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South-East Asian salmon curry
 If you made a batch of the curry paste to cook the prawns earlier this week, you'll still have half of it in a little bowl in the fridge. This is a very easy dish to cook, and many of the ingredients should already be sitting around in your storecupboard. Swap the green beans for another appropriate-feeling vegetable if you fancy, in keeping with the "what's in the fridge" nature of this one. My salmon was bought and frozen before Christmas. It was going to be made into gravadlax before I realised that the fillet I'd bought had, for some reason, been pre-skinned. A skinned salmon fillet's a pest to cook with if you're not doing something very simple with it - too much moving around and it'll flake into bits. So a gentle poaching in a rich curry sauce is an ideal method for a fragile piece of fish like this. If your salmon has the skin on still, so much the better. Don't bother to remove it before cooking. To serve 4, you'll need: One large salmon fillet, about 2lb (900g), defrosted if frozen Curry paste ( see recipe) 1 large onion 2 large potatoes, chopped into 1in squares 50g green beans 1 can coconut milk 1 can chopped tomatoes 1 heaped teaspoon Madras curry powder 1 cinnamon stick 2 bay leaves 1 large handful fresh mint 1 large handful fresh coriander Juice of 2 limes Salt and pepper Chop the onion into medium dice and fry it with the bay leaves, cinnamon stick and curry powder in a large pan until translucent. Add the curry paste to the pan and cook, stirring all the time, for five minutes. Pour over the coconut milk and tomatoes, and stir through the potatoes. Bring the mixture to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes without a lid, stirring occasionally. Stir in the chopped beans and slide the salmon into the dish, making sure it is covered with the bubbling sauce. Put the lid on and continue to simmer for 12 minutes. While the salmon is cooking, chop the mint leaves. When the time is up, stir the lime juice into the curry with salt and pepper to taste. Serve over white rice, scatter the herbs over each serving and get stuck in. Labels: coconut, curry, curry paste, fish, Malaysian, salmon, savoury
Dry prawn curry
 I'm back from a couple of weeks mixing business with pleasure in Florida. More on what we ate later on - for now, here's a recipe using a curry paste that sprang, fully formed, into my head while we were away. I went out to Mill Road in Cambridge as soon as we got back to buy some lovely big prawns, still in their shells, at Sea Tree, a new-ish fish restaurant with the city's only non-supermarket wet fish counter on the far side of the railway bridge; and some fresh spice ingredients at Cho Mee, my favourite of the oriental supermarkets on the town side. It made the whole kitchen smell of South East Asia. Serve the prawns with some fried rice (mine was based around three diced lap cheong, or Chinese sausages, fried until crisp, with spring onions, chopped snake beans, sesame oil and soy, then proteined up with a couple of eggs) or some plain rice and a flavourful stir-fried vegetable. To serve two handsomely, you'll need: 12 king or tiger prawns, shells and heads on 2 fingers fresh turmeric root (see below) 1 inch piece ginger 1 large shallot 3 large red chillies 5 fat cloves garlic 2 sticks lemongrass 30g coriander root 1 teaspoon fennel seeds 8 whole cloves 4 tablespoons vegetable oil 4 tablespoons soy sauce  You might not be familiar with fresh turmeric - it usually comes pre-dried and ground in little pots, by which point it has lost the greater part of its slightly bitter, prickly flavour and intense aroma. The picture here should help you identify it if you're in a shop that stocks ingredients like this (an Indian or oriental supermarket should be able to help you out). Those roots are about the size of your little finger. Be aware that the yellow of the turmeric stains just as badly, if not worse, than the dried stuff does - this is curcumin, an antioxidant that is supposed to be wildly good for you. It's also wildly yellow. So get ready for daffodil fingernails - they'll scrub clean eventually, but it'll take some work. I've also used the very aromatic roots of coriander from the same shop, which usually come attached to the leafy herb and are very inexpensive. Use a sharp knife to peel the turmeric and ginger. Remove the skins from the shallot and garlic and chop the lemongrass into chunks. Put the lot in the bowl of a food processor with the dry spices, the chillies, the soy sauce (I used Kikkoman) and some flavourless oil. Whizz until you have a nearly smooth paste. Remove half of the paste to a container, cover with more oil and pop in the fridge to use later on. It's worth always making too much curry paste - it hangs around for a week