Spicy Red Chicken (Gai Tod Pud Pad) Recipe

This is one of our favourite Thai meals. It is a red dry curry made with fried chicken, curry paste and no coconut milk.
Spicy Red Chicken (Gai Tod Pud Pad) picture

Summary

Preparation Time15 MinCooking Time20 Min
Ready In35 MinDifficulty LevelEasy
Servings6Cuisine
CourseMethod
SpecialityMain Ingredient
Interest Group, ,

Recipe Story

I use hormone free local chicken. In chickens are much smaller than American chickens. They are most often black and have long legs. They feed on bugs and such darting across roadways in search of the best bugs! This is a curry that is popular in the Northeast and plains area of Thailand and doesn’t use coconut milk. sign up for my free newsletter http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art60788.asp

Ingredients

 3# Chicken (whole cut up, or pieces)*
 Red curry paste2 Tablespoon
 2+ Tablespoons Fish Sauce
 Palm sugar1 Teaspoon
 Oil1 Tablespoon
 Sweet Basil (bai Horpha)
 Kaffir Leaves (bai Magroot)
 Red ripe Thai Chiles
 Method
 Rinse and dry the chicken, cut into small it into pieces. Heat peanut oil 3” deep to 375 deg F, deep fry chicken until golden brown.

Directions

Place 1 tablespoon peanut oil in a frying pan or wok, cook the red curry paste until it begins to separate into oil and paste and becomes fragrant.

Add the fried chicken, the fish sauce and sugar and stir fry for a minute to combine ingredients, as the chicken is already cooked.

Garnish with slivered kaffir leaves, basil and sliced red chile flowers.
Serve With steamed jasmine rice, or sticky rice.
*Chicken - You can use bone in or boneless chicken. The thighs have the best flavor and are the favourite of Thais for this dish.

Red Curry Paste (Krung Kaeng Phed)

Red Curry Paste is one of the most important staples of Thai cooking. Although you can buy commercial red curry paste that is good, there is nothing like the flavour and fragrance of making your own Thai Curry Paste.

Although you can use a food processor to chop ingredients for a curry paste, the resulting paste with not be so wonderful and flavourful nor fragrant as the ones when you hand pound with a mortar and pestle. This hand pounding breaks down the fibers releashing aromatic oils, and literally changes the texture and composition of the ingredients. Besides it is fun!

I often have a curry paste making "party" and have my husband do all the pounding for me while I mince, cut, and prep. It is great fun!!! We laugh as he says it is a fun way to release pent-up tension and suppressed aggression after a long week at work.

Maybe Thai people are so gentle as they spend so much time pounding and chopping and cooking in the kitchen, then sitting and eating together.

6-12 dried red chiles, soaked, deseeded and drained
1 tsp white peppercorns
2 tsp coriander seeds, roasted and ground
1 tsp cumin seeds, roasted and ground
2 Tabs thinly sliced lemon grass
½ tsp zest of "kaffir" lime (ordinary lime will do)
6 tabs garlic, chopped
1 tsp minced galangal
1 tsp chopped coriander (cilantro) root
4 tabs chopped shallot
a splash of fish sauce (nam pla)
1 tsp fermented shrimp paste (kapi) (roasted)*

* place kapi on a small tinfoil formed flat tray with sides, place in toaster oven until freagrant. Remove and let cool while you prepare and pound the other curry paste ingredients.

Place ingredients first the harder ingredients of chiles, peppercorns, coriander and cumin seeds, kaffir lime leaf slivers,in a mortor and pound thoroughly with the pestle. When they are completely mashed into a paste, add the garlic, galangal, and coriander root- pound again to form a smooth paste. Now add the shallot, nam pla, and kapi and pound again until it is a smooth paste.

You can use a food processor, but it is more difficult to create a smooth paste. It blender makes a smoother paste. You can begin in the food processor and finish in a mortor to attain the desired smooth paste. Place in glass jar and keep in a refrigerator for up to 3 months.

Thai red curry paste (Mae Ploy or Mae Sri brands are quite good), but freshly made curry paste tastes much better and contains no MSG or preservatives.

Comments

Prezi profile page

Prezi says :

Thai dishes are normally spicy and this one too is no exception! Also, here i loved the ingredients, especially the fish sauce and curry powder. So do we make the recipe with any sort of curry powder available at the supermarkets, or does this entry ask for a specific combination? Also, about the fish sauce, does it have to be homemade or do we get to buy the bottled version?
Posted on: 11 February 2009 - 6:36am
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