Atul Kochhar's Bengali Chicken Korma
INGREDIENTS
SERVES 4
600g chicken thigh fillets
250g Greek-style yogurt
2 tablespoons single cream
100ml water
fresh coriander leaves
1 tablespoon vegetable oil or ghee
1 dried bay leaf
2 tablespoons Onion Paste
½ teaspoon red chilli powder, or to taste
½ teaspoon garam masala
¼ teaspoon ground turmeric
sea salt
For the tarka
4 green cardamom pods
1 teaspoon ghee
5cm piece of cinnamon stick
2 cloves
1 dried bay leaf
Method
Assemble all the ingredients and equipment before you begin. You need a bowl, a whisk, a large sauté or frying pan and a small saucepan.
Cut the chicken thigh fillets into bite-sized pieces. Put the yogurt and cream in the bowl and whisk in 2 tablespoons of the water. Rinse and chop enough coriander leaves to make about 2 tablespoons.
Heat the vegetable oil over a medium-high heat in the sauté pan. Add the bay leaf and stir it around to flavour the oil. Add the onion paste and stir it into the oil for 30 seconds. Add the chicken pieces and continue stirring just until they are lightly coloured on all sides.
Stir in the remaining water, scraping the bottom of the pan. Add the chilli powder, garam masala and turmeric. Season with salt and stir for 30 seconds to cook the spices. Watch closely so they do not burn. Turn the heat to medium, whisk in the yogurt mixture and leave the chicken to simmer, stirring occasionally, for 10 minutes, or until it is cooked through and tender. Do not allow the mixture to boil, or the yogurt will split.
Just before serving, make the tarka. Lightly crush the cardamom pods to loosen the seeds. Melt the ghee in the saucepan over a high heat. Add the cardamom pods and seeds, the cinnamon stick, cloves and bay leaf, and stir until the spices crackle. Immediately pour this over the chicken mixture and stir in.
Adjust the seasoning with salt, if necessary, and stir in the chopped coriander just before serving.
Atul’s curry cooking tip
Whisking the yogurt and cream with a little water helps prevent it splitting in the pan. If your gravy does split, however, you can bring it back by stirring in another tablespoon of yogurt or double cream. I suggest using Greek-style yogurt because it has been strained, so it is less likely to split.
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