or so very nicely in the fridge, you can use it in plenty of different recipes, and it's infinitely less faff than making it as you need it. Put the prawns in a large dish and cover with the remaining half of the curry paste. Set aside to marinade for 45 minutes to an hour. When you are ready to cook the prawns, heat some more vegetable oil (about half a centimetre's depth) in a large frying pan to a high temperature. Add the prawns - carefully, they'll sizzle - to the oil with what marinade sticks to them and fry without moving them around the pan until the top side, not in the oil, has turned pink. Add whatever curry paste remains in the marinade dish to the pan and turn the prawns over. The shells on the side which has been in contact with the oil should have opaque patches alongside the translucent pink. Continue to cook until the other side of the prawns has opaque skins and the curry paste is brown and sticky. Serve immediately - and if you're bold, you'll eat the shells and suck the good stuff out of the heads. Labels: curry, curry paste, fish, Malaysian, prawns, savoury, Spices
Bombay new potatoes
 Here's the recipe I promised last week to use up the other half of that curry paste. I particularly like new potatoes in this sort of dry curry; their waxy texture and delicate flavour works very well against the aromatic spicing, and leaving the skins on helps them finish with a nice crisp. 600g new potatoes Half of Friday's curry paste 1 teaspoon ground turmeric 2 teaspoons fennel seeds Flavourless oil or ghee to fry Salt Fresh coriander to garnish If you didn't cook the peas keema, Friday's curry paste was made with 1 peeled bulb of garlic, 10 spring onions, 1 fat piece of ginger, about 5cm long and 4 green chillies. I used half of it for the peas keema and the other half for this recipe, which makes a fantastic accompaniment for the lamb and peas. If you're only cooking one of the recipes, either make up a whole batch of curry paste and freeze half, or just halve the amounts. A few hours before you cook the meal, steam the new potatoes for 25 minutes, drain and leave in the saucepan to cool completely. When cold, chop them in half (or quarters, if yours are large). When you are ready to start cooking, stir the turmeric into the curry paste. Bring a couple of tablespoons of oil or ghee to temperature in a large, non-stick saucepan over a medium flame, and sauté the whole fennel seeds in the hot oil for a few seconds. Add the curry paste (now bright yellow) and fry, stirring all the time, for a couple of minutes. Tip in the potatoes with a large pinch of salt and keep frying, stirring every now and then, for about 10 minutes until the potatoes are crusty and golden. Serve immediately. These potatoes are also extremely good cold. Labels: accompaniments, curry, Indian, new potatoes, potatoes, savoury, vegetarian
Peas keema - keema mattar
 Since I made that rice pudding, Indian food, and especially the Indian food I used to eat at friends' houses when I was a kid, has been much on my mind. Here in the UK, the cuisine of India has embedded itself into the national consciousness - the Victorians were currying things from their new empire with glee, thrilled to discover a way to disguise the flavour of last week's mutton; surveys done nowadays have demonstrated that the nation's favourite dish is a Chicken Tikka Masala (something you'd never find in India - it's a dish that's evolved over here all on its own); my parents' fridge was never innocent of at least one jar of Sharwood's or Patak's chutney in the 80s. I remember with great pleasure visits to my schoolfriend Gayatri's house, where her Mum, an outstandingly good home cook, would make us saucepans full of sweet, milky masala tea, sneak us sticky, sugary halva while we played in the garden, and serve up about five different curries with rice when it came to mealtime, all different and all wonderful. Peas keema was a regular feature on the lunch table. It's delicious - make plenty, because it freezes very successfully. I've made a curry paste which serves (with the addition of different spices) as the base for both this and the Bombay potato recipe I'll post on Monday, so hold out until then before you make this, or reduce the ingredients of the wet paste by half if you plan on cooking it over the weekend. To serve four, you'll need: 1 bulb garlic, peeled 10 spring onions 1 fat piece of ginger, about 5cm long 4 green chillies (I used Thai bird's eye chillies - adjust amount and variety according to your taste - this amount is pretty spicy) 2 teaspoons coriander seeds 2 teaspoons cumin seeds 750g minced lamb 300g frozen petits pois 300ml stock 2 teaspoons garam masala 1 large handful fresh coriander (about 20g, if you're measuring) Salt Juice of 1-2 lemons Flavourless oil or ghee to fry Begin by reducing the white