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I love this dish. It has the heat and pungency of the green chillies but the actual spices provide the background flavours and are quite mild. It is a hugely popular dish from Bengal, based on the beautiful local tiger prawns. I use both coconut milk and cream as this dish has a rich coconut flavour that would normally be derived from grating and extracting thick and thin milks from fresh coconuts. However, for speed, I cheat and use shop-bought versions. If you wish, you can add a little extra milk and omit the cream altogether.
2 medium onions, peeled and cut into chunks
8g fresh ginger, peeled and cut into chunks
4 cloves
6 green cardamom pods
2 large chards of cinnamon
3 tbsp vegetable oil
5g garlic (approximately 2 large cloves), peeled and made into a paste
3-6 green chillies, slight lengthwise but left whole
¾ tsp turmeric
1 rounded tsp coriander powder
350-400 ml coconut milk
salt, to taste
1 tsp sugar, or to taste
600g medium-large tiger prawns, shelled but with the tail left intact, deveined and cleaned
50g coconut cream (optional)
1 Blend the onions and the ginger to a fine paste. Grind together 2 cloves, 3 cardamom pods and 1 cinnamon chard in a pestle and mortar; set aside.
2 Heat the oil in a large non-stick pan, add the remaining whole spices and fry for 20 seconds or until fragrant. Add the onion paste and fry over a low heat, stirring frequently, for 8-10 minutes until golden brown. It is important that the onions are cooked through.
3 Add the garlic, chillies, turmeric, coriander powder and a splash of water and cook for 1 minute.
4 Stir in the coconut milk, salt and sugar, bring to a boil, then simmer over a low heat for 3-4 minutes.
5 Add the prawns and simmer for 2-3 minutes until cooked.
6 Stir in the reserved ground spices and coconut cream, if using, and serve.
For more tips visit www.anjumanand.co.uk
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Adding sugar generally helps onion to caramelise, giving better taste and colour. I didn't realise it was just a bengali thing?
I know malai curry more in the incarnation of:
1) fry whole masala (fry prawns in this oil and exclude)
2) add ground spices + ginger/onion and fry potato pieces
3) add coconut milk and cook down
4) add prawns and finish!
Very simple, ideally prawns are fresh from your pond...
I like the sound of the Goan variation posted below!
Cama, London,
how unhygienic to keep touching her hair!
monica, grenoble,
I would like t add my way--cook the onion, ginger, garlic as Anjuman did--add ground cashews and a quarter teaspoon of tamatind paste--cook about two minutes--add can can of coconut milk and ground corriander powder. when heated thru add the shrimp and cook till shrimp is pink and then add a quarter teaspoon of molasses and two drops of dark sesame seed oil and shut the heat off. Top with a small quantity of cilantro leaves chopped. I do not like cinnanmon, cardamom, cloves with fish. I am from Goa in South India where we do not use these spices a whole lot bceause they mar the taste of the shrimp.Also play around with the corriander powder, I add just a little. You may also add the green chillies as Anjuman showed, I do not.Finally the coriander powder should be made fresh. Toast corriander dry on a non-stick pan till just browned, they will give out a nice smoky aroma. Stop at that point. Grind in a coffee grinder. I do not use salt with my shrimp curry and it is upto u.
Anon, Anon, Goa
This dish tastes absolutely fabulous! Just one gripe though - true blue Bengalis actually call it "chingri malai curry" rather than the rather affected North Indian "malai chingri".
A possibly better way to add more of the flavor of cardamom is to cook the milk with cardamom powder on slow heat till it thickens to about half its volume.
Maloy, Mountain View, USA