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December 2019

Diced lettuce tomato chicken shawarma

Recipe for making shawarma at home; baking chicken in convection microwave

As someone who grew up in the Middle East, I have eaten my fair share of shawarmas throughout my life. But shawarmas in India, it’s rare that I would say I have enjoyed the same taste. Most of them are sloppy or too oily… and shawarma does not need to be oily! Add to that sometimes the chicken is not cooked well or tasteless, I finally began to wonder if I could re-create the taste of the shawarmas I grew up on.

I watched a bunch of videos and recipes online, including the one below:

… and once I got the gist of the process, I began to try making it myself using easy to procure ingredients.

This post is going to be for chicken shawarma but you can use the meat of your choice — beef, mutton or pork (even though pork shawarma isn’t available in the Middle East).

Chicken breast meat for shawarma
For six shawarma rolls, I used around 600 grams of chicken

I mostly used chicken breasts (two whole pieces) and then a bunch of other pieces of chicken, including thigh, so the meat filling would not be just all fibrous chunks. It doesn’t matter if the meat is boned or not, you’re going to pick the meat off the bone after cooking it anyway.

Homemade shawarma spice mix
For the marinate/spice mix — I used the following
  • Red chilli powder
  • Turmeric
  • Ginger garlic paste
  • Coriander powder
  • Little bit of cumin powder, cinnamon (powder) and mustard sauce
  • Salt and pepper
  • Lemon juice
  • Olive oil (or any vegetable oil)

The reason I’m not mentioning measurements is because it varies based on the amount of meat you wish to marinate. It’s also up to you how you want your chicken meat to taste. Want a more spicy filling? Add more chilli powder and pepper.

Mix the spices into a paste. (Taste it and make adjustments to your liking). Gently spread the spice mix on the chicken and marinate the meat for at least an hour. Longer you marinate meats, the better it usually tastes. I often leave it overnight now.

Then, grease a baking tray with olive oil or your preferred oil.

Marinated chicken for homemade shawarma
Place the marinated chicken meat on the baking tray and then preheat your oven

I baked the chicken in a convection microwave at 190 degree celcius (374° Fahrenheit) for 25 to 30 minutes. I tend to check in between to flip the meats and gently scrape off any spices that would stick to the pan.

Roasted chicken microwave pan
If the chicken isn’t 100% well done, don’t fret. The cooking isn’t over.

While the chicken cools off, you can work on the other fillings. Cut up some lettuce (NOT cabbage*) and tomato. You can add them in as is but I like to flavour the vegetables by mixing them in some garlic mayonnaise. Mayonnaise is easy to procure so I use that and it does not taste that different from toum — which is traditionally used in shawarma. Toum is a garlic paste that looks seemingly simple to make but given how much oil and garlic I would need for it to come out right — and the right kind of food processor — I decided instead to use store bought garlic mayonnaise instead.

If you wish try making toum yourself, watch this or the video below:

Back to the chicken. Now, here comes the real time-consuming part. You have to cut up the chicken pieces into small chunks.

Cut up chicken shawarma microwave
Once all diced up, put it all back on the same baking tray and mix the pieces of chicken with the oils left on the pan, which by now are well flavoured

Bake the chicken again for 5 to 10 minutes until the meat is well cooked.

Aldan Kubz pita bread
For the wrap, I use this brand of pita bread which is made in Kerala. It’s probably the best brand making such kuboos (Arabian bread) in India.
Diced lettuce tomato chicken shawarma
And now, line up the ingredients…
Plating homemade chicken shawarma
My brother had brought some Tahini (sesame seed paste) from Dubai so I used that as a spread but it’s not a must. Toum would suffice as well. Even hummus works!

Roll it up and enjoy!

Since trying it for the first time, I have made shawarmas at home four more times and I now rarely buy shawarmas from outside when in Bangalore. The one I make at home feels so much more healthier (less grease, cannot vouch on the nutrition). And now I know it is possible to make the Middle East’s most popular street food at home without the need for the equipment the shops use to grill the meat.

Siem Reap to Bangkok by bus… my experience at the Thailand border

Date: 16 May 2018

Today saw our tour of Cambodia come to an end. This journey began when I met up with my girlfriend in Chiang Mai, Thailand, then flew to Phnom Penh (Cambodia’s capital), then took the bus to Siem Reap, spent a day exploring Angkor Park and today, we depart for Bangkok. But instead of taking a flight, I figured we would cross international borders by road instead.

Giant Ibis bus to Bangkok
We booked the 7:45am bus via Giant Ibis. Tickets costs $32 per person. The bus was hardly full.
Green fields Cambodia
It’s not that flights from Siem Reap to Bangkok are much more expensive. I just never crossed international borders by road before so I thought I’d get to experience something new.
Cambodia public school
I also wanted to see more of Cambodia’s countryside and the way of life out here (pictured is a public school)
Hill Cambodia countryside
But much of what I saw were farmlands
Giant Ibis bus rest stop Cambodia
We would stop once along the highway for a rest stop break
Poipet road Cambodia
Closer to noon, we had reached the border town of Poipet
Happy Mart Cambodia highway
Poipet isn’t big but it is the most developed town I had seen along the way since leaving Siem Reap
Cambodia Thailand border crossing
The bus would drop us here and then pick us up again from the Thailand side. We were all given badges and asked to follow our guide.

Our bus came with a guide who had a look at our passports before getting down from the bus and when I told him I was from India, he was like “oh”. He told me Indians and Chinese often face hurdles with immigration at this border. We were also told we would have to pay 100 baht to Cambodia immigration upon exit.

Poipet departure Cambodia border
That green structure is the Cambodia immigration for departures

It was crowded inside but lines moved fast. The Cambodian immigration officer asked for the 100 baht but did not give a receipt or anything. I still wonder why we had to pay money upon leaving Cambodia… and that too in Thai baht.

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