parts of the spring onions (reserving the green), the ginger, the chillies and the garlic to a paste in the food processor. Reserve half of this mixture to form the base for the Bombay potatoes, which go very well with this dish. Crush the cumin and coriander finely with a mortar and pestle, and stir them into the half of the paste you are using for this recipe with a generous pinch (use all the fingers of one hand for this) of salt. Heat some oil over a medium flame and fry the paste for a couple of minutes until it is giving up its fragrance. I like to use a wok with a lid or a large Le Creuset casserole dish for this dish, which allows you plenty of room to work in. Add the minced lamb and fry, stirring continuously, until it is browned evenly (about 5 minutes). Add the stock, turn the heat down to a very low simmer, and put a lid on. Leave to simmer for 30 minutes while you chop the green parts of the onions into pea-sized pieces and mince the coriander. At the end of the 30 minutes, taste for salt and add more if you need it (you probably will - this dish can take quite a lot of salt). Stir in the garam masala, the peas and the chopped green parts of the spring onion. Continue to simmer for a moment until the peas are no longer frozen, and add the juice of one lemon. Taste again - you may prefer more lemon juice (I like mine very sharp and usually use the juice of two lemons). Cover and cook for another 10 minutes until the peas are soft. They turn a slightly unfortunate colour with all this cooking, but they taste fabulous. Take the pan off the heat skim off any fat. Stir in the chopped coriander and serve immediately. Labels: curry, Indian, Lamb, Meat, mince, peas, savoury
Chicken devil curry
 This is a recipe with a really interesting pedigree. It's a Malaysian curry, but it's not a Tamil Indian, Malay or Chinese recipe. This dish is unique to the Kristang, descendants of Portuguese traders who lived in the port of Malacca, and is deliciously different in flavour to the curries you usually find in Malaysia. Chicken devil curry is a bit like a cross between the vinegar-seasoned curries of Goa and the devilled foods of Victorian Britain. It's fiery hot, and unbelievably tasty. Serve with plenty of rice - you'll need it to soak up the sauce, which is serious foretaste-of-the-heavenly-feast stuff, and to temper the heat of the chillies. I served this with some dal and some cooling pineapple and cucumber salad. To serve 4, you'll need: 6 chicken joints (your choice), with bone and skin 4 medium potatoes 1 large onion 6 cloves garlic 2 in piece of ginger, peeled 1 stalk lemongrass 10 fresh red chillies 10 dried red chillies 10 blanched almonds (or 5 candlenuts, if you can find them) 2 teaspoons powdered mustard 1 teaspoon black mustard seeds 2 tablespoons soft brown sugar 2 tablespoons rice vinegar 1 can coconut milk (use a brand like Chacao without emulsifiers) 1 teaspoon caster sugar Salt and pepper Rub the chicken pieces (I used six thighs) with a teaspoon of caster sugar, a teaspoon of salt and a generous amount of pepper. Set aside while you prepare the curry paste. Put the onion, garlic, ginger, lemon grass, almonds and both kinds of chillies in the bowl of your food processor with 2 tablespoons of water, and whizz until everything is reduced to a paste. Heat 2 tablespoons of flavourless oil in a wok, and brown the chicken all over. Remove it to a plate, and add the curry paste to the hot wok. Cook the paste over a high flame, stirring all the time, for five minutes with a spoonful of the cream from the top of the coconut milk. Add the mustards, the sugar and vinegar to the paste and stir until the mixture starts to bubble. Lower the heat to medium and slide the browned chicken pieces into the pan to cook in the paste for ten minutes. Add the rest of the coconut milk from the can with a teaspoon of salt and the chopped potatoes. Stir well to make sure all the potato and chicken is covered with sauce, put a lid on the wok and simmer over a low flame for 20-30 minutes. Labels: chicken, curry, Malaysian, Meat, mustard, savoury, Spices
Dal
 I decided on a bit of childhood nostalgia for supper over the weekend. When I was a very little girl and we went to visit family in Malaysia, the biggest treat in the world was a trip with my Grandfather in his Mini Moke, starting before dawn, to inspect the rubber and palm oil plantations. It was magical - the stink of curing rubber, a thrilling terror of snakes in the dark, the burst jackfruit on the plantation floor, and the two of us bumping along jungly roots and mud in what looked for all the world like a set of tent poles in a wheeled orange dinghy. At the end of his tour of inspection, my Grandfather habitually stopped for breakfast at an Indian coffee shop, and for me, this was the perfect end to an almost unbearably