There are a select few really good meals in this world that take just 10 minutes to prepare from start to finish. This Thai Basil Chicken (Gai Pad Krapow) is one of them.
And it isn’t one of those rush jobs either. This isn’t an episode of 30 Minute Meals, where Rachel Ray comes up with an ambitious 3-part menu and screeches into the finish line at the end, unceremoniously dumping all of her dishes into serving bowls and delivering her end-of-show sign-off with a sense of tired relief.
This is going to be a relaxed 10 minutes of cooking.
To prove it to you, I will proceed to outline how each one of those minutes is going to be spent.
Making Thai Basil Chicken in 10 Minutes
Minute 1: You’re going to walk leisurely over to your fridge and pull out a pack of ground chicken. Then you’re going to chop up 3 chilies. They don’t have to be pretty.
Minute 2: You’re going to peel and slice 3 shallots. My trick? Cutting off both ends, sweeping my knife lengthwise across the shallot, and peeling off the outside in one fell swoop before slicing. Oh, and if you can’t find shallots, a red onion will do just fine.
Minute 3: Following the same pattern from the previous step, you’re going to slice 5 cloves of garlic. Hint: smashing them with the side of your knife makes ’em a lot easier to peel. Yay garlic!
Minute 4: You’re going to heat a wok over high heat (not medium high. HIGH.), and then add a few tablespoons of oil, along with your prepared chilies, shallots, and garlic.
Minute 5: You will allow said oil, chilis, shallots, and garlic to do their work in said wok, stirring occasionally to help them along a bit.
Minute 6: You’ll add the ground chicken and start breaking it up.
Minute 7: You will continue cooking the ground chicken until browned. How is this happening so quickly? Answer: your stove is cranked up as high as it will go.
Minute 8: You’ll throw in some sugar, soy sauce and fish sauce, and stir-fry everything together. You are a kitchen genius.
Minute 9: You’ll deglaze the pan (which is just a fancy way of saying “scrape up all the brown bits”) with broth, and toss in a bunch of holy basil or Thai basil leaves. (YES, we know this dish is traditionally made with holy basil, but it can be difficult to access in the states, so Thai basil is fine to use!)
Minute 10: You’re almost home free. Just continue stir-frying over high heat until most of the liquid is cooked off and the basil is wilted.
And that, my friends, is dinner. 10 ingredients, 10 minutes. All you need is a bowl of rice to serve it with.
Read on for a much shorter version of the Thai Basil Chicken (Gai Pad Krapow) recipe instructions, this time with visual aids!
(Note: Pad krapow is actually made with a specific type of basil called holy basil. If you can find it in your local Asian grocery store, by all means use it! It is hard to find, however, which is why we grow it in our garden or substitute store-bought Thai basil. Even regular Italian basil can work for this dish. At that point, it might not be a true pad krapow, but it will still be good!)
Thai Basil Chicken: Recipe Instructions
In a wok over high heat, add the oil, chilies, shallots and garlic, and fry for 1-2 minutes, until softened and just starting to brown at the edges.
Add the ground chicken and stir-fry for 2 minutes, breaking up the chicken into small bits.
Add the sugar, soy sauce, and fish sauce. Stir-fry for another minute and deglaze the pan with the broth. Because your pan is over high heat, the liquid should cook off very quickly. Add the basil, and stir-fry until wilted.
Serve your Thai Basil Chicken (Gai Pad Krapow) over white rice (or brown rice).
Thai Basil Chicken (Easy Gai Pad Krapow)
Ingredients
- 3 to 4 tablespoons oil
- 3 Thai bird chilies or holland chilies (de-seeded if desired and thinly sliced)
- 3 shallots (thinly sliced)
- 5 cloves garlic (sliced)
- 1 pound ground chicken (450g)
- 2 teaspoons sugar (or honey)
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon fish sauce
- 1/3 cup low sodium chicken broth (or water)
- 1 bunch holy or Thai basil leaves
Instructions
- In a wok over high heat, add the oil, chilies, shallots and garlic, and fry for 1-2 minutes. Add the ground chicken and stir-fry for 2 minutes, breaking up the chicken into small bits.
