Curry Chicken Recipe (Kari Ayam)

Curry Chicken (Kari Ayam)
Curry Chicken (Kari Ayam) pictures (1 of 6)

Nyonya loves their curry chicken, or kari ayam in Malay.

When it comes to making curry chicken, I always choose the easy way out—I buy instant curry chicken paste, which is both convenient and quite tasty. However, back home in Penang, my family would always make curry chicken from scratch. Well, first of all, you just can’t beat the authentic great taste of a red-hot curry chicken (click the picture above to check out the complete gallery); secondly, no instant curry mix would rival the fresh and exotic aroma of home-made spice paste of turmeric, fennel, cumin, coriander seeds, and other aromatics. So, the answer is pretty clear. If you want the best curry chicken, be prepared to spend some time in your kitchen…(get curry chicken recipe/kari ayam after the jump)

Curry chicken is made with bone-in chicken traditionally, and curry leaves are used to infuse the curry with the intense fragrance of the curry leaves. My family love eating curry chicken with nasi kunyit (turmeric sticky rice) but I will have to share that recipe in the future. For now, do check out this droolsome curry chicken recipe prepared by my sister-in-law in Penang.

Enjoy!

Curry Chicken Recipe

Ingredients:

1 Whole chicken (remove head, neck, feet and chopped into pieces)
200g Potatoes (peeled and cut into wedges)
200ml Thick coconut milk or to taste (use more if you like it “lemak”)
1 sprig Curry Leaves (use only the leaves)

1 Star arise
1 cloves
1 cinnamon stick
5 tbsp Oil
1 ½ cup Water

Spice Paste (ground):

3 cloves Garlic
18 Shallots
12 Dried Chili (soaked and remove seeds)
15g Turmeric
15g Coriander seeds
1tsp Fennel
1tsp Cumin
20g Shrimp paste (toasted)
1 Lemongrass (white part only)

Seasoning
1 tbsp Salt
1 tsp Sugar

Method:

Heat up your wok, pour in 5 tbsp oil, sauté cinnamon stick, star anise and cloves, fry over low heat, add in spice paste and stir-fry until fragrant.

Add chicken, potatoes, curry leaves and fry well. Add in water, cover the pot, braise over low heat until chicken and potatoes are cooked well.

Add the thick coconut milk, salt and sugar. Continue to simmer in low heat for 20-30 minutes or until the chicken becomes tender. Remove and serve with white rice, bread, nasi kunyit, or roti jala.

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63 comments... read them below or add one

  1. I could devour your Chicken Curry NOW!

  2. David says:

    Oh goodness,this looks absolutely delicious to the bone. I will bookmark this dish and add it to our Thanksgiving table.We don’t do turkey rather a wide array of different Asian dishes. Thanks for sharing

    • Nyonya Food says:

      David! What a great idea. Yes, Asian dishes are a lot more interesting than turkey and stuffing in my honest opinion! How about curry turkey????

      • David says:

        quite honestly I dislike turkey unless it’s sliced paper thin for a sandwich, and even then I don’t like it much. But curry chicken and this one in particular is going to be awesome. We will still have a few traditional American dishes like pineapple honey glazed ham, but thats about it. Thanks for sharing as always.

      • Joanie Campsie says:

        Agree with you 150% that Asian dishes are definitely much more interesting than turkey and stuffing. Sorry lah, Martha Stewart and her roast turkey couldn’t hold a candle to Nyonya food. Give me some good old Penang nyonya food anytime! Should I ever host Thanksgiving for the American side of my family, it will definitely be Thanksgiving with a Penang twist. :-]

      • Joanie Campsie says:

        BTW, how much thick coconut milk should I use? It’s missing from the list of ingredients. Thanks in advance!

    • eatsiptrip says:

      Here, here, on the array of Asian dishes, we do that for x-mas dinner. Lots of sambals, Indian and Malaysian curries, Nonya dishes like bua keluak(smuggled) chicken or char bee hoon, babi Ketjap, rojak, on and on…it all makes for a wonderFULL night.

  3. Tricia says:

    Hmmm…Yummy!!! I miss my curries!!!

  4. Su-yin says:

    Thanks for the recipe, the curry looks fantastic. I usually take the easy way out and use A1 or Brahms paste, but have been trying to learn how to cook curries from scratch recently.

    For some reason the white bread in the background reminds me very much of Gardenia! :P

    • Nyonya Food says:

      Su-yin – yes, I get tired of instant curry paste now. You are right, Gardenia. I almost forgot about it. I bet it is Gardenia. LOL.

  5. Jay says:

    Erm…..dang.

  6. Robert Danhi says:

    The curry looks VERy good, just like home..cannot wait until February to go bak and makan lah…hey, why wait, heading to kitchen to cook soon.. Maybe curry turkey for Thanksgiving?

    • Nyonya Food says:

      Right on, yes, poor turkey needs some exotic spices and curry love. Rub your turkey with some curry spice paste this year. Aiyah!

  7. kl_changs says:

    Drool, drooool, drooooooool…………

    What a gorgeous looking curry! Your sis-in-law is as talented as you are, Bee. Did ur mom organise a test session before accepting her into your family? Hehehe.

    Do you simmer until the meat comes off the bones?

    • Nyonya Food says:

      Whahahah, you are so funny, I forgot about that age-old ritual about interviewing the daughter-in-law. Nope, it didn’t happen in my family. ;)

  8. Saif says:

    I love this Kari Ayam recipe! will make it soon. One thing I need to ask you. isn’t that lemon grass on picture along with the chicken & potatoes? I think adding lemon grass, will give it nice aroma. right?

