Thursday, 19 July 2012

Thailand Chicken and Cashew Nuts

Well, it is finally here, the authentic Thailand Chicken and Cashew Nut recipe. This is a meal I learnt how to cook at the Thai cooking school and it is really delicious and quite healthy too. The Thai name for this meal is: Kai phad med ma-muang (gold star for anyone who can pronounce that).

From start to finish this dish will probably only take you 25 minutes at most to prepare. It is very easy to make and very hard to go wrong, so a great easy treat for a Friday “culture food” night. To buy this meal from scratch will probably cost about £6-£8 depending on where you get it and also what you have in the cupboards already.


Ingredients (for 2-4 people depending on how hungry you are)
  • 1 white onion
  • 2-3 garlic cloves (depends how much you like garlic)
  • A bunch of spring onions
  • 1-2 red medium sized fresh chilli peppers (depends how much you like chilli)
  • 2 chicken breasts
  • 1 tablespoon of soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons of oyster sauce
  • ½ a teaspoon of sugar (white or brown, it tastes just as good)
  • A handful of cashew nuts
  • A dessert spoon of oil

This dish is lovely served with egg noodles or rice. In Thailand I had it with both - it just depends what you prefer. This dish is also great with a small blob of sweet chilli sauce on the side. Read the instructions on how to cook the egg noodles or rice, typically egg noodles take less than five minutes and rice takes about 20 minutes.

How to cook it
Step one: Chop your onion up into medium sized slices and put your into a garlic crusher. Heat the oil in a non stick pan (preferably a wok) and fry the white onion and garlic until they just start turning brown.
Step two: Cut the chicken into small chunks and add the chicken to the wok. Stir fry it all until the chicken has cooked through.
Step three: Wash and cut up your spring onions into chunks of about 2cm, and then cut the red chilli(s) into tiny pieces. TIP: if you don’t like spicy food I would only add half a chilli and remove the seeds, if you love spicy food, keep the seeds and add as much as you like. Stir in the spring onions and chilli, and cook for about 30 seconds.
Step four: Add the oyster sauce, soy sauce, half a teaspoon of sugar and the cashew nuts. Stir for about 1 – 2 minutes until the food is piping hot.

Step five: Serve up on a plate with your egg noodles or rice and enjoy!

TIP: If you like Tofu, this dish can also be served with tofu in. The best kind of Tofu to buy is the pre-cooked stuff from most big supermarkets. Just add this in when you add the chicken in.

Once you have tried it let me know what you think…….. I had it for dinner tonight and it was delicious! Here is the one I ate earlier:


Whilst we were in Thailand, this dish made up about a third of everything we ate as we loved it so much. Although, I have to say in Thailand when you say “little chilli” it comes out with a full plant's worth of red chilli’s in it and it nearly blows your mouth off! Still somehow whilst you are there you can power through the spice and still enjoy the flavours!

Next blog: Not sure…. Some people have asked for Pad Thai, which is also delicious, but am tempted to move onto another country – what do you all think?

3 comments:

  1. I'm for the Pad Thai, only because we had it out once when we went to that lovely Thai Resturant in the Andover. But will happily go with what the others think. What country is next I wonder.

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  2. I'm surprised that you even let those chilis in your kitchen let alone cooked with them . Pad Thai sounds good :) , can have a whole Thai banquet then :)

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  3. Pad Thai it is then! The next blog should be this weekend so get your wok's at the ready for some
    Pad Thai :-) lovely!

    Cook me culture

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