This is crazy tasty curry in a hurry. Almost sounds too good to be true. But I can make this in a half hour flat. And so can you. That makes this weeknight friendly. And it serves 4. So invite some friends. Grab some naan at your local shop. Cook up some rice. Maybe a green salad. And have a dinner party on a Tuesday night. It’s totally doable. And it would be fun. Everyone needs to have fun.

It’s all about the onions

Onions are the foundation of a lot of Indian dishes. Doesn’t really matter what you make. It always seems to start with “chop a whole mess of onions”. The next step is almost always “cook those onions until they’re brown”. That’s the part that takes time. Like 20 minutes. Or more. 30 minutes even. And it’s 30 minutes of closely attended time. No wandering off to check your email. No checking Instagram. You need to pay attention. There’s an easier way. A way that lets you make restaurant quality chicken madras in 30 minutes. Total time. Indian restaurants have this figured out. They make this stuff called curry base. Or curry gravy. They make huge pots of it. Takes a couple hours. Hard to make a curry in 30 minutes if the gravy takes 2 hours. That’s where your microwave comes in. You can make curry gravy in the microwave. In 10 minutes. Zap the onions. Toss them in your blender. And then just cook like they do in restaurants. Don’t worry. Restaurant curries are easy. You’ll see.

 

You need madras curry powder to make chicken madras

That should not be a surprise. It’s in the name. Madras curry isn’t actually an Indian dish. It’s an English invention. And the definitive ingredient is Madras curry powder. A bit of history. Mid 19th century London. Leicester Square to be specific. A shop starts selling a curry powder with South Indian influences. It’s a hit. A big hit. So much so that you can choose from multiple Madras curry powder at just about any Indian grocer. It’s the signature ingredient in Madras chicken curry. It needs to be there. Leaving it out isn’t quite as ridiculous as leaving eggs out of egg salad. But it’s close. It’s curry powder. But with a South Indian twist. Not just the uusual suspects. Curry leaves. Star anise. And more chili. Not a crazy amount of chili. But more. A bit of bite that you won’t get in your run of the mill curry powder. What I want to know is when they’re going to change the name to Chennai chicken curry?

The sauce is the thing for madras chicken curry

That’s the funny thing about curries. The sauce is the thing. At least for me. The chicken is good. But the sauce is what makes the dish. So I’m always looking for ways to make a better sauce. It’s about texture. Lush is a word I use a lot. But it’s about flavour first. Maximum flavour. So I look for it everywhere. Restaurants pre-cook their chicken. They do it for speed. And they do it for food safety. Knowing ahead of time that the chicken is cooked takes a big variable out of the equation. That peace of mind comes at a price. A big price in fact. All those wonderful, flavourful juices from the chicken are lost forever. Not here though. Here the chicken is poached in the final dish. All those juices wind up in the sauce. And then in your mouth. Where they belong.

Restaurant results from restaurant technique

This is pretty close to full blown restaurant techniques. A lot of it is identical. The real change is the way the gravy is made. And cooked. The rest is pretty much identical. Fry your whole spices. Cook out the garlic ginger paste. Bloom your powdered spices in oil to extract maximum flavour. Fry the onion gravy. Add the chicken. Adjust the seasoning. That’s the playbook. Get that down and you’re on the path to mastering Indian restaurant style cooking. It’s not hard. Maybe a little different from what you’re used to. But not hard. Once you understand the process you can cook anything. The rest of the recipe follows lessons learned from restaurant style. Bloom the spices in oil. That’s important no matter what style you go with. If you like a little spicy. And you’re craving a lush restaurant sauce. Then this chicken madras is one for you!

Weeknight cooking – weekend results

This is an old recipe. From 2018 in fact. Originally published as part of a nearly Indian restaurant series. So it’s a retread. All new pictures and text. But a retread nonetheless. I’m bringing it forward because I believe. Madras chicken curry for all. Any day of the week. Because good food shouldn’t be a weekend thing. It should be an everyday thing. Madras chicken curry on Tuesdays. I think that should be a thing. I’m hoping you feel the same.

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