Authentic chicken and coconut curry laksa
- Published: 23 Feb 18
- Updated: 9 Jun 25
Learn how to make authentic chicken and coconut curry laksa with MasterChef winner Ping Coombes’s step-by-step recipe.
“This dish is popular all over Malaysia and steaming-hot bowls of fragrant, spicy broth with chicken, noodles, prawns and egg are eaten at any time of day,” says Ping. “I love it, and I made it as my showstopper dish during the quarterfinals of MasterChef in 2014. The judges loved it. The key component is the spicy laksa paste. It’s a labour of love to make, but once it’s done you can keep it in the fridge for up to a month, ready to be turned into bowls of goodness whenever the mood strikes.”
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Serves 4 -
Hands-on time 30 min, simmering time 25 min
Nutrition
- Calories
- 896kcals
- Fat
- 51.2g (15.2g saturated)
- Protein
- 42.4g
- Carbohydrates
- 64.6g (3.1g sugars)
- Fibre
- 3.4g
- Salt
- 3.5g
delicious. tips
Nyonya cooking is a hybrid of Chinese and Malaysian cooking styles, typical of the Straits-born Chinese (also known as Perenakan Chinese) communities of Malaysia and Singapore. In step 6 you can use other ingredients you have to hand, such as tofu, salmon or cooked chicken or pork.
Visit souschef.co.uk or asiancookshop.co.uk for harder-to-find ingredients such as bean curd puffs (also called tofu puffs). Or go to an Asian supermarket, if you can, for ingredients to make your laksa taste even more authentic.
If you can’t find dried shrimps, you can season the laksa paste with fish sauce. Add 2-4 tbsp depending on how intense you like it.
Deseed the fresh chillies before chopping them, if you want to reduce the spice – or omit half. If you like spice, leave some broth unstrained (step 5) to retain more chilli heat.
In place of fresh galangal, use more ginger – or buy galangal paste in a jar or tube (from the spice section of large supermarkets).
You can buy shrimp paste in larger supermarkets (we used Seasoned Pioneers from amazon.co.uk).
If you have trouble whizzing the ingredients (step 2), add a little more vegetable oil to loosen the mixture. Don’t add water as you don’t want a watery paste when it hits the frying pan.
Cook the laksa paste for at least 15 minutes. If you have time, cook it very gently for 30 minutes or more – the flavour will deepen.
Watch how to bring all the elements of this laksa together in our video…
Poach the chicken/prawns and make the laksa broth up to 2 days ahead, then cover and chill. Make double the quantity of laksa paste and store in the fridge for up to 1 month.
Open a fragrant gewürztraminer or South African sauvignon blanc for this.