Curried Chicken Pot Pie

Curried Chicken Pot Pie

DSC09870.JPG

Last week, Alisa Bowman asked what impressive but no-fuss meal she could serve her book club. Hungry bookworms answered with a wide range of culinary solutions:

  • Diva Lisa jumped straight to dessert and suggested cheesecake. Lisa, you can join my book club any day.
  • Cheri Sicard recommended pulling out the slow cooker. Shunning the chicken-and-condensed-cream-of-mushroom-soup route, she suggested two gourmet slow cooker books by Lynn Alley.
  • Cheryl of 5 Second Rule proposed clever parchment pockets stuffed with seafood and vegetables.
  • Dana McCauley served up a winner with her deep dish, gotta-have-it lasagna.

Me? I thought a casserole might be handy and tried to fancy things up with individual chicken pot pies. Talk about flakey ideas, this dish fell apart the second the fork touched the crust.

DSC09859.JPG

Serves me right for not following the recipe and using a 9×13 baking dish and the recommended phyllo crust.

I’m not a chicken pot pie fan, but this recipe’s updated twist on a bland classic won me over. Sweet potatoes swap out carrots, leeks replace onions, coconut milk bumps the dairy, and a hint of curry sets it part from the stodgy old standard. How good was it? Well, first off, it survived me using ramekins, substituting ordinary no-fail pastry and being out of peas. Secondly, Andrew, who thinks anything’s better with a crust, said this was so good he’d eat it with or without pastry.

DSC09863.JPG

This recipe is another creation from what is fast becoming one of my favourite cookbooks ever, Rose Murray’s A Taste of Canada. While my book club doesn’t meet over dinner, this dish is making me rethink that policy.

Curried Chicken Pot Pie with Phyllo Crust

Printable Recipe

Serves 4 to 6

A crisp, light phyllo crust lifts this delicious pot pie into make-ahead company fare.

Ingredients

  • 1 tbsp canola oil
  • 2 tbsp curry paste (mild Madras)
  • 1 large leek, white and light green parts only, thinly sliced (about 1 1/2 cups)
  • 1 can (14 oz.) light coconut milk
  • 1 cup chicken stock
  • 1 lb butternut squash or sweet potatoes, diced (1/2 inch) (about 3 cups)
  • 1 sweet red pepper, diced
  • 6 cups diced cooked chicken or turkey
  • 4 tsp corn starch
  • 4 tsp fresh lime juice
  • 1 cup fresh or frozen green peas
  • 6 sheets phyllo pastry
  • 3 tbsp melted butter

Instructions

  1. In a large sauce pan over medium-low heat, heat the oil. Stir in the curry paste and leek.
  2. Cook, stirring, until the leek is softened, about 2 minutes.
  3. Stir in the coconut milk, stock, squash and red pepper. Bring to a boil, stirring up any bits from the bottom of the pan.
  4. Cover, reduce heat and simmer until the squash is tender, about 10 minutes.
  5. Stir in the chicken, bring back to a simmer and cook for 5 minutes.
  6. In a small bowl, stir together the cornstarch and lime juice. Add a little of the cooking liquid, then stir the mixture back into the pan,
  7. Cook, stirring, for 2 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool slightly.
  8. Stir in the peas.
  9. Pour into an ungreased 13- X 9- inch (3L) baking dish. Refrigerate until cold.
  10. Place the sheets of phyllo pastry between 2 sheets of waxed paper. Cover with a damp tea towel to prevent them from drying out. Place 1 of the sheets over the chicken mixture, folding under the excess pastry around the edges to fit inside the dish.
  11. Lightly brush the pastry with butter. Repeat with the remaining sheets and butter, making sure to brush the top sheet. (The recipe can be prepared to this point, covered and refrigerated for up to 12 hours. Remove  from the refrigerator 30 minutes before cooking.)
  12. Bake in a 375F (190C) oven until the pastry is golden and the filling bubbly, 25 to 30 minutes.

No Comments
  • Dana McCauley
    Posted at 17:44h, 06 February

    I think you and I might be chicken pot pie twins – like you, it’s not something I gravitate toward often but this versions sounds really terrific!

  • cheryl
    Posted at 17:55h, 06 February

    I’m with you both. I had a run-in (literally) with a pot-pie as a kid, so I’m always a bit wary. But I think a broken crust is actually a sign that it IS flaky! And coconut milk and curry? Yes, please.

  • lisaiscooking
    Posted at 10:52h, 07 February

    This sounds really delicious! I’ve recently become a big fan of sweet potatoes cooked in coconut milk, so this combination must great all together.

  • Christie's Corner
    Posted at 15:42h, 07 February

    Dana, this version is so good I hesitate to call it chicken pot pie, but it’s made with chicken, is cooked in a pot and has a crust. The similarities end there.

    Cheryl, I knew the coconut milk would appeal to you. If you make it, there will be no pie throwing. It’s too good to waste.

    Lisa, the combination of sweet potatoes / coconut milk / curry paste / lime is wonderful. I’m can’t believe I didn’t think of it myself.

  • jodi (bloomingwriter)
    Posted at 21:53h, 07 February

    Oh my god….I want some, right now! How long before the computer geeks of Silval make it so we can email food to one another? And I don’t mean ‘Tea. Earl Grey. Hot.” either.

  • FRANCESCA
    Posted at 20:28h, 08 February

    Sounds scrumptious! Great capture too!

  • Holly
    Posted at 21:49h, 08 February

    Great pictures and recipes!

  • Christie's Corner
    Posted at 11:33h, 09 February

    Jodi, the person who develops that technology will rule the world. But I bet even then, panty hose will run when you look at them, the kitchen won’t clean itself and black sweaters will continue to act as magnets for light haired cats.

    Francesca, it was a fun shoot. Especially since I had to eat the evidence.

    Holly, thanks for dropping by and commenting.

  • Lisa magicsprinkles
    Posted at 11:49h, 09 February

    THIS I could get into. You’re right about the bad rap that bland CPP gives to something that could be so delish. Thanks for sharing!

  • Denise @ Creative Kitchen
    Posted at 16:14h, 02 November

    This sounds really good!! I’m bookmarking it now. Thanks for sharing.