Chicken Naag
Method
Make a fine paste of the ginger, garlic and tomatoes (ideally use a blender but if you don’t have one then grate the ginger and garlic to create a rough paste and chop the tomatoes). Stir in the powdered spices, salt and yoghurt. Add in the chicken and potatoes and leave, while you get on with step 2.
Step 2:Heat the oil and butter/ghee in a medium non-stick saucepan. Add the mustard seeds and cook until they have popped – this will take about a minute max. Add the onions and cook over a moderate flame, stirring often, until the onions are well browned on the edges, around 7-8 minutes.
Add the chicken, potatoes and marinade and cook over a moderate-high heat, tossing the chicken in the paste quite often until the sauce in the pan starts to release oil droplets back into the pan (look at the edges of the pan). This should take around 8-12 minutes and the sauce will now have completely reduced. If you are not sure, taste it, the sauce should taste good and shouldn’t have any raw garlic flavours. If it is taking a while to cook - add a little of the water to the pan and reduce further before the next step.
Step 3:Once the sauce has reduced significantly pour the remaining water (enough to come half way up the chicken), and bring to the boil. Cover and cook on a low flame until the chicken and potatoes are cooked, around 12-18 minutes (depending on the size of the joints and potatoes). There should be enough of the sauce for a creamy gravy, if not add a little more from the kettle.
Stir in the chopped coriander and serve with some lovely Basmati rice and an ice cold Cobra.
Meet Anjum Anand
BBC's Indian Food Made Easy chef Anjum Anand grew up in London but has also lived and studied in Geneva, Paris and Madrid.
After gaining a European business degree Anjum decided to develop her interest in Indian cookery, making it fresher, lighter and simpler to cook.
Anjum challenges fiercely the assertion that Indian food is heavy and difficult to cook and is determined to make 'cooking an Indian' as common as rustling up a stir-fry.
In response to research indicating that 70% of Brits would cook more curries if they had a quick and easy recipe to follow, Anjum Anand has devised an exclusive dish to inspire and equip the nation in time for Cobra’s National Curry Week 2009.
Required Ingredients
- 3 tbs. vegetable oil
- 2 tbs. ghee or butter
- 1 tsp. brown mustard seeds
- 750g chicken, skinned and jointed (chicken breasts and thighs are ideal)
- 7 baby potatoes, peeled and quartered
- 1 medium onion, finely chopped
- Handful of finely chopped coriander leaves and stems
- 330ml of water
- 7 fat garlic cloves, peeled
- 3/4” ginger, peeled
- 3 medium tomatoes, chopped into 2 cm chunks
- 3 rounded tbs. full fat Greek yoghurt
- 1½ tbs. coriander powder
- 1¼ tsp. garam masala
- ¼-½ tsp. red chilli powder plus some paprika for colour (optional – add more chilli if you like it a little hotter)
- ½ tsp. turmeric powder
- 1 tsp. cumin powder
- Salt to taste

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