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Try This Beginners’ Recipe for Indian Chicken With Coconut

There are just a few ingredients that you chuck into a blender and that is about it.

Try This Beginners’ Recipe for Indian Chicken With Coconut
A chef prepares a curry dish in the kitchen an Indian fine dining restaurant in Chobham, U.K. (Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg)

Chef Romy Gill has had to work hard for her success.

She was born and brought up in Burnpur, West Bengal, where her father worked in a steel plant. She learned to cook with her mother and decided she wanted to be a chef after her mother was diagnosed with cancer. Romy never formally studied culinary arts, and when she moved to the U.K. in her early 20s to go to university, she didn’t have handy connections in the hospitality business.

Romy married an Englishman and settled in a small town in the west of England, near Bristol. She went on to open her own restaurant, Romy’s Kitchen, in Thornbury. I went there once: It was charming with very good food. But it has closed now. It’s by sheer force of personality that Romy has made her way onto the national, and even international, stage.

Try This Beginners’ Recipe for Indian Chicken With Coconut

Her first cookbook, “Zaika: Vegan Recipes From India,” was well-received and she was already a regular guest on cooking programs before becoming one of the chefs on “Ready Steady Cook,” a BBC daytime game show.  She’s also a contributor to publications, including the New York Times and National Geographic, and was invited to cook at the James Beard Foundation in New York.

Along the way, she has been honored by Queen Elizabeth II with an MBE award, making her Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. She’s currently working on her next cookbook, “The Himalayan Trail, Kashmir to Leh.”

Try This Beginners’ Recipe for Indian Chicken With Coconut

I asked Romy for a beginner’s recipe for an Indian dish and she has supplied one for nariyal murgh, a chicken curry with coconut. There are just a few ingredients that you chuck into a blender and that is about it. It’s not a sophisticated dish with layers of flavor. But if you are looking for a simple Indian recipe that tastes great, this might work for you.

I made it with only four chicken thighs (instead of the nine specified in the recipe) because even I would struggle to eat that much meat, and I do like an abundance of spicy gravy. Romy recommends cooking the chicken with the bone in, for flavor. I bought boneless meat because I am lazy. 

Ingredients:

9 chicken thighs (peel the skin off)

175 grams (6.2 ounces) of white onion peeled and diced into chunks

6 cloves of garlic

15g ginger peeled and diced

2 green chilies

2 teaspoons turmeric

2tsp ground coriander

1tsp salt

1tsp paprika

2tsp tomato puree

400 milliliters (13.5 ounces) coconut milk

Preparation:

In a blender combine all the ingredients, except the chicken, into a fine paste.

Heat a (fan) oven to 200 degrees Celsius (392 Fahrenheit), gas mark 6 . That’s 220 Celsius in a regular oven.

While the oven is getting hot, mix the thighs and paste in a bowl.

Place in a casserole dish and cook in the oven for 45 minutes.

Richard Vines is Chief Food Critic at Bloomberg. Follow him on Twitter @richardvines and Instagram @richard.vines.

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