Thursday, March 25, 2010

Curry Chicken Tenders

So, my posts have been kind of sparse lately. There’s a few reasons for that.
  1. Work has picked up and I’ve been getting home later, 8pm is no time to start cooking dinner.
  2. Gary’s home now, so I’ve been leaving the cooking up to him. I rather enjoy coming home with dinner ready for me.
  3. I’ve been in a cooking and baking rut, and have no new ideas of what to cook; although I keep flagging recipes to make.
  4. My baking itch is pretty much dormant right now.
So, with Gary cooking almost every night, we’ve been eating meals we’ve made before with a few new ones mixed in. Gary saw this recipe for satay chicken tenders and decided to try it. I’ve probably mentioned this before, but one of the few spicy things I can tolerate is curry. I love curry chicken, so this was a good choice any day of the week.

curry chicken tenders

The original recipe called for chicken tenders, but any part of the chicken will do. We used a chicken breast for this and pounded it with a meat mallet to tenderize. He also used half the amount of curry powder stated, but I recommend using the full amount (as written below) because it could have used that extra kick. Martin Yan heats the remaining marinade to pour over the chicken, but I didn’t have any excess left.

Grilled Curry Chicken Tenders
adapted from: Martin Yan Quick and Easy
printable recipe

ingredients:
2 TBSP soy sauce
2 TBSP fresh lemon juice
2 TBSP curry powder
1 TBSP packed brown sugar
1 TBSP vegetable oil
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1/4 tsp Chinese five spice powder
1 lb chicken breast

directions:
In a bowl, combine all the ingredients except chicken. Set aside.

Lay a piece of plastic wrap on a cutting board. Place chicken on top and cover with another piece of plastic wrap. Pound with a meat mallet with the flat side. Remove plastic wrap. Cut into 1 inch wide strips against the grain at an angle. Add chicken into the marinade, mixing well to coat evenly. Let stand for 10 minutes.

Meanwhile, heat up the grill (foreman, grill pan, etc). Place chicken on the George Foreman grill, cook for 2-3 minutes or until chicken is no longer pink in the center.

If you do have reserved marinade left over, you can heat it up in a saucepan over medium high heat and bring to a simmer. Pour the sauce over the chicken before serving.

Serves 4

5 comments :

  1. Will just bringing the marinade to a simmer protect you from bacteria that's left in it from the raw chicken?

    I've used leftover marinade for sauces before, but usually make sure they at least stay at a full boil for a few minutes to make sure nobody gets sick. If it doesn't ruin the consistency or flavor, I'd recommend doing that.

    ReplyDelete
  2. @hungrystudent

    These were the instructions in the cookbook, but since there isn't much marinade left (for me, there was none) the medium-high heat will pretty much bring it to a boil in seconds.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Gotcha. I guess I just misunderstood the post and was curious to know whether the marinade came to a boil.

    The dish sounds very tasty! I'm thinking about giving it a try tonight.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Gotcha. I guess I just misunderstood the post and was curious to know whether the marinade came to a boil.

    The dish sounds very tasty! I'm thinking about giving it a try tonight.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Will just bringing the marinade to a simmer protect you from bacteria that's left in it from the raw chicken?

    I've used leftover marinade for sauces before, but usually make sure they at least stay at a full boil for a few minutes to make sure nobody gets sick. If it doesn't ruin the consistency or flavor, I'd recommend doing that.

    ReplyDelete

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