Green Thai Chicken Curry

 by Jayefuu
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This is one of the most tasty and flavoursome curries I've ever made.

The curry has an amazingly fresh taste, with creamy coconut, just enough chilli and loads of coriander.

The original recipe excluded the vegetables, but to fill a house full of students I added vegetables I thought would complement it to help fill us up and make it cheaper. If you don't fancy green beans, mange tout go really well as well.

The recipe for the curry paste I use can be found here, it's really quick to make in batches in a food processor and can be frozen up to 6 months for convenience.
 
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Step 1: Ingredients

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  • 2 tbsp green thai curry paste (according to taste)
  • 1 tbsp soft dark brown sugar
  • 2-3 large carrots, cut into thin sticks
  • 200g fine green beens, cut into ~4cm lengths
  • 1-2 thick stalks lemongrass, fat ends bashed with a rolling pin (optional), I use paste
  • 750g/1½lb skinless, boneless chicken, cut into chunks (use breast and/or leg meat)
  • zest  and juice of one lime
  • 400ml/14fl oz coconut milk (a can full)
  • 2 tbsp Thai fish sauce (or light soy sauce)
  • handful of coriander, roughly chopped (the more the better though to be honest)
susanchen2011 says: Aug 9, 2012. 11:29 PM
It tastes very good.
beehard44 says: Aug 25, 2010. 9:39 AM
the green curry from soms noodle house here in the Philippines will set your mouth on fire! when i tried it at first, i thought it was ginataan or something, so i slurped down a bowl of the sauce ( i was dining at home, i had it delivered). Big mistake. good thing i have a liter of full UHT cream milk in my fridge....
arne hendriks says: Dec 18, 2009. 5:55 AM
Maybe you could have an Instructables Restaurant Thai Style. In that case I will upload some of my favorite recipes from the Thai kitchen as well.
lemonie says: Oct 25, 2009. 12:36 PM
Lovely stuff, I like this sort of dish (though would use thighs in preference). Is that a Tefal frying-pan?

L
Jayefuu (author) in reply to lemonieNov 30, 2009. 12:55 AM
Yup. It's an awesome pan.
lemonie in reply to JayefuuNov 30, 2009. 10:35 AM
Yeah, they're pretty good for a few years.

L
Ninzerbean says: Oct 25, 2009. 12:25 PM
Fantastic! - even though I don't eat chicken - I can envision how good this will be with tofu, but what are "manges touts"?
lemonie in reply to NinzerbeanOct 25, 2009. 12:34 PM
They're pods picked before peas developed, hence they've not acquired mature toughness.

L
Jayefuu (author) in reply to NinzerbeanOct 25, 2009. 12:28 PM
Sorry, I spelt it wrong. I meant mange tout. They're like the pods that peas come in, but you don't have to shell them like peas, you eat the lot. They're kind of sweet and crispy and amazing.
Jayefuu (author) in reply to JayefuuOct 25, 2009. 12:29 PM
crisp not crispy
Ninzerbean in reply to JayefuuOct 25, 2009. 4:17 PM
I am amused that you would correct "crispy" but not "spelt" or is that a real word in the UK? In the US it is a grain of some sort. We say "spelled" for the past tense of "spell", ah I know, separated by a common language... 
Jayefuu (author) in reply to NinzerbeanOct 26, 2009. 1:22 AM
=] No I think it's spelled here too, just a bad habit as spelt is how it sounds phonetically. I never pick up on it since firefox thinks I'm just writing the grain I guess :) Thanks
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