Country Captain or East India Chicken Curry
From Joy of Cooking, Rombauer and Becker, 1995 edition, p. 428. The following words, correspondingly, are not mine.
4 Servings.
This dish has become a favorite in America, although it probably got its name not from the sea captain who brought the recipe back to
our shores, but from the Indian officer who first made him acquainted with it. So says Cecily Brownstone, a great friend; this is her
time-tested formula. For still another oriental chicken curry, see Rijsttafel, 211.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Cut into pieces:
- A fryer
Coat them with:
- Seasoned Flour, 552
Brown the chicken in:
- 1/4 cup butter
Remove, drain, and place in a casserole. Simmer gently in the pan drippings until golden:
- 1/4 cup finely diced onions
- 1/2 cup finely diced green pepper, seeds and membrane removed
- 1 minced garlic clove
- 1 1/2 to 3 teaspoons curry powder
- 1/2 teaspoon thyme
Add:
- 2 cups stewed or canned tomatoes
and simmer until the pan is deglazed.
Pour this sauce over the chicken and bake uncovered about 40 minutes or until the chicken is tender.
During the last 5 minutes of cooking, add:
- 3 tablespoons currants
Serve with:
- Boiled Rice, 206
garnished with:
- Toasted slivered almonds
Chicken in Curry Sauce (heh heheheheh, it said sauce)
Now, Brian and John's Midnight Gourmet(TM) took a look at the above recipe and proudly proclaimed, "What the hell is a fryer." Never mind that this
statement, which is clearly in the interrogative case as opposed to the declarative case one would expect to find in a proclamation,
is defeatist and ignorant-sounding, and probably not proud at all. And never mind that Brian knows perfectly well that a fryer is a medium-size
whole chicken. But it was in character, let me assure you -- we didn't have a so-called "fryer", and there was no way we were going to go back to
Marsh's and buy one, especially because we were waiting for our Curried Rice to
cook. Besides, we had all this extra chicken already waiting around, conveniently thawed for our cooking pleasure. So we decided to have a little fun
with the recipe:
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