As I mentioned in another post, I bought a couple sweet potatoes with no thought as to what I'd actually do with them. The first recipe I made, sweet potato chili, came out great. Here is another recipe I tried this past weekend, which is for the Instant Pot.
I was skeptical about curry. It's not something I typically eat. I made chicken curry once for my husband before we were married, but that was many moons ago and I don't remember if I liked it or not. I don't know if he liked it either. Probably not, since I had no idea at that time that he was so plain-vanilla about food.
It was easy to put together, and it was especially nice to just throw in the Instant Pot and cook it on high pressure for 12 minutes. Unfortunately, I think I cut the sweet potato too small, because it pretty much disintegrated. The taste was there, but no chunks of potato. The onions melted away, too.
I liked the taste of this, and it was filling. I didn't put it over riced cauliflower or anything like that. I just ate it as-is. It was a nice change from the standard stuff I usually eat.
There are two changes I would make if I were to make this again. I'm someone who likes chunkiness in my stews, so I would chop bigger pieces of onion and sweet potato. Also, I'd probably pour it over riced cauliflower as suggested in the recipe in order to make it more substantial.
Here's the nutritional info (per cup) I got using My Fitness Pal: 284 calories, 13 g fat, 18 g carbs, 7 g sugar, and a whopping (!!) 23 g of protein. I'm quite surprised at the protein. I know the chicken contributes a lot, but that seems off to me. According to My Fitness Pal, the whole can of coconut milk is 14 grams of protein, so that adds a little more. If you decide to make this recipe, you may want to plug it into whatever food logging app you use and see what you come up with.
This is the recipe I made, which made six one-cup servings: https://therealfoodrds.com/instant-pot-sweet-potato-chicken-curry/
I would actually put two sizes of sweet potato in - larger chunks and smaller chunks, so the smaller ones can break down and provide that flavour while you have the bigger chunks to enjoy.
ReplyDeleteThere is a Buddhist temple nearby that makes a red curry with sweet potato in and my favourite thing is how they simmer it for hours upon hours so that small bits break off and amalgamate themselves throughout. ;)