Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Cambodian Chicken Curry with Lemongrass and Coconut Milk

This dish, although it's a curry, is not at all like Thai or Indian curries. It's not hot. It's a little tart and quite enjoyable. 

4 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
1  4-inch finger of ginger, roughly chopped
2 large shallots, chopped
The bulb ends of 4 fresh lemongrass stalks, peeled and sliced thinly
1 1/2 Tablespoons rice vinegar
1 teaspoon turmeric
1 teaspoon freshly grated lime zest
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
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oil
6 boneless chicken breasts or ten thighs
1 cup chicken broth
1 cup coconut milk
1 tablespoon fish sauce
1 teaspoon packed brown sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice

Hot rice for serving
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Combine the ingredients from the top part of the list in your food processor. The original recipe says you can do it the traditional way with mortar and pestle... Not me, not in this life!! Holy Cow! It took me a good ten minutes of pureeing this into a paste in the food processor. By hand it might take one whole day! 

Run the processor intermittently scraping down the solids and running it again, until it's almost like a paste. It will look fibrous, that's okay. You just don't want it to look chunky. 

Heat oil in skillet until hot, then add spice mixture. Cook, stirring about a minute or two until the aroma is noticeable. 

Add the chicken, cook, turning often until lightly browned. This might take 5 minutes or so, depending on the size of your skillet and how you rotate everything to brown. 

Stir in broth and the rest of the ingredients (except lime juice), scraping up any browned bits in the pan into the sauce. Bring to a simmer, cover and cook for ten minutes over low heat. 

Just before serving, stir in the lime juice. 

Serve immediately over hot rice. Jasmine Rice is suggested, since it goes with the Cambodian theme, but regular white rice will be good. 
   


Gather all your ingredients.

Grate the zest off your fresh lime.

Put all the spice ingredients into the food processor. I should have cut them a bit smaller. It took WAY too long to pulverize everything.

OK, after about week (just kidding)... it's a pasty consistency.

Add spice to hot oil in skillet.

Cook stirring till it's heated well and smells divine.

Add your chicken. I prefer to cut mine up. You could leave the pieces whole, but boneless.

Stir until chicken is all cooked and browned a bit. It won't get crispy, don't look for THAT browned.

Add broth...

Coconut milk...

Fish sauce and Spices...

Add everything but the lime juice.

Stir it up nicely.

And cover to simmer about ten minutes.

After simmering, add the lime juice. Stir it in and serve right away.

Doesn't that look delicious? It really is!!

A nice salad on the side completes the meal.

Standing Rib Roast


It sounds impressive, doesn't it? It's not difficult. Go ahead and try it for your next special meal. 

Standing Rib Roast - This is a Prime Rib roast. Have your butcher cut the ribs off, and then tie to the meat. It stays moist with the ribs on, but slicing around the ribs is tough. 

1/3 cup Bread crumbs
Dijon Mustard
3 sprigs Parsley
Teaspoon Rosemary
S&P

S&P the roast and roast in 325*F oven for 90 minutes. Combine bread crumbs with parsley and rosemary. 

Remove from oven, coat with Dijon mustard, and bread crumb mixture. Return to oven for an additional 90 minutes or until internal temperature of 145* is reached. 

Remove from oven, allow to rest for 10 - 15 minutes. Remove meat from ribs and slice for serving. Enjoy! 

Simple, huh? :)



Rib roast with ribs along the bottom. "Standing" on it's ribs.


The butcher cut them off and then tied them back on with twine.


See the twine? Salt and pepper to taste. OK, into the oven at 325*F for 90 minutes.


While the roast is cooking, prepare the crust. 1/3 cup bread crumbs. A couple nice springs for fresh parsley, cut up. A Teaspoon of dried rosemary. I also added in some chopped shallots.

When I took the roast out, I decided to cut the twice so I didn't muss the crust. I left it on last time. I'll leave it on next time too. The roast wanted to slide off it's ribs once I cut it. Don't worry about the crust. You're gonna muss it when you slice anyways. :) Live and learn.


Coat the roast in Dijon Mustard. It took a good 2 or 3 Tablespoons of mustard. Dab it all over.


Pat the bread crumb mixture onto the mustard.


Back into the oven for a while more. You want to roast until it reaches an internal temperature of 145*F. Mine was about 6.5 lbs and took an additional 90 minutes.


Once 145*F has been reached, checked with an instant thermometer, remove from oven and allow the roast to rest for 10 - 15 minutes before slicing.


I lifted the roast away from the ribs, placing it onto the serving platter. No, the ribs didn't go to waste. :) They were a special treat for hubby! Ribs are Yummy!


I used my trusty electric carving knife and sliced into slices about 1/2 - 3/4 inch thick. Remember, this is prime rib, the slices are fairly large, even if you cut them thin. You can see here, in the center, Medium Rare. Perfect! The edge slices were a bit more done. Choices for everyone!


Standing Rib Roast, Sauteed Garlicky Brussel Sprouts, Hot Rolls, Hot Fruit Compote, Parsley Red Skin Potatoes. Dessert? Pumpkin Pie with Whipped Cream. :D


Happy Family! :D