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Re: Coconut chicken Soup

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>I tried the coconut chicken soup and didn't like the taste of ginger in it.

Without the ginger it tastes bland. Has anyone come up with a variation they

like that isn't too bland?

>

>Thanks,

>

>Jafa

I have a similar recipe I've made for years, which uses curry. My

family likes curry more than ginger, as a flavoring.

I cook the curry in a dry pan until fragrant, then add oil and sautee

some onions. Then add coconut milk, salt, and meat and cook. It

can be thinned for soup, or made thicker for a saucy kind of

thing to put over rice. You can use any meat: the original

recipe used shrimp.

-- Heidi

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--- In , Idol <Idol@c...>

wrote:

> Heidi-

>

> >I cook the curry in a dry pan until fragrant,

>

> Curry paste? What kind?

Since she uses a dry pan it must be curry _powder_. Which

brand of curry powder do you use Heidi? A different blend

of spices can be used by each manufactuer, and so one curry

powder can differ radically from another. Many of them that

I've seen also include ground ginger.

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-

I took a dry pan to mean a pan with no liquid added besides the

curry. I've heard of cooking curry powder in oil, but not by itself.

>Since she uses a dry pan it must be curry _powder_.

-

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-

BTW, I love how you knock me for asking a question, then ask the very same

question.

>Since she uses a dry pan it must be curry _powder_. Which

>brand of curry powder do you use Heidi? A different blend

>of spices can be used by each manufactuer, and so one curry

>powder can differ radically from another. Many of them that

>I've seen also include ground ginger.

-

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--- In , Idol <Idol@c...>

wrote:

>

> I took a dry pan to mean a pan with no liquid added besides the

> curry. I've heard of cooking curry powder in oil, but not by

> itself.

Yeah, you can dry roast ground spices in an oil-free pan.

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--- In , Idol <Idol@c...>

wrote:

> -

>

> BTW, I love how you knock me for asking a question, then ask the

> very same question.

I didn't think I was knocking you. I was just answering

your question about whether Heidi was referring to a curry

_paste_ or a curry _powder_. I would have waited for Heidi

to answer it herself, but given the cooking method described,

I was sure that she meant a powder, and I wanted to further

ask for myself which brand of powder she uses, which is not

the same question as what kind of paste she uses.

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>>I cook the curry in a dry pan until fragrant,

>

>Curry paste? What kind?

:

No, curry powder. I don't know the brand --

it was in a big plastic jar from our local

Indian restaurant. Cooking spices in a dry

pan is a great way to draw out their flavor.

Makes the kitchen smell good too.

Just put the powder in a dry pan and move

it around a little. " Dry pan " cooking seemed

weird to me when I started, and DON'T use a

nonstick pan for it. I use the dry pan method

for heating tortillas too, and for roasting

dry chilis. Roasting seseme seeds too, but you

have to cover them with a screen because they pop.

-- Heidi

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Heidi wrote: << No, curry powder. I don't know the brand --

it was in a big plastic jar from our local Indian restaurant. Cooking spices in

a dry pan is a great way to draw out their flavor. Makes the kitchen smell good

too.>>

----- I used to cook with curry powder. a few years ago I came across a recipe

which required whole spices to be gently dry-roasted THEN pounded in a pestle

and mortar... the resulting flavour and aroma were so much better that I never

again used pre-mixed/ground curry powder... have found some whole turmeric

recently. will buy some as soon as I finish my current stock of ground turmeric.

Dedy

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>----- I used to cook with curry powder. a few years ago I came across a recipe

which required whole spices to be gently dry-roasted THEN pounded in a pestle

and mortar... the resulting flavour and aroma were so much better that I never

again used pre-mixed/ground curry powder... have found some whole turmeric

recently. will buy some as soon as I finish my current stock of ground turmeric.

>

>Dedy

I'd bet they really are good that way! I can't see me doing it in my current

state though. I do roast chili peppers and grind them, and I know

what you mean, no comparison ...

-- Heidi

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Heidi wrote -- I'd bet they really are good that way! I can't see me doing it

in my current state though. I do roast chili peppers and grind them, and I know

what you mean, no comparison ...>>

Heidi,

for me, using the pestle and mortar is a form of therapeutic excercise :-) I'm

sure using an electric coffee/spice grinder will give the same results in a

fraction of the time...

Dedy

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>Heidi,

>for me, using the pestle and mortar is a form of therapeutic excercise :-) I'm

sure using an electric coffee/spice grinder will give the same results in a

fraction of the time...

>

>Dedy

And, a lot of it is " learning curve " . I found it VERY time consuming

to make kefir the first time (laugh!). When you watch

good cooks, say on the Iron Chef, they are grinding

salt, deboning fish, etc. and still making an umpteen course

dinner in an hour ...

-- Heidi

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