exciting morning. What we ordered was always perfectly simple: two bowls of rice, two roti canai, and a positive lake of delicious dal. Proust had his Madelines. I have lentils. When I spooned this over my rice at the weekend, I felt as if I was seven again. Eating stuff like this is a fabulous way to keep young. To serve 4-5 people as one of two curries on the table, you'll need: 250g mung dal (mung lentils, available at Indian supermarkets) 1 large onion 4 cloves garlic 1 piece of ginger, about the length of your thumb 4 cloves 2 cardamom pods 1 star anise 3 dried chillies (I used Malaysian cili padi) 1 teaspoon curry powder (I used Bolst's) 1 teaspoon ground turmeric 1 or 2 Thai bird's eye chillies Water Salt 2 tablespoons ghee Start by picking through the lentils for any twigs or stones. Rinse the lentils well in a sieve and soak in cold water while you prepare the base of the curry (about fifteen minutes). Slice the onion finely and chop the garlic. Wallop the ginger with the side of a cleaver or something heavy, and chop into slices. In a saucepan, fry the onion, garlic, ginger, cloves, cardamom, anise and dried chillies in the ghee until the onion is browning. Add the turmeric and curry powder, and continue to cook for a couple of minutes. Add the drained lentils to the pan with the chopped bird's eye chillies, and pour over water to cover the lentils by about 3cm. Stir in about a teaspoon of salt. Simmer the dal gently for between 30 and 45 minutes, until the lentils are soft. Add more water if you prefer a thinner, more sauce-like dal. Serve as one of a selection of curries. Labels: chillies, curry, Indian, lentils, Malaysian, savoury, Spices
Sweet potato and chickpea curry
 I like to make a vegetable curry as an accompaniment when I make a meat one, but this curry is substantial and tasty enough to stand up as a meal on its own with rice. This curry is in a southern Indian style, with coconut milk making the curry rich and thick, and lime juice adding zing. It's great for vegetarians - it's loaded with flavour, and will have the meat-eaters fighting among themselves (probably with forks) for a helping too. I have been lazy in this recipe and haven't made my own curry paste. A good shop-bought curry powder works very well here - as usual, I recommend Bolst's Madras powder, which is really well-balanced and fragrant. To serve four, you'll need: 3 sweet potatoes 2 onions 6 spring onions plus more to garnish 2 tablespoons curry powder 1 teaspoon coriander seeds 1 teaspoon cumin seeds 1 teaspoon fennel seeds 1 inch piece of ginger 4 cloves garlic 1 can chickpeas 1 can coconut milk 1 bird's eye chilli (more if you want a hotter curry) 1 handful chopped coriander leaves Juice of 1 lime 3 tablespoons oil Salt to taste Dice the onions and slice the spring onions, and sauté them in the oil with the curry powder and the coriander, cumin and fennel seeds until the onions are soft and translucent. Add the garlic and ginger, both chopped finely, with the diced and peeled sweet potato and the sliced chilli, and continue to sauté until the sweet potato starts to caramelise and brown a little at the edges. Pour the coconut milk over the curry, cover and simmer for fifteen minutes, until the sweet potato is soft. Add the drained chickpeas to the pan with half the lime juice and a teaspoon of salt, and simmer for another five minutes. Taste for seasoning - you may want to add more lime. Remove from the heat and stir in the fresh coriander, and garnish with some sliced spring onion. This curry tastes even better if you leave it in the fridge for a day before reheating and serving. If you do this, add some more fresh coriander when you serve it. Labels: accompaniments, chickpeas, coconut, curry, Indian, savoury, sweet potato, Vegetables, vegetarian
Malaysian curried lamb shoulder
 I'm cheating a bit here. The flavours are bang-on Malaysian, but you'd be unlikely to find a shoulder joint cooked in this way in Malaysia proper, where bite-sized pieces of meat are the norm in this kind of a curry. I decided to cook half a lamb shoulder on the bone in this curry sauce to maximise the flavour by keeping the meat near the bone - and because I love the fall-off-the-bone texture that a fatty shoulder achieves after a couple of hours slow cooking. What makes a curry definably Malaysian? A few things - the spicing will be rather different from Indian curries, making use of more eastern aromatics like lemongrass, coriander, star anise and ginger. The liquid in the curry will probably be coconut milk, rather than yoghurt or any other dairy product. I've made my own curry paste here, but if you don't have the time or the inclination, you should be able to find good Malaysian curry powders and pastes on sale in any Chinese supermarket. I particularly like Yeo's curry powder. This will