Aromatic Chicken Rendang

"A traditional Malay dish, Rendang is a specialized dry-ish curry that is made distinctive by adding dry-fried grated coconut towards the end of cooking time. It is made with chicken or beef (this takes an hour and a half at least to get tender) traditionally. You may experiment with ostrich, lamb, veal or duck, and make it as spicy as you like by varying the amount of chilli. Dried chillies can be purchased at Asian stores."
 
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photo by Rinshinomori photo by Rinshinomori
photo by Rinshinomori
photo by Rinshinomori photo by Rinshinomori
photo by Rinshinomori photo by Rinshinomori
photo by Rinshinomori photo by Rinshinomori
photo by RotiJala photo by RotiJala
Ready In:
1hr 15mins
Ingredients:
14
Serves:
3-4
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ingredients

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directions

  • Pulse the shallots, ginger, galangal root, chillies and sliced lemongrass, adding enough of coconut cream to make a thick paste.
  • Heat oil in a thick-bottomed non-stick saucepan till medium hot. Stirfry the shallot paste for 2 minutes. Add turmeric and smashed lemongrass stalks. Cook for 2 minutes.
  • Add meat pieces. Stir-fry for 5 minutes.
  • Add rest of coconut cream. Cook on medium-low heat till meat is done and quite tender, and curry sauce is very thick (you're lucky if the timing of both coincide!). Scrape bottom of pan every 2 minutes with spatula to ensure curry does not burn. If curry is getting dry before meat is tender, add a bit of water.
  • Cooking time varies with size and cuts of meat. When curry is thick and almost dry, add fried dessicated coconut, brown sugar, salt and kaffir lime leaves. Cook for another 5 minutes.
  • Serve hot with plain boiled rice, preferably jasmine or basmati variety. Yummm!

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Reviews

  1. I'll give it five stars even if I've never made it just yet just because I've had the beef version of this and I'm totally hooked. Rendang is so yummy. I'm so happy I can actually use chicken as a substitute, it cooks faster than beef so I don't need to wait that long and I can dig in right away.
     
  2. I used 3 chicken thighs to make this for 2-3 servings. Never having any Malay food before I did not know what to expect and was hoping it was not too hot. It is not hot at all and actually sweeter than I expected. I normally do not use shallots because they are quite costly here and used regular onion along with garlic to mimic the taste of shallots. I'm not sure what you serve this with normally other than white rice, but I think this dish will really go well with big salad with tart salad dressing or vinegared side dish. The taste is quite complex from different flavors coming through for such an easy preparation. Thank you you RotiJala for posting this yummy recipe. Looking forward to get more acquainted with foods from Malaysia and Indonesia.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I've been cooking and baking almost every day for the past 27 months ever since I moved here from Kuala Lumpur. Enjoy food discussions pretty much. Friends and other half love my roti jala (turmeric lacy pancakes) eaten with chicken curry or fish curry. They also like my cakes, bread, cookies and muffins. There are so many things to discover and enjoy in the world of cooking and baking.
 
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