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Well, I wished for rain and I got rain. So I have to cook some rainy weather food to warm up our tummies and to chase away the sniffles caused by the alternating cool and hot weather.
Chicken curry is the best thing ever and my kids love it. They’ve been trained to eat spicy food from young. It’s a gradual process. Just expose them to spicy food and pretty soon, their tastebuds will be conditioned.

It’s not too difficult to cook chicken curry at home. The end-result is really worth the effort. You need:
- 1 large chicken about 1.5kg, chopped
- 6 ladies’ fingers, cut into half lengths
- 4 large potatoes, quartered
- 3 teaspoons mixed spices, usually consisting of fennel and mustard seeds, coriander
- 4 tablespoons curry powder mix (use the prepacked mix for meat)
- santan, or coconut milk from 1 coconut
- 4 stalks lemon grass, crushed
- 4 stalks curry leaves
- 6-8 cups water
- cooking oil
- salt to taste
First thing I do is to heat up some oil in the wok, or pan. Throw in the mixed spices and leave to pop for a few minutes to flavor the oil.
Add the curry powder mix, then the stalks of lemon grass and curry leaves. Fry all together till the spicy fragrance fills your kitchen and gets your neighbors drooling with envy
.
Add chicken pieces, then the potatoes. Fry for a few minutes before adding water to the mixture. Season with salt to taste. Cover the wok and allow to simmer till the chicken and potatoes are softened.
Add the ladies’ fingers followed by the coconut milk. Simmer till ladies’ fingers are softened. Use medium heat throughout the cooking process.

Chicken curry can be a one-dish meal if you’re in a rush, We typically eat it with rice and papadam. Papadams are round crackers made from chickpea flour and Indian spices. Very tasty, I tell ya!
They’re sold in packaged sheets at the Indian store and I fry them myself at home. They make a delicious accompaniment to any meal of curry. My kids sometimes eat it on its own as a snack or with a topping, sort of like a nacho.
Some of my Australian friends have developed a routine of eating Indian curry rice on Fridays. They would run to the nearby Indian restaurant to buy back a mountain of Indian curry and rice.
When they come to KL, they will insist I take them out for spicy Indian food. Who says Caucasians can’t take the heat?
Some of them are even better than me and I’m supposed to be the resident Chili Queen!



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