Chicken Vindaloo




Chicken Vindaloo with Baby Marrow / Courgettes / Zuchinni

I love all foods hot and spicy and in zhoosing up my meals I think creatively to enhance a boring supper and blending flavours to create a dish that is appealing in both looks and taste.  I was browsing through my mum’s recipe books in KZN last week and came across a vindaloo recipe that was handed to her by a friend that I never had the privilege of meeting. The friend was of Goan  origin and worked as a cook to many in Durban. On a trip to Goa  (West India) a few years ago, I had the pleasure of tasting vindaloo, in both fish and chicken and nothing eaten thereafter compared to it.  I have adapted the recipe to make it  Paleo Detox friendly and the pungency of the cloves and red crushed chilli work well to create a good vindaloo, without wine or white wine vinegar, as was in the original recipe.  I also added baby marrow / courgette / zuchinni (instead of potatoes) to bulk up the meal and include a fair measure of vegetable carbohydrates.

The Vindaloo itself, originated in the Indian region of Goa and it is derived from a Portuguese dish known as “Vinha De Alhos” which translates as “wine and garlic”.  The Portuguese dish was effectively a wine and garlic based stew which was typically made with Pork and served around Christmas time.  However, after the dish was introduced to India, it changed rapidly to what we now know as the Vindaloo with the introduction of chillies and different Goan spices.  
A Chicken Vindaloo isn’t generally that popular in India, other than in Goa, but the dish has become very popular in the UK, the Middle East, the US and Canada and also Australia and New Zealand, where it is pretty much universally included on Indian restaurant and take away menus.

It also seems to taste much nicer if eaten a day or two after preparation as this allows more time for the flavours to be absorbed by the meat and although some of the flavours and spices can be used in different quantities to vary the dish according to taste, one thing to remember is not to reduce or change the amount of vinegar as a Vindaloo get its excellent flavour only as a result of the vinegar in the recipe. For my purposes, I used cloves and dry red chillies as a flavour enhancer.

Typically the Goans use pork with a traditional Vindaloo, but it can be prepared with beef, chicken, seafood and also vegetables such as potatoes, peas and other root vegetables.  Here I’ve decided to use chicken.  Generally a paste of the spices which includes sugar is made, along with a base of oil, garlic and onion.  I have adapted the recipe according my purposes.

Ingredients

200g chicken breast meat cubed
3-4 baby marrows / courgettes cutting into 3s
2 tblsp coconut oil or ghee (olive oil may be used)
1 onion finely chopped
5ml freshly ground salt
5ml (1tsp) red chilli powder
a pinch of tumeric
1 tsp green chillie, finely chopped or minced (this may vary according to your heat requirements)
2.5ml (1/2 tsp) garam masala
15ml (1 tblsp) coriander powder
250ml (I cup) water, boiling
1 tomato peeled and chopped or grated
2-3 whole cardamom
2-3 whole cloves
1-2 cinnamon sticks
5ml (1tsp) crushed dried red chillies
15ml 1 tblsp tomato paste (sugar and preservative free)
1.5 tsp freshly ground garlic and ginger
2-3 tblsp fresh coriander chopped
Optional:  Curry leaves, added with the onions
3-6 tblsp of white wine vinegar
Adding extra red chilli powder and green chilli to increase the spiciness.  Add bits at a time and do the taste test!

Here’s How

  • Add the crushed ground garlic, ginger, salt and red chilli powder to the chicken pieces, mix and set aside for 10 minutes

  • Heat the oil in a pot or wok.  Add the cardamom, cloves and cinnamon sticks
  • Add onions and fry until soft, then add the chopped /grated tomato.  Cook until the onions and tomato are almost melted or have formed a nice thick masala
 

  • Add the turmeric powder, garam masala, coriander powder, green chillies and crushed red chillies

  • Add the chicken and stir.  If the curry is too dry and tends to stick to the pot, add half to one cup of boiling water and stir
 

  • Add the tomato paste and stir until all the pieces are well coated.  Cook until the chicken is tender


  • Add the baby marrow about 5-10 minutes before end of cooking time to the vindaloo.

  • Add the chopped fresh coriander leaves and serve.
 

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Prava Singh

A Mom, daughter, wife, sister, aunt and friend experiencing life through an evolutionary body with a revolutionary mind... A recent past former Type 2 insulin dependent and hypertensive walking time-bomb for 13.5 years, I have made positive lifestyle changes that has aided and abetted my health status for my overall betterment. Passionate about all things food, with a proud Indian heritage, I regularly blog my culinary attempts that have worked for me in my endeavours to break the shackles of food addictions and food slavery. Passionate about people too, my decision to share these endeavours is driven by informing others that a lifestyle change through food is indeed possible. I have indeed survived high school and survived life too in the most interesting and thought-provoking ways. Having lost over 50kgs of excess weight in just under a year, I have reclaimed my life and am thoroughly enjoying the journey.

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3 Responses

  1. Tam says:

    omg! That looks DIVINE! Pity my wife doesn’t like hot food. But my goodness, I want to pull up a chair right now and tuck in.

  2. Prava says:

    it was devine Tam, you may adjust the chilli powder, cloves and both green and red chilli to suit your taste. :)

  3. Tam says:

    Cool. I will. And I love the broccoli recipe as well. I think I’ll try it this weekend

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