make more paste than you need, but it keeps well in the fridge for a few weeks if you put it in a jar and pour over some oil to stop the air getting to the paste. To serve two greedy people, you'll need: Curry paste4 tablespoons coriander seeds 2 tablespoons cumin seeds 12 cloves 1 cinnamon stick 2 star anise flowers 1 teaspoon black peppercorns 3 stalks lemongrass 1 peeled piece galangal, about the length of your thumb (substitute with extra ginger if you can't find any) 1 peeled piece ginger, about the length of your thumb 3 fresh birds-eye chillies (cili padi in Malay - cut down here if you want to reduce the heat) 10 dried chillies (you can find sun-dried cili kering, a less fearsome chilli than cili padi, in some Chinese supermarkets - otherwise, use what you can find) 1 teaspoon turmeric powder or 1 grated fresh turmeric root 1 bulb garlic Lamb and sauce
½ shoulder of lamb, on the bone 2 large onions 1 can coconut milk 2 tablespoons light soy sauce 1 handful coriander leaves Salt Flavourless oil for frying Preheat the oven to 180° C (350° F). Begin by heating a couple of teaspoons of oil in a heavy pan with a lid, large enough to fit the lamb in snugly. The pan should be able to fit inside your oven. When the oil is very hot, sear the lamb on all sides, and remove it to a plate. Chop the onions finely and fry them with two tablespoons of the curry paste in the same oil you seared the lamb in. Add a little more oil if necessary. Fry, stirring all the time, until the onions are translucent and soft (about eight minutes). Return the meat to the pan with any juices it has released onto its plate. Pour over the coconut milk, add the salt and the soy sauce, and bring the whole confection to a gentle simmer. Put the lid on and put the pan in the oven for 2 hours, turning the meat occasionally. Taste the sauce when the cooking time is finished - you may find you want to add a spot of sugar or a squeeze of lemon juice. Skim off any fat that's floating on top of the sauce. Peel the skin off the lamb and discard. Sprinkle over the fresh coriander leaves and serve with rice. I like a salad of fresh pineapple and cucumber with this. Labels: curry, Lamb, Malaysian, Meat, savoury, Spices
Curry puffs
 I'm having a bit of a Malaysian food binge at the moment, and the beef curry puff is about as Malaysian as you can get. These little pasties are made from a mouth-meltingly short, flaky pastry, and are filled with a rich beef, onion and potato curry. There are as many variations on the curry puff as there are cooks. Some prefer a shortcrust pastry, some like a chicken or vegetable filling - I've also seen sardine in Malaysia. Some are so fiercely spiced you need to cool your tongue between bites, some so subtle that they come across...well...a bit Cornish pasty. This recipe is just gorgeous - serve some curry puffs next time you have some friends round and just watch how fast they vanish. Try to use beef dripping to fry the filling if you can find it; it gives the curry puffs a delicious beefy depth. (Use vegetable oil if you can't find any.) To make about 30 you'll need: FillingBeef dripping to fry 12 oz onions, diced 12 oz waxy potato, cut into 1cm cubes 1 teaspoon ginger, diced very fine 5 cloves garlic, diced very fine 8 shallots, sliced thinly 1 lb minced beef 4 tablespoons Madras curry powder 1 can coconut milk Juice of 1 lemon 2 tablespoons caster sugar 3 teaspoons salt Pastry
1 lb flour 4 oz butter 8 oz lard 1 egg, and another to glaze 2 tablespoons sugar Juice of ½ a lemon 6 fl oz water  Start by cooking the filling. Stir fry the onions in a tablespoon of beef dripping until they are soft and translucent. Remove them to a bowl and set aside. Add another tablespoon of dripping to the pan and fry the potato cubes in the same wok with a pinch of salt until they begin to take on a little colour, then pour over 4 fl oz of water and put the lid on, reducing the heat to a simmer. Cook for between five and ten minutes, until the potatoes are cooked through. Put them in the bowl with the onions. In the same wok, stir fry the ginger, garlic and shallots in a little more dripping. When the spices are giving off their scent, add the beef and stir-fry for five minutes until well mixed. Add the curry powder and continue to stir-fry until all the beef is coloured. Add the onion and potato, stir thoroughly, then add the coconut milk, sugar, salt and lemon juice. Reduce the heat to a low simmer, and reduce the mixture until it's thick and glistening. Taste, adding more lemon juice and salt if you think it needs it. Cool and refrigerate. (This is important - you'll find the puffs much easier to fill if the curry is cold. A warm filling will be slightly runny.) You can make the pastry and fill the puffs on the same day you prepare the filling, but the filling is one of these things that