Coconut Chicken and Vegetable Curry
by Aviva Goldfarb on Aug 30, 2011
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Our 12-year-old friend Cate recently visited her grandmothers ancestral home in China with her family. When I asked her about the food, she said it was really good but that eating Chinese food night after night got a little boring. My daughter, Celia, chimed in that she got tired of eating Middle Eastern food every night in Israel this summer. I had to laugh.
In North America we are so fortunate to live among a blend of immigrants from all over the world, and our food options reflect this diversity. Its not at all unusual for our family to eat (homemade) Indian, Thai, Mexican, and Italian food on any given week, and then go out for Japanese or Ethiopian food on the weekends. Sometimes we forget how different that is from how much of the world eats.
Food can be a delightful pathway to another country or culture for your family. When you make an Indian-inspired meal like the one below, for example, take the opportunity to have the family learn something about the people in that part of the world and how they eat. You may even be inspired to have a weekly international night, when you eat the food from a different country and learn more about it.
Here are a few facts about India to get you started with this weeks International Night:
- Most Indians eat food with their hands, using a little bread or rice to scoop up the flavorful dishes. For the most part, Indians only eat with their right hands and use their left hands to pass the food.
- Many Indians are vegetarians. In the Hindu religion, which is practiced by the majority of Indians, cows are considered sacred so Hindus never eat beef.
- Curry powder, often used in making Indian food, is really a mix of different spices such as cumin, turmeric, cardamom, and ground chilies, but there are endless combinations of ground spices that make up Indian curry blends.