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Chicken pho with berry sambal recipe
First published: 17 June 2015
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This chicken pho with sweet and sour berry sambal recipe is a wonderfully fresh tasting broth that’s nothing like Granny would make! Packed with oriental flavours, shreds of chicken and fresh crunchy vegetables, then topped with a taste-exploding spoonful of naturally sweet berries mixed with chilli and rice wine vinegar, this warming soup will soon leave you feeling restored. Serves 4.
Ingredients
1.2 litres good chicken stock (ideally homemade, see tip below)
1 bunch spring onions, thinly sliced, white and green tops kept separate
1 carrot, thinly sliced
1-2 Thai bird’s eye red chillies, halved, deseeded, to taste
5cm piece root ginger, peeled, thinly sliced
3 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
2 small fresh or dried kaffir lime leaves
2tsp Thai fish sauce (nam pla)
1tbsp soy sauce
500g boneless, skinless chicken breasts
200g pak choi, leaves shredded, stems cut into bite-sized pieces
300g pack chilled cooked rice noodles
100g bean sprouts, rinsed, drained
Handful coriander leaves, roughly torn
For the sambal:
225g strawberries, sliced
175g raspberries
100g caster sugar
2tbsp rice vinegar
2-3 Thai bird’s eye red chillies, roughly chopped with seeds
2cm piece root ginger, peeled, finely chopped
1 small onion, finely chopped
Add the stock to a large saucepan then add the white spring onion slices, carrot, chilli, ginger, garlic, lime leaves, fish sauce and soy sauce. Bring to the boil, stirring, then add the whole chicken breasts, cover and simmer gently for 30 minutes or until the chicken is cooked through. Test by piercing the centre of one of the chicken breasts – there should be no hint of pink juices.
While the chicken pho simmers, add all the sambal ingredients to a saucepan and heat gently until the sugar has dissolved. Boil rapidly for 10 minutes until the fruit is soft and pulpy. Break up the fruit if needed with a vegetable masher then spoon into a dish and leave to cool.
When the chicken is cooked, lift the pieces out of the pan with a draining spoon then tear into fine shreds on a chopping board using a knife and fork. Add the pak choi leaves and stems to the broth and cook for 2 minutes, then add the bean sprouts and coriander and cook for 1 minute.
Divide the noodles between 4 deep serving bowls, top with the chicken shreds then ladle over the broth. Top with spoonfuls of the sambal to taste. Any leftover sambal can be kept in a screw-topped jar in the fridge up to 2 weeks.
Cook’s tip: Don’t throw the chicken carcass away after you have had a roast chicken; take all the meat off the bones then add the bones to a saucepan. Add 1 roughly chopped onion, 2 sliced carrots and whatever extra odd veggies you have in the fridge, a slightly soft tomato, half a pepper, half a leek or a little swede or parsnip. Cover the chicken with cold water, add salt and pepper and bring to the boil. Cover and simmer for 1-2 hours then strain. Cool and freeze the stock in handy sized portions in the freezer up to 3 months. Defrost before use.