When I was a child, I doubt curry would have been on the menu for many
if any picky eaters. Now though,
possibly in an effort to keep up with their peers, it seems that a mild curry
is often a will eat.
For the purposes of this blog, I have actually found a castle shaped
cookie cutter to make a curry castle.
To do this, I placed the cookie cutter on the plate, then wedged the
cooked rice around it, spooned the curry inside the cutter and then carefully
removed it.
I often do curry in the slow cooker so all I have to do when we all get
in is prepare the rice. With this
recipe, I don’t even need to worry about any other accompaniments as the veg
are stealthily hidden in the curry itself!
It's been called curry castle and rice moat in our house for as long as I can remember and don’t now know
where the name came from, it may have been something from my own
childhood. It doesn’t usually get
served as a castle and moat though.
A friend called me in a state of apoplexy one day asking how I managed
to get the chicken to stack up like a castle – she’d been trying all afternoon
as her daughter had asked for the dish by my name for it. I couldn’t help laughing as I explained
that I just serve the rice round the edge of the plate in a circular “moat” and
dollop the curry in the middle – it’s just our name for curry and rice!
For the rice, I use a normal mug full of dry rice for 4 people. Put the rice in a lidded pan and cover
with two of the same sized mugs full of freshly boiled water and add a knob of
butter. Bring back to a simmer
then cover and cook over a low to medium heat for about ten minutes or until
all the water has absorbed and the rice is cooked. If the water all disappears before the rice has cooked add a
little at a time – about 25ml – until the rice is tender.
A good tip with making rice in advance is to drain it and hold it in a
strainer/sieve under cold running water until it is cool throughout – this
stops it cooking and turning to a mush.
You can then pop it into a bowl and cover it and refrigerate to heat up
later. Don’t keep cooked rice in
the fridge for more than a few days though. To reheat, simply put it back in the sieve and pour over
boiling water.
For the curry: (serves 6)
2 tablespoons rapeseed oil
800g filleted chicken thighs
1 large onion, finely chopped
250g can of white beans
250g steamed cauliflower
2 tablespoons plain flour
250g can of chopped tomatoes
4 tablespoons ground almonds
4 tablespoons coriander
1 tablespoon cumin
½ teaspoon chili powder (or more to your taste)
½ teaspoon allspice
2 cloves garlic crushed
1cm cube ginger, finely chopped or grated
2 tablespoons turmeric
2 tablespoons garam masala
1 teaspoon tamarind paste (use Worcestershire sauce if you don’t have
tamarind)
200g block of creamed coconut
1.
In a flame proof casserole, heat the oil and gently
fry the onion, ginger and garlic.
2.
Using a
slotted spoon to allow the oil to drain back into the pan, transfer to a food
processor and blend to a fine puree together with the cauliflower and white
beans.
3.
Brown the chicken gently in the remaining oil for
about 5 minutes.
4.
Mix together the remaining dry ingredients and then
add to the pan with the chicken and continue to cook gently for a further 5
minutes
5.
Add the canned tomatoes and the puree and bring to a
gentle simmer.
6.
Add the creamed coconut and stir through until it
has dissolved into the sauce.
7.
Add 250ml of hot water and bring back to the boil.
8.
Cover and transfer to the oven (or put the lot into
your slow cooker) and cook at 130C for 2 hours, checking and stirring
occasionally.
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