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Chicken curry
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Russell Howard's chicken & prawn curry

With puffed rice crackers

Chicken curry
Save recipe

1 hr plus soaking & drying
Not Too Tricky

serves 6

About the recipe

When comedian Russell Howard first ate this dish at Longrain restaurant in Sydney, it blew his mind, calling it ‘a proper death row meal’. To help Russell relive the joy, I tracked down ex-head chef Martin Boetz for his recipe – It’s the perfect combination of South-East Asian flavours: hot, sour, salty and sweet. The original version uses just coconut cream, but I’ve made mine with a combo of coconut cream and light coconut milk for the same vibe with less of the fat. You’re going to love it!


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 and Jimmy's Friday Night Feast

Jamie and Jimmy's Friday Night Feast

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

600ml organic chicken stock

300g coconut cream

400ml light coconut milk

160g tamarind paste

4 sticks of lemongrass

4 Asian shallots

400g minced free-range chicken breast

2 long fresh red chillies

½ a bunch of fresh coriander (15g)

400g raw tiger prawns

8 teaspoons palm sugar

8 tablespoons fish sauce

1-2 limes

optional: crispy shallots, to serve

RICE CAKES

200g Thai sticky rice

500ml vegetable oil, for deep frying

Top Tip

To make your own crispy shallots, peel and finely slice Asian shallots, toss in plain flour, then deep-fry until golden and crisp. Drain on kitchen paper and scatter over your curry. Yum!

Method

  1. To make the rice cakes, cover the rice with cold water and leave to soak overnight.
  2. Drain the rice, then spread it out evenly in a lined bamboo steamer (about 5mm thick). Set the steamer in a wok over boiling water, then cover and steam for 20 minutes.
  3. Preheat the oven to 80°C/176°F (or to its lowest setting). Remove the rice from the wok and allow to cool a little. Wet your hands and lightly pick up small clumps of rice with your fingertips, being careful not to squash the grains together, and transfer to a wire rack set over a baking tray. Dry in the oven for 2 hours.
  4. Put the vegetable oil in a wok or large heavy-based saucepan (unless you own a deep-fat fryer) and place on a medium-high heat to bring up to 170°C–180°C, or add a cube of bread – if it turns golden in about 30 seconds, you’re good to go.
  5. Fry the rice in small batches, holding them under the oil if needed with a slotted spoon, for 30 to 45 seconds, or until puffed up and crisp, turning to cook evenly on both sides. Carefully remove with your slotted spoon to kitchen paper before they colour, while you cook the next batch. Leave to cool and store in an airtight container until ready to serve.
  6. For the curry, heat the chicken stock in a large pan on a medium heat, add the coconut cream, coconut milk and tamarind, and gently bring to the boil.
  7. Meanwhile, whack the lemongrass against your work surface and remove the tough outer layer. Peel the shallots, then very finely chop with the inside of the lemongrass, and add to the pan.
  8. Stir in the minced chicken and cook for 4 minutes, stirring to break up any lumps.
  9. Trim the chillies and finely chop with the coriander stalks, roughly chop the prawns. Add it all to the pan with the palm sugar and fish sauce.
  10. Finely grate over the zest of 1 lime, and squeeze in the juice, then leave to simmer for 5 minutes. Have a taste and adjust the seasoning, adding a little more lime juice, fish sauce or sugar, if needed. Scatter over the remaining coriander.
  11. Serve the curry with the rice cakes and a scattering of crispy shallots, if you like (see tip). Delicious with a fresh green salad.

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