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  Recipe Home » Thai » Chicken & Coconut Milk Soup (Gaeng Com Yam
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  Chicken & Coconut Milk Soup (Gaeng Com Yam
  Category: Thai
  Author: The Savvybearcat
  Date: 1/1/2007
  Hits: 610
Ingredients:
5 cup "Thin" coconut milk
1 small Chicken, sectioned and cut into bite-sized pieces (bone-in)
3 Stalks lemon grass, bruised and cut into 1" lengths
2 tsp Laos powder (Ka)
3 Green onions, finely chopped
2 tbsp Coriander leaves, chipped
4 To 6 fresh Serrano chillies, seeded and chopped
Juice of 2 limes
3 tbsp Fish sauce (Nam Pla)
Instructions:
Here's another classic "Tom Yam" type chicken soup. The "Laos" powder
is dried galangal, powdered. Unlike ginger, dried galangal seems to
retain most of it's character. If you use canned coconut milk, the
"Thin" milk is the more watery liquid in the can. The thick
condensed stuff is coconut "cream" (not to be confused with the
syrupy sweet coconut cream used for Pina Coladas). If you shake the
can up and combine the two, you have thick coconut milk.

A lovely lemony, creamy soup, Dom Yam Gai calls for chicken pieces cut
through the bone with a heavy cleaver, Chinese style. If you find
gnawing on chicken pieces and delicately trying to remove the bone,
vainly searching for a place to deposit it, inhibiting your dinner
conversation, you may debone the bird and substitute chicken pieces.
In either case, use both dark and light meats for color and nutrition.

[Although if you're talking at the table, ya got no reason to be
eating a dish this good! S.C. ;-} ]

In a saucepan, bring the "Thin" coconut milk to a boil. Add the
chicken pieces, lemon grass and Laos powder. Reduce heat and simmer
until the chicken is tender, about 15 minutes. Do not cover as this
will tend to curdle coconut milk. When the chicken is tender, add
the green onions, coriander leaves and chillies. Bring the heat up
just below boiling. Remove the pan from heat, stir in lime juice,
fish sauce and serve.

NOTE: Beef cut into thin strips or firm white fish pieces may be
substituted for chicken.

From "The Original Thai Cookbook" by Jennifer Brennan, GD/Perigee,
published by Putnam. 1981.

Posted by Stephen Ceideburg; February 6 1991.
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