vegetable oil
1 Tbsp hot paprika, or to taste
1 Tbsp grated garlic
1 large shallot, sliced
1/2 cup chickpea flour
fish sauce, to taste (I used 3 Tbsp)
1 can coconut milk (I used light)
cilantro, torn
green onion, sliced
lime & lemon wedges
Fish sauce
chili sauce
First fry the chicken in hot oil. This can take ten minutes per side to get a good sear.
Meanwhile, grate the ginger, garlic and slice the onion. Whistle a little, if you can.
Once the chicken is brown on both sides, sprinkle on the paprika, ginger, and garlic. Cook for a minute, until fragrant.
Then add the beautiful shallot and cook a few minutes to soften. The shallot will add sweet goodness to the curry and balances the heat from the hot paprika.
Sprinkle on the chickpea flour and, to prevent lumps, stir. This will ensure that everything is coated and all the flour is moistened. The chickpea flour will thicken the curry and add a slightly earthy background flavor.
Now for the liquids.
Pour on stock, coconut milk, and fish sauce – instead of salt (I used quite a bit since my chicken stock is low sodium).
Simmer 30 minutes, breaking the chicken into smaller pieces with a wooden spoon. If the sauce gets too thick, thin it out with stock or water. If it seems a bit thin, make a slurry with some more chickpea flour and stir it in.
No biggie. That’s real life.
Meanwhile, cook the noodles and hard boiled eggs. Slice up a rainbow of garnishes.
Serve the noodles in one bowl, the curry in a second bowl, and the toppings on a platter.
Let everyone assemble their ohn-no-khao-swe.
… cilantro, lime, green onion,
And fish sauce.
Eat with gusto.
This is how you spell “beautiful” in Myanmar.
Enjoy with all your heart, my friends.
Have a beautiful summer.
Servings |
4 people |
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The secret to making a great ohn-no-khao-swe is in the toppings. More specifically, in assembling your own bowl, just as you like it. If you do it right, in every bite you’ll find chicken, noodles, chili peppers, green onion, cilantro, eggs, lime juice, and fish sauce.
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- 1-2 chicken thighs (boneless & skinless)
- vegetable oil
- 1 Tbsp hot paprika , or to taste
- 1 Tbsp ginger root , grated
- 1 Tbsp garlic , grated
- 1 large shallot , sliced
- 1/2 cup chickpea flour
- 1 quart chicken broth
- fish sauce , to taste (I used 3 Tbsp)
- 15 oz coconut milk
- 1 lb spaghetti (wheat noodles)
- 2 eggs , hard boiled (sliced)
- fresh cilantro , torn
- green onions , sliced
- lime , wedges
- lemons , wedges
- fish sauce
- chili sauce
- First fry the chicken in hot oil. This can take ten minutes per side to get a good sear. Meanwhile, grate the ginger, garlic and slice the onion. Whistle a little, if you can.
- Once the chicken is brown on both sides, sprinkle on the paprika, ginger, and garlic. Cook for a minute, until fragrant. Then add the beautiful shallot and cook a few minutes to soften. The shallot will add sweet goodness to the curry and balances the heat from the hot paprika.
- Sprinkle on the chickpea flour and, to prevent lumps, stir. This will ensure that everything is coated and all the flour is moistened. The chickpea flour will thicken the curry and add a slightly earthy background flavor. Now for the liquids. Pour on stock, coconut milk, and fish sauce – instead of salt (I used quite a bit since my chicken stock is low sodium).
- Simmer 30 minutes, breaking the chicken into smaller pieces with a wooden spoon. If the sauce gets too thick, thin it out with stock or water. If it seems a bit thin, make a slurry with some more chickpea flour and stir it in.
- Meanwhile, cook the noodles and hard boiled eggs. Slice up a rainbow of garnishes.
- Let everyone assemble their ohn-no-khao-swe.
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