Monday, March 28, 2016

Chicken Jalfrezi - Bengali Hot Chicken Curry

Chicken Jalfrezi - one of those dishes almost always found in many Indian restaurants that serves North Indian dishes. Little did I know earlier that the roots for this dish is actually from Bengal. "Jhal" meaning "Hot" in Bengali (apparently). Some websites claim that Jalfrezi has taken over Chicken Tikka as the No.1 dish for UK. This is again a dish I got introduced during my Bangalore Days. A spicy, tangy, thick, chicken curry suitable for roti or rice. There are multiple recipes available on the web, here's my version with a slight twist here and there. 


Ingredients
Ingredients for curry paste
  1. Chicken
  2. Onions
  3. Tomatoes
  4. Tomato Paste
  5. Green Chillies
  6. Dried Red Chillies
  7. Ginger Julienne
  8. Cashew
  9. Poppy seeds
  10. Garam Masala
  11. Cumin Seeds
  12. Cumin Powder
  13. Ginger and Garlic paste
  14. Cumin Powder
  15. Red Chilli Powder (If possible both regular and Kashmiri Chilli for the colour)
  16. Amchur Powder
  17. Turmeric Powder
  18. Vinegar
  19. Tomato Ketchup
  20. Ghee
Method

1) Take about half of the onions, few tomatoes, green chillies, poppy seeds, and cashews and grind it into a smooth paste.
2) Heat a large kadai and add a few tablespoons of vegetable / canola oil.
3) When oil is hot add cumin seeds and dried red chillies and saute until you get the cumin and chilli "fragrance" out.
4) Add the paste done in step #1, ginger garlic paste and saute well until oil separates.
5) Add chicken, few tablespoons of vineger, about a tea spoon of tomato paste, pinch of turmeric powder, tea spoon of cumin powder, red chilli powder, half a teaspoon of Amchur powder, garam masala and salt to taste.
6) After the chicken is say about 1/3rd cooked, add a tablespoon of tomato ketchup (or sauce depending on which part of the globe you are from), add the remaining onions, ginger julienne saute for a few minutes.
7) Add water and let the curry boil to thicken as needed. Watch out not to add too much water as this is meant to be a thick curry. Do also note that the cashew paste will assist in thickening this up later. By now you should be able to smell the tangyness in the curry.
8) Once the curry has reached the required consistency (by when the chicken must have been cooked as well), add a good dollop of ghee to give the curry a rich and creamy texture. Let it simmer for a few minutes.
9) The curry is done once you can see the oil separated and has reached the consistency you need.
10) Garnish with coriander leaves and serve hot with roti/chappati or rice.


Happy Cooking!!

C

2 comments:

  1. Nice Chenni, what vegetables go with this gravy?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you want a veggie version you can use panneer. Just add panneer at the end.

      Delete

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Chetty