  9. Cynthia says:

    Mmmmmm, it’s been a while since I’ve had chicken curry. Think I’ll make some this week. That sauce looks perfect to be sopped up with a new flat bread recipe I am planning to try soon.

  10. Yohan says:

    Wow, the curry certainly looks very delicious! I feel hungry by just looking at the pictures :-)

    By the way, how do you call the curry leaf in Malay?

  11. love to eat says:

    Gorgeous! The recipe says to add coconut milk, but I don’t see it in the list of ingredients. How much of it should be added?

  12. Liz says:

    The curry chicken looks awesome – but how much of the thick coconut milk should I be adding?

  13. Jencrafted says:

    The curry chicken looks tantalizing! I think I’ll make that for dinner this evening. By the way, would you recommend boiling the potatoes separately then adding it to the curry once it’s cooked? Trying to avoid overly starchy and mushy potatoes in the curry, which seems to be my problem in the past. Appreciate your input!
    Love your blog! You do us Penangites proud!!

  14. K.K Choo says:

    I like to deep fried my potatoes first to lightly brown, no more mushy potatoes.

  15. sally khoo says:

    i give it a twist – instead of coconut milk, i substitute with fresh milk and also add in ripe tomates to give it color. The potatoes would thicken the gravy, try it.

  16. David says:

    Just so I understand (living in UK):
    When you write 15 grams of tumeric, is that fresh root or dried powder?
    Also, how big are shallots in Malaysia? – 18 shallots bought in the UK weigh 500 grams, which seems a lot for a rempah.

  17. Pearl says:

    I learnt from my thai sis in law..to add 1 Tbsp crushed peanuts or cruncy peanuts spread :)

  18. hungryc says:

    I have been cooking curry chicken using the spice paste I buy from a market in Penang. So, when the uncle retires, I’ll not be able to cook curry chicken like that again…maybe it’s time to learn to make the paste from scratch

  19. Heather says:

    Hi there. I notice the ingredient “shrimp paste” says toasted. How do you toast that or do you buy it already toasted? Thanks. Also what is the conversion for the ingredients in grams? Thanks!

    • Nyonya Food says:

      Heater – you basically add the belacan in a hot wok, keep stirring and breaking it so it’s toasted. By the time it’s done, it’s become dry and very aromatic, and almost powdery.

  20. suka chiak says:

    Can I cook the chicken with the skin removed?and can we add big onion also like in some curry?

  21. KC says:

    I have tried this recipe and it is the real deal. However, I think lemongrass is a crucial ingredient in the nyonya chicken curry that should not be left out.

  22. chandani says:

    The picture was so great it started to make me hungry. So I had to try this recipe. It is bit different from the one i grew up with but loved it. Love the idead of getting the ingredients ready from scratch.

  23. JieHao says:

    There are a few ingredients that I don’t understand. For example, star anise and cloves. I bought them in packets. Are they of the same size everywhere? The cloves I had seemed too small for the amount of chicken.

    Next are the shallots. In the markets they label those long sharp leafy vegetable as shallot (looks like spring onion) but when I googled, they tell me that shallots are small onions. So which one should i be using?

    Thank You

    • Nyonya Food says:

      Sorry for the late response, but cloves are small but they are very aromatic so you only need a small quantity to impart the fragrance. Shallots are small onions.

  24. Dorothy Lin says:

    I loved your receipes! I lived in NY for almost 40 years and I loved cooking malaysian food for my family. For Thanksgiving Day I made Popiah, Mango Lobsters Salad, and Chow Kueh Teow from your receipes. My family and friends enjoyed them. For Christmas, I will try to make Buttered Prawns,LaLa clams,Otak otak and Lobsters Yee Mein. Wish me luck!
    Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
    Dorothy

  25. umyousef says:

    Hi, I tried this recipe yesterday…for six year old son who loves chicken curry. So I sauteed the spices and scooped out most of it and stored for later use and added the chicken pieces (just two for him), potato, water and coconut milk. This recipe is rightly described as droolsome. My son finished two big plates and from now on, I am not going to bother with the instant paste anymore. I intend to always make big batches and keep them for future use. Thanks for sharing this.

  26. Robin says:

    I will start making curry chicken for my lunch today. I live in England.

  27. KY says:

    Hi, is this Nyonya curry or is this the ‘regular’ kari ayam like on your other blog? What’s the difference between Nyonya curry and the other curry? Thanks.

  28. Avsky says:

    The shrimp paste I use in my cooking is the dried block, brown in colour (belachan). I am wondering if your sister-in-law got that delicious looking red oil in the photo, from using the wet red shrimp paste? It certainly adds a whole other dimension to this dish that I really wish I had, as mine turned out more yellow, like a Gulai Ayam!

  29. Foodcraze says:

    i just tried this recipe. For some reasons, the curry does not look as “red” as your picture. I suspect is the dried chili? Would fresh chili work?

    Also, I used mortar and pestle to pound the spices. They did not turn out as powdery as i expected so the gravy has bits and pieces of the spices. Is it supposed to be that way?

    • Nyonya Food says:

      Hi Michelle – yes, you can use fresh red chilies. If you use dried red chilies, make sure you use those with red color, some dried ones tend to lose the red colors. Also, when you sauteed the spice paste, make sure the color turns red / oil turns red. For mortar and pestle, you have to keep pounding until all the bits and pieces break down.

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