any breach of copyright posting it here. I have acknowledged where it came from and put it up here to share because it was worth it.
Ingredients
• 1 1.5 kg (3½ lb) whole free-range chicken, skinned and jointed, or 8 chicken thighs, skinned
• 1 tbsp freshly cracked Tellicherry or Kampot black peppercorns
• 1 tsp ground turmeric
• ½ lemon, juiced
• 3 white onions, half roughly chopped and half thinly sliced
• 3 garlic cloves, crushed
• 3 cm (1¼ inch) piece ginger, peeled and finely chopped or grated
• olive oil
• ½ tsp sea salt
• steamed rice, chapattis, salad, to serve
Instructions
Marinating time 3 hours
Put the chicken in a large dish. In a small bowl, combine one-quarter of the black pepper, the turmeric, lemon juice and a pinch of salt, then rub all over the chicken and leave to marinate, covered, for a few hours.
Blend the roughly chopped onion with the garlic and ginger to make a paste.
Toast the remaining pepper in a hot, dry frying pan until there’s a delicious nutty, toasty scent and the pepper begins to smoke. Shake the pan so the pepper doesn’t burn.
Heat a good glug of oil in a heavy-based frying pan (one with a lid) and fry the sliced onion until it turns soft and golden. Add the onion paste and continue frying until all the liquid has evaporated and the onion is starting to brown.
Add the toasted pepper (reserve a generous pinch for later) and the chicken, including all the marinade juices, 300 ml water and the salt. Bring to the boil, cover and simmer for 30 minutes, or until the chicken is cooked through – add a splash more water if the curry gets too thick.
Serve the curry sprinkled with the reserved toasted black pepper, alongside some rice, warmed chapattis and salad.
I've got no pictures of it because I was busy doing this and a couple of other things then when it was on a plate got the usual "what a toss" when I got the camera out.
How I did it was pretty much to the recipe although I used 1.5 kg drumsticks. Added a bit more lemon juice because 1/2 wasn't enough to make more than just a very stiff paste.
Ingredients
• 1 1.5 kg (3½ lb) whole free-range chicken, skinned and jointed, or 8 chicken thighs, skinned
• 1 tbsp freshly cracked Tellicherry or Kampot black peppercorns
• 1 tsp ground turmeric
• ½ lemon, juiced
• 3 white onions, half roughly chopped and half thinly sliced
• 3 garlic cloves, crushed
• 3 cm (1¼ inch) piece ginger, peeled and finely chopped or grated
• olive oil
• ½ tsp sea salt
• steamed rice, chapattis, salad, to serve
Instructions
Marinating time 3 hours
Put the chicken in a large dish. In a small bowl, combine one-quarter of the black pepper, the turmeric, lemon juice and a pinch of salt, then rub all over the chicken and leave to marinate, covered, for a few hours.
Blend the roughly chopped onion with the garlic and ginger to make a paste.
Toast the remaining pepper in a hot, dry frying pan until there’s a delicious nutty, toasty scent and the pepper begins to smoke. Shake the pan so the pepper doesn’t burn.
Heat a good glug of oil in a heavy-based frying pan (one with a lid) and fry the sliced onion until it turns soft and golden. Add the onion paste and continue frying until all the liquid has evaporated and the onion is starting to brown.
Add the toasted pepper (reserve a generous pinch for later) and the chicken, including all the marinade juices, 300 ml water and the salt. Bring to the boil, cover and simmer for 30 minutes, or until the chicken is cooked through – add a splash more water if the curry gets too thick.
Serve the curry sprinkled with the reserved toasted black pepper, alongside some rice, warmed chapattis and salad.
I've got no pictures of it because I was busy doing this and a couple of other things then when it was on a plate got the usual "what a toss" when I got the camera out.
How I did it was pretty much to the recipe although I used 1.5 kg drumsticks. Added a bit more lemon juice because 1/2 wasn't enough to make more than just a very stiff paste.