Skip to navigation | Skip to content

Share your knowledge. Make a difference.

Making Thai Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup.

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic (by 2 people)   Your rating: 1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic

Ranked #1690 in Food, #45417 overall

Rated G. (Control what you see)

 

Created by
All Thailand Experiences

Thai Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup doesn't take long to cook. You can replace the chicken with any meat or seafood. Now you can learn to cook this dish at home using the recipe and online video  taught by Chef Chanrat Karatna, nickname Air, and his staff not only how to cook  Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup but about the ingredients.

Watch the Coconut Cream Soup video and take notes.

 

Thai Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup
Tom Kha Gai
  • ¾ cup chicken stock or plain water
  • 200g chicken breast (skinned)
  • 10g thinly sliced fresh young galangal
  • ½ cup coconut cream
  • ¾ cup coconut milk
  • 6g kaffir lime leaves, stem removed and torn
  • 10g red shallots. peeled
  • 40g straw mushrooms sliced, substitute with chanterelles or oysters mushrooms torn
  • 10 grams or 1 stalk of lemon grass bruised and sliced into 1 inch lengths
  • 1 tbsp coriander or cilantro leaves
  • 1 coriander root scraped
  • 1 - 2 tbsp lime juice
  • 1 - 2 tbsp Thai fish sauce
  • 10g red bird's eye chilies
In a sauce pan, combine stock or water with coconut cream and coconut milk. Boil over high heat. Add the galangal, lemongrass, red shallots, chilies, coriander root and mushrooms.

Add the chicken and simmer until tender. Add the kaffir lime leaves, fish sauce and lime juice and continue simmering until fragrant. Remove from heat and transfer to the serving bowl. Garnish with fresh coriander and serve.

The soup should be rich and creamy, salty, sour and spicy.

 

If you would like to learn how to cook Thai food from Chef Chanrat Karatna at his Thai cooking school in Chiang Mai Thailand, contact us.

How to cook Thai Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup, Tom Kha Gai 

How to cook Thai Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup

Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup doesn't take long to cook. You can replace the chicken with any meat or seafood. Now you can learn to cook this dish at home using the online videos. In the 2 online videos you will be taught by Chef Chanrat Karatna, nickname Air, and his staff not only how to cook Thai Fried noodles but about the ingredients at his cooking school Air's Thai Culinary Kitchen in Chiang Mai Thailand. Copy the recipe below then watch the Thai Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup video. Thai Chicken and Galangal Coconut Cream Soup "Tom Kha Gai" * ¾ cup chicken stock or plain water * 200g chicken breast (skinned) * 10g thinly sliced fresh young galangal * ½ cup coconut cream * ¾ cup coconut milk * 6g kaffir lime leaves, stem removed and torn * 10g red shallots. peeled * 40g straw mushrooms sliced, substitute with chanterelles or oysters mushrooms torn * 10 grams or 1 stalk of lemon grass bruised and sliced into 1 inch lengths * 1 tbsp coriander or cilantro leaves * 1 coriander root scraped * 1 - 2 tbsp lime juice * 1 - 2 tbsp Thai fish sauce * 10g red bird's eye chilies In a sauce pan, combine stock or water with coconut cream and coconut milk. Boil over high heat. Add the galangal, lemongrass, red shallots, chilies, coriander root and mushrooms. Add the chicken and simmer until tender. Add the kaffir lime leaves, fish sauce and lime juice and continue simmering until fragrant. Remove from heat and transfer to the serving bowl. Garnish with fresh coriander and serve. The soup should be rich and creamy, salty, sour and spicy.

Runtime: 8:08
4726 views
1 Comments:

powered by YouTube

New Amazon Voting (Plexo) 

Thai cooking

Quick & Easy Thai: 70 Everyday Recipes by Nancie McDermott

Quick & Easy Thai: 70 Everyday Recipes by Nancie McDermott

Now busy home cooks can bring the fantastic flavor more...0 points

Real Thai: The Best of Thailand's Regional Cooking by Nancie McDermott

Real Thai: The Best of Thailand's Regional Cooking by Nancie McDermott

Nancie McDermott, widely regarded as the American more...0 points

Thai Food by David Thompson

Thai Food by David Thompson

"Thai cooking is a paradox," writes Aust more...0 points

The Everything Thai Cookbook: From Pad Thai to Lemongrass Chicken Skewers--300 Tasty, Tempting Thai Dishes to You Can Make at Home (Everything Series) by Jennifer Malott Kotylo

The Everything Thai Cookbook: From Pad Thai to Lemongrass Chicken Skewers--300 Tasty, Tempting Thai Dishes to You Can Make at Home (Everything Series) by Jennifer Malott Kotylo

Sumptuous Thai dishes you can make at home! <p& more...0 points

Buddha's Table: Thai Feasting Vegetarian Style by Chat Mingkwan

Buddha's Table: Thai Feasting Vegetarian Style by Chat Mingkwan

Here is a great collection of Thai recipes in term more...0 points

Great Thai Stuff on Amazon 

Thailand Flag Polyester 3 ft. x 5 ft.

Amazon Price: $1.94 (as of 10/08/2008)

Thai Sticky Rice Steamer (basket only)

Amazon Price: $2.95 (as of 10/08/2008)

Thailand - Country Shield Patches

Amazon Price: $1.99 (as of 10/08/2008)

Buddha (Pop Art) Art Poster Print - 12" X 36"

Amazon Price: $9.99 (as of 10/08/2008)

Great Thai Stuff on eBay 

Loading Fetching new data from eBay now... please stand by
eBay

Cheap flights to Thailand on Orbitz! 

Travel to Bangkok, Thailand from...






Travelers

Children or Seniors?
Adults (18-64):

     

   

powered by Orbitz
X
allthai

About allthai

I have been living in Thailand since 1989. I have traveled extensively
throughout the Kingdom and want to share my wonderful experiences of
Thailand with others.  I talked with many travelers
here in Thailand and saw a need to take visitors away from the normal
tourist areas filled with large tour buses and groups. The biggest
complaint I heard from visitors is "there is no real Thai culture".
"Everything is staged for the tourists". This is because they keep
following each other around using their guide books. I lived in a
remote area of north Thailand at Wat Thaton temple in the town of
Thaton on the Burmese border for more than 3 years. I taught English to
Monks, novices, high school students, the Thai Army, local and tourist
police. I also did hill tribe programs by taking a small number of
tourists to hill tribe villages to spend the evening. All the money for
the trek went to the villagers. I bought clothes for the children,
medicines and blankets for the families. I paid the villagers to build
a bamboo schoolhouse and paid a teacher to teach Thai at the school who
could speak their language. I taught them how to dispose of waste
properly, keep the children and village clean and to use spoons instead
of their fingers when eating which was a big source of their health
problems. I provided seeds and Logan and lychee fruit trees for
planting. This was fine until I left the temple then the school stopped
and the health problems returned. I talked with the Abbot of the temple
and he now has a school for the children at the temple. He has a nurse
looking after the children and takes those to the clinics that have
problems.

My wife and I now help orphaned and abandoned hill tribe children through our
tour operation All Thailand Experiences.

I also write Thailand travel articles for the Welcome to Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai and other magazines. 

allthai's Pages

See all of allthai's pages