Khai Pad Gaprao - Chicken With Holy Basil
1 lb ground or minced chicken
2 tablespoon chopped garlic
2 tablespoon chopped shallots
2 tablespoon chopped mixed red & green jalapenos , (prik chi fa)
1 teaspoon green peppercorns whole.
1/4 cup fish sauce
2 tablespoon palm sugar
1 cup coarsely chopped holy basil leaves, (bai gaprao)
Optionally you can add a medium "Spanish" onion, cut into rings, quartered and separated. Or
you can use sliced green onions, or a combination.
Method: My wife chops the chicken with a pair of cleavers, and I can't bear to watch. You can
of course use a meat grinder or a food processor). The garlic, shallots, peppers and peppercorns
are ground together in a mortar & pestle or a food processor. In a hot wok, with a little
cooking oil, briefly stir fry this paste to bring out the flavor and aroma. add the remaining
ingredients and continue to stir until the chicken is cooked through.
Serving:
For luncheon pad bai gaprao can be served over plain rice, or over a fried egg or egg crepe,
placed on the rice. For dinner it goes well with the hot and sour tom yum soups, as well as curries
and other Thai food. Add the usual Thai condiments (chilies in fish sauce (prik nam pla), ground
chilies (prik phom) and sugar), as well, perhaps as ground black pepper. Variants: It can be made
with chopped pork, or even a chopped beef base, though of course the flavors are quite different.
You can also experiment with replacing the meat with hard tofu marinated in a mixture of sweet soy,
fish sauce and ground ginger, say, or a vegetable mix of your choice (I like to mix broccoli and
cauliflower florets, with julienned carrots and wing beans), to make a vegetarian pad bai-gaprao.
Serve with rice and the usual Thai table condiments (prik dong [chilies in vinegar], prik pom
[ground red chilies] and sugar). This is a quick and easy dish to make. The holy basil has a "hot
peppery" taste, but if you can't get it then the standard European basil is a reasonable
substitute, though you should add a little freshly ground black pepper in this case. Prik chi fa -
called the Thai jalapeno is the best chili to use, but if you can't get it standard Mexican
jalapenos will do very well as a substitute. Canned jalapenos are comparatively bland however.
Recipe By: Muoi Khuntilanont
Yield: 1
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