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Hainanese chicken rice recipe

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Rating:

4.5/ 5 stars 276 Votes
  • Cuisine: Singaporean
  • Prep Time: 1 hr(s) 30 min(s)
  • Cook Time: 2 hr(s) 45 min(s)
  • Serves 6

This is a classic Singaporean dish of delicately poached chicken infused with ginger, which is accompanied by rice cooked in chicken stock, a bowl of the hot stock itself, and various sauces. Tiffany makes quick chilli and ginger sauces and also serves this with kecap manis and cucumber.

Ingredients

Chicken
1 very fresh chicken (preferably free-range), fat trimmed and reserved for the rice
1 tbsp Chinese rice wine
2 tbsp light soy sauce
1 garlic clove, roughly chopped
6 slices ginger
2 spring onions, roughly chopped
1 tsp sesame oil
½ tsp salt

Stock
1 kg chicken carcasses (or legs or wings)
3 slices ginger
2 spring onions

Chilli sauce
10 long red chillies, seeded and roughly chopped
1–2 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
5 cm ~piece of ginger, roughly chopped
lime juice
salt

Ginger sauce
75 g ginger, roughly chopped
6 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
½ tbsp lime juice
½ tsp salt

Rice
fat from the chicken (or peanut oil as a healthier alternative)
2–3 cm piece of ginger, grated
3–4 garlic cloves, finely chopped
3 cups long-grain rice, rinsed and well drained
1–2 tsp salt
2 pandan leaves, each tied in a knot (optional)

To serve
sliced spring onion or blanched shredded cabbage
kecap manis
sliced cucumber

Preparation

Rub the inside of the chicken with the rice wine and half the soy sauce. Pound the garlic, half the ginger and half the spring onion to a paste in a mortar (or blend in a food processor). Rub the paste inside the chicken.

Bring a large pot of water to the boil, then turn off the heat and add the chicken, remaining ginger and spring onion. Cover with a lid and leave to stand in the water for 1 hour. After the first 5 minutes, lift the chicken out and drain the water from its cavity, then return to the water. Repeat 2 or 3 times during the hour (this ensures that there’s enough hot water inside the chicken to cook it through). After 30 minutes, bring the water back to almost boiling then turn the heat off again. Cooking the chicken without boiling it ensures it is tender and juicy.

Remove the chicken from the water. Combine the remaining soy sauce with the sesame oil and salt and rub into the chicken. Leave to cool.

To make the stock, add the chicken carcasses, ginger and spring onions to the pot of water and boil for 1–2 hours, until the stock has a strong chicken flavour. Strain the stock through muslin cloth.

Meanwhile, make the chilli sauce. Pound the chilli, garlic and ginger to a paste in a mortar (or blend in a food processor). Add ½ tablespoon of chicken stock and lime juice and salt to taste.

To make the ginger sauce, pound the ginger and garlic to a paste in a mortar (or blend in a food processor) and add the lime juice, salt and 2 tablespoons of chicken stock.

To make the chicken rice, heat the chicken fat in a wok until it releases oil, then add the ginger and garlic and fry until golden. Discard any solid pieces of fat. Add the rice and salt and stir-fry briskly for 1–2 minutes. Transfer the rice to a saucepan or rice cooker and add 3 ½ cups (875 ml) of chicken stock and the pandan leaves if using. Cover with a lid and cook until the stock is absorbed (you may need to add a little more stock towards the end if the rice seems dry).

To serve, slice the chicken into bite-sized pieces. Reheat the remaining chicken stock and ladle into small serving bowls, garnishing with sliced spring onion or blanched shredded cabbage. Serve the stock alongside the chicken, rice, chilli sauce, ginger sauce, kecap manis and cucumber.

SBS cook’s notes
Oven temperatures are for conventional; if using fan-forced (convection), reduce the temperature by 20˚C. | We use Australian tablespoons and cups: 1 teaspoon equals 5 ml; 1 tablespoon equals 20 ml; 1 cup equals 250 ml. | All herbs are fresh (unless specified) and cups are lightly packed. | All vegetables are medium size and peeled, unless specified. | All eggs are 55–60 g, unless specified.

If you enjoyed this Hainanese chicken rice recipe then browse more Singaporean recipes, meat recipes and our most popular hainanese chicken rice recipe.

Singaporean Restaurants

Displaying 10 of 42 Singaporean Restaurants.

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1. Harry's Singapore Chilli Crab   Sydney
2. Temasek   Parramatta
3. The Old Raffles Place   Collingwood
4. Singapore China Town Restaurant   Northbridge
5. Bismi's Gold an Fork   Melbourne
6. Ginger & Spice   Neutral Bay
7. Gingerboy   Melbourne
8. Katong Singaporean Restaurant   City Beach
9. Suria Takeaway   Girrawheen
10. Raffles Room at Steventon Lodge   Tea Tree Gully

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Comments (68)

Previous Page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 Next
05 Jun 2013 04:11 AEST
Damian
suburb?
Safety Issues?
I'm just a young guy who works in a kitchen, but I noticed many safety issues in this video. jewelry is still on which can cause bacteria and handling the knife.
Agree(7 people agree)
Disagree(2 people disagree)
02 Jun 2013 01:38 AEST
Hainan Wong
Hainan, China
Final word
Look, the recipe says Hainanese Chicken Rice. It was introduced to Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam and other South East Asian countries by Hainanese immigrants and traders. The recipe is traditional Hainan originating from the Hainan province in China. Please Would other stop claiming it as their own.
Agree(8 people agree)
Disagree(1 people disagree)
31 May 2013 03:18 AEST
Wendy Walsh
Tallai
Shallots vs scallions and spring onions
To Al of Collingwood. The name of this vegetable varies across states, like many foods. In Victoria it is called a spring onion or scallion, but in NSW it has always been called it a shallot, as a spring onion is the larger variety with bulbs. A French shallot is something different altogether. This is a very old debate. Just like potato scallops versus potato cakes, confusion will always reign.
Agree(3 people agree)
Disagree(1 people disagree)
25 May 2013 05:16 AEST
Lee Kuantan Yew
The Palace
Clarification
My fellow Countrymen and all lovers of Singaporean food Please be informed that all Singaporean recipes have been vetted and approved by the Singapore Government's Centre for the preservation of food flavors and prevention of anti Singaporean sentiment. This recipe is definitely one approved by my government. Best Regards Senior Minister Lee P.S. no spitting or chewing gum before, during or after consuming any Singapore approved recipes please.
Agree(8 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
21 May 2013 12:57 AEST
Al
Collingwood
Shallot?
Why does she keep calling the spring onions shallots? They're not shallots, they're spring onions, or scallions.
Agree(4 people agree)
Disagree(4 people disagree)
29 Apr 2013 09:13 AEST
jjjjaaaannnaa
bendigo
um
ithough it tasted quite groos and yucky
Agree(2 people agree)
Disagree(2 people disagree)
02 Apr 2013 12:16 AEST
Zico
Canada
Food
hi are u singaporean or malaysian
Agree(3 people agree)
Disagree(6 people disagree)
01 Jan 2013 01:08 AEST
te
port kennedy perth
awesome thank u
easy simple quick tasty thankyou
Agree(3 people agree)
Disagree(8 people disagree)
   

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