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Burmese Chicken
Food writer and photographer Naomi Duguid’s stunning books provide keen insight into the people and foods of the countries she visits. One of our favorites, “Burma,” includes a terrific recipe called Aromatic Chicken from the Shan Hills. It’s simple, yet has deep flavor. We wanted to finesse things to make this even faster and easier for the home cook. We swapped in boneless thighs for Duguid’s bone-in chicken and switched to a Dutch oven instead of a wok. She suggests a mortar and pestle, but we used a blender to make a paste of lemon grass, garlic, ginger and shallots. This meant we could skip a marinade and let the chicken season as it cooked. A dose of red pepper flakes added moderate heat, but traditional Burmese food can be fairly spicy; if you want more heat, increase the red pepper flakes or stir in a slivered jalapeño, serrano or bird’s eye chili with the cilantro. We liked the chicken over steamed rice or thin rice noodles.
4
Servings
Don’t use the fibrous outer layers of the lemon grass. You want only the white, slightly tender (but still firm) inner bulb. Trim the root and all but the bottom 5 inches of the stalk, then peel off the first few layers. If you buy lemon grass in a plastic clamshell container, it likely already has been trimmed.
30 minutes
Ingredients
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8
ounces plum tomatoes (2 large), quartered
-
4
tablespoons grapeseed or other neutral oil, divided
Directions
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01In a blender, combine the tomatoes, 1 tablespoon of oil, ½ teaspoon salt, the turmeric, pepper flakes, lemon grass, shallots, ginger and garlic. Blend until a thick paste forms, about 1 minute, scraping down the blender as needed.
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GET DIGITAL & PRINTThis is delicious although it was a bit too salty. I will cut on the salt next time. If it needs saltiness later, perhaps I can just use fish sauce. There was lots of leftover paste, planning to use fried/baked tofu to recycle the paste instead of chicken breast.
Same here, very salty. 177MS recipes are usually spot on so I double checked and I followed exactly. I think I could drop the salt one full teaspoon.
And, yes, I used kosher not table.
other than that, it was a good quick meal. I doubled the pepper flakes but didn't have lemon grass or zest to add so I added some lime zest along with the juice at the finish.
Hi All -
This recipe was developed with Diamond Crystal kosher salt which is about twice as much by volume as Morton's kosher (or table salt). We are in the process of updating all recipes to reflect the switch to Morton's kosher for recipe development across the board. We have just updated this one to reflect the correct amount of Morton's kosher. Sorry for the confusion!
Best,
The Milk Street Team
wondering why you are switching to Morton's Kosher salt. All recipes I find in books and on-line are with Diamond K salt when using Kosher salt. Just curious...
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Is it 1 Tsp Turmeric, or 2 Tsp Turmeric? The general recipe says it calls for 2 Tsp, but the step by step only mentions 1.
This was easy and delicious! I added about 1/3 can of coconut milk at the end because my spice paste remained very paste-y. I suppose that moves this more towards a curry but it was delicious nonetheless.