Tandoori
Chicken Recipe
Traditionally,
tandoori dishes are cooked in a tandoor, an oval shaped clay oven with
a small fire in the bottom. The heat rises gradually but ultimately
reaches a much higher temperature than a barbeque.
A tandoor is
normally used to cook naan bread, meats and kebabs (meat or paneer).
The bread is stuck to the sides, the kebabs stood vertically and whole
chickens rested on a grid over the fire.
For domestic
cooking, a tandoor is not really convenient but the meat dishes can be
reproduced on a barbeque or in the oven. The bright red appearance of
tandoori meats which you may see in Indian restaurants is produced by a
food dye which really isn't necessary to enhance the look of your
tandoori dishes.
I have a great
fondness for tandoori style food. It has flavour, without being "hot"
or high in calories or too filling. In fact it's an ideal dish summer
or winter, if you fancy something a little different. As a bonus, it
doesn't take hours to prepare. Of course you can take all the effort
out of it and use a pre-prepared mix, but I think they have less
flavour and you can't use them for anything else, whereas if you use
the individual spices, you can make other dishes as well.
You can easily make
tandoori chicken (whole), tandoori lamb chops (pork would be more
unusual, but there's no reason why you shouldn't use it, if you prefer)
and lamb tikka (kebabs) but my personal favourite is chicken tikka
because it's so quick so here's my own recipe.
This tandoori
chicken recipe serves two people - multiply it for as many people as
you want.
Tandoori
Chicken Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 Chicken
breasts
- 1 small tub
Greek yogurt
- 1 tsp ground
cumin
- 1 tsp ground
coriander
- 1/2 tsp ground
turmeric
- 1/2 tsp ginger
powder
- 1/4 tsp chilli
powder (or to taste)
- 1 small clove
garlic, crushed
- salt to taste
- 1 tbsp lemon
juice
Cut the chicken
breasts into 1 inch cubes and set aside. Mix the spice powders and
garlic into the yogurt. You can use low fat yogurt if you prefer. You
can also use fresh ginger or ginger paste from a jar rather than ginger
powder but go easy on the quantity as it can be quite over-powering.
At this point you
can also mix in the salt and lemon juice but if you do so, don't leave
the chicken to marinade for more than about 20 minutes or it will
become very dry when cooked. If you want to marinade it for a longer
time, add the salt and lemon juice just before you cook the dish or
sprinkle on to serve.
Thread the chicken
onto skewers and either barbeque or cook under a grill using medium
heat until the chicken is slightly browned and cooked through.
For a light meal,
serve with salad, pitta or naan bread and lemon wedges or for something
more substantial with rice and dahl.