Indian style Hyderabadi chicken recipe
- Cuisine: Indian
Ingredients
1kg chicken thigh fillets
Heaped tablespoon white sesame seeds
50g peanuts
1 onion, sliced
4 tbs oil
2 pinches of salt
1 tbsp each of ginger and crushed garlic
1½ tbsp crushed green chilli
Pinch turmeric
1 tbsp dried chilli
Salt
1½ cups yoghurt
1 tsp garam masala
¼ tsp black cumin seeds
1 tbs lemon juice
Preparation
Cut chicken thigh fillets into large cubes. Don't remove fat, remember fat will keep it moist.
In a pan, roast the white sesame seeds and peanuts. Grind them to a paste. Mix with a little milk to make a thick paste. This will thicken and bind the sauce.
The trick is to cook the onions right. Cook them in the oil with salt (salt will prevent the onions from burning) until caramelised and golden brown about 5 minutes. Set aside.
Combine ginger, garlic, crushed chilli, pinch of salt, turmeric, peanut paste, yoghurt, garam masala and cumin seeds. The acidity of the yoghurt will help to tenderise the chicken. Mix together and add cooked onions.
Add chicken cubes and marinate for 10 minutes (no longer – these are powerful spices and the acidity will draw too much moisture from chicken).
Using a thick-bottomed pot. Put the chicken and the marinade into the pot and then sit a large stainless steel bowl into the top of the pot so that it seals around the rim. The heat will create suction and hold the bowl in place and this steams the dish similar to a pressure cooker. Fill the bowl with 1/4 cup (maximum) of water and cook over medium heat for 30 – 40 minutes. When the water has evaporated you’ll know it’s cooked.
As it cooks in its own juices it’s amazingly tender – like it’s been steamed but with all those great flavours. Just before serving add the lemon juice.
If you enjoyed this Indian style Hyderabadi chicken recipe then browse more Indian recipes, meat recipes and our most popular hainanese chicken rice recipe.
Indian Restaurants
Displaying 10 of 715 Indian Restaurants.
| Restaurant | Book Online | Suburb | |
| 1. | Royal India Restaurant | West Perth | |
| 2. | Gopal's Vegetarian Restaurant | Melbourne | |
| 3. | Jehangir | Mawson | |
| 4. | Jewel of India | Manuka | |
| 5. | Rama's | Pearce | |
| 6. | Tandoor House | Kingston | |
| 7. | Tandoor Indian Restaurant | Belconnen | |
| 8. | Hanuman | Darwin | |
| 9. | Keller's Swiss and Indian Restaurant | Alice Springs | |
| 10. | Taste of Asia | North Hobart |
Comments (6)
Comment on this recipe
PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.
Featured Food & Recipes

Hot Tips
Peeling and de-seeding tomatoes
To peel and de-seed a tomato, score a small cross in the base of the tomato with your knife; plunge in boiling water for 1 minute, refresh under cold water (running water seems to make peeling easier too); cut in half and scoop out seeds with a dessert spoon.
Glossary
Dried Prawns
Known as camarao seco in Brazilian cooking. Tinely blended to a powder or soaked and ground, these tiny sun-dried prawns add a great depth of flavour to Bahian dishes such as xinxim de galinha.


VideoNEW
Podcasts
Blogs