really improves by being kept in the fridge for a day - the flavours deepen and meld. To make the pastry, mix the egg, sugar, salt, water and lemon in a measuring jug and refrigerate until it's nice and cold. Sieve the flour into a bowl, and rub in the butter until the mixture looks like breadcrumbs. Cut the lard into little cubes (about the same size as you cut the potato) and blend it well with the flour/butter mixture. Add the contents of the measuring jug and bring everything together gently with your hands. Rest the pastry in the fridge, wrapped in clingfilm, for an hour. Slice the pastry in two and roll out half into a thin rectangle. Fold the rectangle into three (as if you were folding an A4 sheet to fit in an envelope) and roll it out again. Repeat the folding and rolling four times. Cut out rounds about ½ cm thick with a large fluted pastry cutter and repeat the process with the other piece of pastry. (If you've scraps left over, just roll them out and use the cutter on them.) Beat an egg and put it in a cup where you can reach it easily as you work. Put a tablespoon of filling in the middle of each pastry circle, and wipe some beaten egg around half the edge. Press each edge together to seal and crimp the curry puff. Arrange the puffs on a baking tray and brush each with the beaten egg to glaze. Bake at 230° C for the first 10 minutes, then reduce the heat to 200° for 20 minutes. Cool (if you can bear to - ours usually go straight from the oven into slobbering mouths) on a cake rack.
Labels: baking, beef, curry, Malaysian, Meat, Pastry, savoury
Green curry
 Thai green curry is fierce stuff. A green chicken curry is also pretty easy to make at home; with half an hour to spare you can produce a wok full of searingly hot, aromatic deliciousness. Although you can make your own curry paste from spices and fermented fish paste at home, I've found that Mae Ploy's green curry paste is so good and so convenient I don't bother any more. Some UK supermarkets stock it (I've seen it in Waitrose and Sainsbury's), you'll find it in oriental supermarkets as a matter of course, and it's available online in the UK and through Amazon in the US, where you can buy things to eat while you read your books. Please do not believe what it says on the pot. If you use three tablespoons of this extremely hot paste in a curry of this size, you'll lose sensation in most of your digestive tract for the rest of the evening (which may be a blessing). I love hot curries, but there's a point past which even my tastebuds refuse to go. To serve two you'll need: 1 can coconut milk 2 tablespoons Mae Ploy green curry paste 2 large chicken breasts, boned and skinned 8 small aubergines, halved, or one large one cut into pieces 1 small can bamboo shoots 1 tablespoon palm sugar (substitute soft brown sugar if you can't find any) 5 kaffir lime leaves, torn 2 tablespoons fish sauce 1 handful basil leaves I couldn't find any kaffir lime leaves - they'd sold out at the Malaysian supermarket I went to in London at the weekend, so I used the pared zest of a lime instead. If your supermarket stocks Bart's Spices, you should be able to find freeze-dried kaffir lime leaves, which work very well. I like to use Chaokoh coconut milk (Americans can find it here, and Brits here; it's very inexpensive and extremely useful in the kitchen, so stock up on plenty). It's something Rosemary Brissenden's excellent South East Asian Food put me onto; when cooking a Thai curry, you need to look out for a coconut milk like Chaokoh, without emulsifiers, thickeners and God knows what else. This is because you'll be cooking with the thick part of the milk, which will float to the top of the can, until it separates and releases its oil - in a coconut milk with added gubbins, the oil will never separate out, no matter how much you cook it. You need this oil for flavour, and because it's the fat you'll be 'frying' the curry's ingredients in.  Chop all your ingredients before you start. Put the thick, solid part of the coconut milk in the wok (about half a can of a watery-looking liquid will remain in the can), and cook it, stirring, over a high flame until it is bubbling and the oil has separated from it. Add two tablespoons of curry paste to the wok and carry on stirring until the paste no longer smells harsh and raw - you'll notice a mellow, aromatic fragrance starts to develop. Add the chicken to the wok and continue to 'fry' until the meat has all changed colour. As you stir, add the remaining liquid from the coconut can, a tablespoon at a time. Add the sugar, fish sauce, lime leaves or zest and vegetables to the wok and turn the heat down. Simmer for about eight minutes, until the meat and vegetables are cooked through and the sauce has thickened a little. Taste a little of the sauce to check the seasoning and adjust if you want to. Take the wok off the heat and stir in a large handful of basil, torn roughly. Thai basil is much more fragrant, with a delicious edge of anise, but if you can't find any, the European sort will be fine. Serve on top of a bowl of rice, and make sure you allow plenty of the delicious sauce to soak into the rice. Labels: chicken, chillies, curry, Meat, savoury, Supper, Thai
