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Thai green curry
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Greg Davies' Thai green chicken curry

Baby Thai aubergines & Thai sweet basil

Thai green curry
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1 hr
Not Too Tricky

serves 8

About the recipe

Greg has always been fond of Thai cuisine, but found a real love for it after gigging there, especially for Thai green curry. Now, the base of any good curry is the paste, so it’s worth the effort to hunt out all the ingredients. Just remember, a little goes a long way, so make a big batch and freeze it in portions for future use.


nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Salt

g

Protein

g

Carbs

g

Fibre

of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Jamie's Friday Night Feast Cookbook

Jamie's Friday Night Feast Cookbook

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

2 long fresh red chillies

600g free-range chicken thighs, skin off, bone out

vegetable oil

2 x 400g tins of light coconut milk

4 fresh lime leaves

2 teaspoons palm sugar

2–3 tablespoons fish sauce

10 baby Thai aubergines

1 bunch of fresh Thai sweet basil (30g)

PASTE

2 teaspoons cumin seeds

2 tablespoons coriander seeds

2–4 large green Thai chillies (prik chee fah)

12 small green Thai chillies (prik kee noo)

4 sticks of lemongrass

6cm piece of galangal (or ginger)

8 cloves of Thai garlic

10 Thai shallots

½ a bunch of fresh coriander (15g)

2 kaffir limes

2 teaspoons shrimp paste

1 teaspoon ground white pepper

Method

  1. For the paste, toast the cumin and coriander seeds in a dry frying pan over a medium heat until golden and smelling fantastic. Pound to a powder in a pestle and mortar, then tip into a bowl.
  2. Trim the chillies (deseed if you like) and roughly chop with the lemongrass (use just the thick, lower part, discarding the outer layer), then peel and chop the galangal, garlic and shallots.
  3. Place it all in a pestle and mortar with 2 sprigs of coriander (stalks and all) and a good pinch of sea salt. Finely grate in the kaffir lime zest, then pound to a paste. Muddle in the shrimp paste, ground cumin and coriander, and white pepper (or whiz everything together in a food processor).
  4. Deseed the red chillies, finely slice at an angle and place in ice-cold water, ready for serving. Slice the chicken into 2cm strips.
  5. Drizzle 2 tablespoons of oil into a large heavy-bottomed pan on a medium-high heat. Add 3 heaped tablespoons of the curry paste (save the rest for another day) and a splash of coconut milk, then fry for 30 seconds, or until smelling fantastic, stirring continuously.
  6. Stir in the chicken, then, after 5 minutes, pour in the remaining coconut milk and bring to the boil, stirring regularly. Tear in the kaffir lime leaves and simmer for 10 minutes.
  7. Stir the palm sugar into the pan and have a taste; the curry should be slightly sweet, but not overpoweringly so. Add the fish sauce and taste again – it should taste well rounded, salty with an underlying sweetness.
  8. Quarter the aubergines and add to the pan to cook for 2 to 3 minutes (regular aubergines will take quite a bit longer, so cook until tender), then turn off the heat.
  9. Pick and stir in most of the Thai basil, then drain the chilli and sprinkle over with the remaining Thai basil and coriander. Delicious served with jasmine rice.

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