- Add the sugar, soy sauce, and fish sauce. Stir-fry for another minute and deglaze the pan with the broth. Because your pan is over high heat, the liquid should cook off very quickly.
- Add the basil, and stir-fry until wilted. Serve over rice.
nutrition facts
Made this tonight. Had some snow peas and baby bok choy I needed to use up, so I tossed them in and followed the rest of the recipe as it was written.
10/10 would make again. With extra veggies or not this recipe was phenomenal!
Thank you Brandon!
Loved this recipe! I didn’t have any Thai basil so I got some regular basil and added a few leaves of mint and tasted great!
Like “Laurie” I also ended up using regular fresh Basil (holy or Thai Basil nowhere to be found in my area) and added bell peppers, snap peas, and sting beans.
I’ve never cooked with fish sauce before – when I added that, the smell was nasty to my nose. Figured there was 0 chance this would turn out.
Might be the best dish I’ve ever cooked. Soooo good. This will definitely become part of our rotation. It would be awesome if it took 2 hours to make. The fact you can do it all in ~10 minutes or so? Sublime.
Thanks so much for this.
Haha that’s the funny thing about fish sauce—funky smell, great flavor. So glad you liked this, Mike!
My sister recommended this recipe. I first made it about 6 months ago and my boyfriend and I have made it approximately 10 times since then. Every time we are completely delighted! So incredibly flavorful and the return on investment is amazing considering how quickly it comes together! One note for others: I always get painfully hot chili fingers when working with chilies. I’ve found that if I wash my hands with olive oil directly after chopping, I can avoid that. Thank you, Sarah, for this meal!
Thank you so much for your kind feedback, Kathleen! So glad you’re enjoying this recipe, and thanks for the tip re: the chilies!
Thank you for sharing this wonderful recipe. I’ve made this dish various times and have become one of my family’s favorite dishes.
You’re very welcome, Blake! Thank you for trying it and for coming back to leave this feedback and review. :)
This was the second recipe of yours that I made in 2 days, and it turned out great! I added more vegetables and used regular basil. Fantastic!
Love that, Laurie! So glad you enjoyed it. :)
Dear Bill, Judy, Sarah or Kaitlin ––
I wanted to respectfully comment and inquire about the above posting.
I found the photos a bit confusing and conflicting with the listed ingredients and the instructions in a couple of regards.
…
1. Thai Red Chiles are markedly hotter (Scoville 50,000 to 100,000) compared to Holland Chiles (Scoville 5,000 to 10,000), yet you call for using same quantity of either.
Will you please explain or clarify this for us ?
2.
The first 2 photos showing the start of cooking with shallots & chilis in the wok, does not seem to reflect the recipe and *totally* confuses and throws me off. The recipe specifies three (3) Thai chiles. Yet those pictures show waaaaay more chiles than that . . . . even if they were the larger Holland chiles and were sliced lengthwise. The photos seem to show what looks like 6, 10 maybe 12 chiles in the wok with the shallots.
(Interestingly, the photos of the finished dish seems to show fewer chiles.)
I just want to understand so I follow your instructions properly.
Please clarify.
Thank you for your time, assistance and guidance.
Hi SS,
1. We list both as an option, the first for those who like their food spicy, and the second for those who like theirs mild.
2. We blogged the recipe using Holland Chilies, which were quite large—3 holland chilies will give you quite a bit of pepper! They cook down and shrink, so that’s why it looks like there are fewer chilies in the final dish.
Doesn’t the word “pad” mean noodle in Thai? I think this dish is misnamed.
I’m not sure of the exact translation of “pad,” Chris, but I do know that this particular dish is usually spelled “pad krapow.”
“Pad” means “to stir fry” in Thai. “Krapow” or “Bai Krapow” is basil, or “leaves of basil”. It’s right… ;)
“Pad” describes the cooking method, stir fry in Thai.