Smoked salmon kedgeree
 Kedgeree is one of those curious dishes to come out of colonial India, with European ingredients (in this case smoked fish, usually haddock) alongside Indian spices and rice. There's an Indian dish called Khichri which is a close cousin of our kedgeree, made from rice, lentils, onions and spices. Here in the UK it's a (now rather uncommon) breakfast dish. When I was a kid, our neighbours used to invite the whole street round for a New Year's breakfast, in which kedgeree played a starring role. Kedgeree is a good idea if you've a lot of people staying in the house; you can prepare it the day before and microwave it for a very rich and delicious brunch. This kedgeree is a bit more delicate than the traditional smoked haddock version. It uses barely cooked smoked salmon and fresh, sweet and juicy king prawns, and instead of strong onion, I've used spring onions. The salt used in curing the salmon is sufficient for the whole dish; you will not need to add any extra. It's important that the rice is chilled before you cook; if it is warm or hot, the grains are prone to break up and become mushy in cooking. To serve four, you'll need: 100g basmati rice, cooked and chilled 10 spring onions, chopped 1 inch of ginger, grated coarsely 1½ tablespoons Madras curry paste (I used Patak's) 10 raw, peeled king prawns 1 pack smoked salmon, torn into shreds 1 egg per person ½ pint chicken stock ¼ pint double cream 1 handful coriander, chopped 1 knob butter  Carefully slide the eggs into boiling water and boil for six minutes; the yolk should still be soft, and the white just set. Peel, halve and set aside. Stir fry the ginger and spring onions in a wok until soft, then add the curry paste and prawns and stir fry until the prawns have turned pink. Add the rice to the wok and stir fry. After five minutes, add the stock and salmon, and continue stir frying until the salmon has turned opaque. Remove the wok from the heat and add the cream and coriander. Stir well, and serve with a segment of the soft, creamy egg. This dish is inextricably associated with New Year in my head, so I served it this evening with a glass of toasty, nutty champagne. Delicious. Labels: breakfast, curry, egg, fish, Indian, kedgeree, prawns, Rice, salmon
South-Asian spiced fishcakes
 My Mum recited this recipe, which she had just conjured from thin air, down the telephone the other evening. I'm always in the market for good store-cupboard recipes, and this sounded excellent: something to use up that can of good, fatty fish; some mellow and fiery curry spices; last night's mashed potato; the eggs left over from my last cake; and some of the herbs clogging the fridge. This is a recipe where you need a canned fish rather than something fresh; it's rich and moist but flaky, which is exactly what you require here. I love Mummy's fishcakes. They made a regular appearance on the table when I was a little girl, and since then she's refined and tweaked them into something quite fantastic. They're also very quick to prepare if you have some mashed potato hanging around, so next time you prepare some as an accompaniment, make a pound or so extra so you can try these the next day. The little patties are dusted with cornflour to make them crisp and golden; we eat them with rice and some very serious feelings of gratitude. For about 16 fishcakes you'll need: 1 can Alaskan red salmon (I went for Alaskan salmon because I'd just been reading Legerdenez, a perfume blog from Alaska which I commend to you - if you're not in the mood for salmon, a good fatty tuna will also do well.) 6 small shallots 4 cloves garlic 1 large handful fresh coriander 1 ½ teaspoons curry powder (I use Bolsts) 1 red chilli Zest of 1 lime 1 ½ tablespoons grated fresh ginger 2 eggs 1 lb mashed potato 1 teaspoon salt Cornflour to dust Butter and olive oil to fry Put all the fishcake ingredients except the potato in the blender, and blitz until everything is roughly chopped. (The fish is quite salty already, so be careful not to oversalt.) Remove to a mixing bowl and use your hands to combine everything until well-blended. Shape the mixture into patties the size of your palm, and dip in cornflour. Refrigerate for half an hour, then fry for five minutes each side until golden. Serve with rice and a sweet chilli sauce, or a wedge of lime . Labels: curry, fish, fishcakes, India, leftovers, savoury, Spices, Supper
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