Broiled Or Grilled Marinated Chicken (Gai Yang)
Kai yang or gai yang, also known as kai ping or gai ping, or pīng kai, is a dish originating from the Lao people of Laos and Isan, but it is now commonly eaten throughout the whole of Thailand.
A street and market food served everywhere in Thailand, this chicken is traditionally associated with the Northeast. At the train stations or bus stop, you can get a few skewers and a little bag of sticky rice for a delicious snack or light lunch. The marinade dates back to a time before the introduction of chilies by the Portuguese. Black peppercorns were used in enormous quantities, and they still have an important role in Thai cooking.
Ingredients
- FOR THE MARINADE:
- 3 tbs Minced cilantro root
- 3 tbs Fish sauce
- 3 tbs Chinese light soy sauce
- 2 tbs Fresh lime juice
- 1 tbs Freshly ground black pepper
- 2 tbs palm sugar
- 1 tbs Minced garlic (3 cloves)
- -
- GAI YANG SAUCE
- 1.5 tablespoons toasted rice powder*
- 1.5 tablespoons chili flakes
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- 3 tablespoons fish sauce
- 8 tablespoons tamarind watered down (really to taste)
- -
- 2 lb Chicken legs or breasts - skin and fat removed
Directions
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*Khao khua, or toasted rice powder, is a common ingredient used in numerous dishes mostly as a thickene
- Take 150 grams of sticky rice
- Heat a frying pan or wok on medium heat.
- Add the plain raw sticky rice (not rinsed) to the hot pan, and dry roast, slowly stirring continuously. After about 10 minutes, the grains of rice should begin to turn from milky white to golden yellow, and they should also start to smell like popcorn.
- Keep dry frying for about 15 minutes, until the sticky rice is golden in color, then remove from heat and set aside.
- To grind the sticky rice into powder, grind it in a food processor to a course powder.
Stores up to 1-2 weeks in a dry container.
Make the sauce:
- Add some hot water to a bowl containing the tamarind pulp and start to work the tamarind until it turns into a thick soupy consistency.
- To the tamarind, you add khao kua, chili flakes, a bit of sugar, and fish sauce.