Recipe: Tom Kha Gai (Thai Chicken Soup)

Tom Kha Gai, Photo by Manos Angelakis.

I love good soups, and I often make them in my kitchen. Through the years, I’ve added numerous soups to my repertory, and Tom Kha Gai, a Thai chicken soup, is one of them.

One of the recipes I use is from the kitchens of the Spice Market, the Thai restaurant of the hotel Regent Bangkok. Unfortunately, that hotel is no longer in existence.

I still have the “Standardized Menu Item Sheet” used in the kitchens of most 5-star hotels. It describes in detail what the per-person ingredients and cooking method should be for any particular dish the restaurant offers. Additionally, in many hotels, there is an image of the finished dish attached to the sheet. 

I have made a small modification to the instructions. Instead of only coconut milk, I use coconut milk and chicken stock 50/50 or the combination of coconut milk and chicken broth by Freak Flag Organics. Except for that, I use the recipe as it was given to me.

Combination chicken broth and coconut milk. Photo courtesy of Freak Flag Organics.

Ingredients for 1 person:

1 cup chicken, white meat, shredded
3/4 cup coconut milk and chicken stock, 50/50
20 grams mushrooms (the recipe calls for sliced button mushrooms, but I use Chinese umbrella mushrooms)
20 grams lemongrass stalks, lightly pounded to bring out the juice and aroma
10 grams galangal, sliced
30 grams lemon juice
5 grams chopped Kaffir lime leaves
15 grams fish sauce
5 grams chili pepper, sliced
5 grams chili oil
Cilantro leaves for garnish, chopped

Method:

Boil the coconut milk or 50/50 coconut and chicken stock.

Add the shredded chicken, mushrooms, lemongrass, and galangal. Bring back to a boil.

When the chicken is cooked, add the fish sauce, sliced chili pepper, and Kaffir lime leaves.

Season with lemon juice and chili oil.

Garnish with chopped cilantro, and serve hot.

+ posts

Manos Angelakis was one of the founders, the former Managing Editor for 25 years, the former Managing Editor Emeritus, and former Senior Food & Wine Writer of LuxuryWeb Magazine. He passed away in 2025 as an accomplished travel writer, photographer, and food and wine critic based in Hackensack, New Jersey. As a travel writer, he wrote extensively about numerous cities and countries. Manos was also certified as a Tuscan Wine Master and traveled to wine-producing areas in order to evaluate firsthand the product of top-rated vineyards. His articles in other publications include Vision Times and Epoch Times.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Restaurant Review: Lunch at Hotel Maria Cristina, San Sebastian, Spain

Restaurant Review: Lunch at Hotel Maria Cristina, San Sebastian, Spain

The city of San Sebastián has become famous for having more Michelin-starred restaurants in and around it than almost any other city in the world. The quality of meals in this city, in general, has been elevated to heights not imagined by diners in many other countries. During my most recent visit, I had lunch at the Hotel Maria Cristina, a 5-star property at the center of town, a few yards from the Gastronomika conference venue.

read more
Spa Review: Doga Thermal Health and Spa, Pamukkale, Turkey

Spa Review: Doga Thermal Health and Spa, Pamukkale, Turkey

This is a destination that had me exclaiming, “Why didn’t anyone ever tell me about this before?” Chances are you’ve never heard of Pamukkale’s travertine slopes even though they tend to overwhelm first-time visitors. What appears to be a sheer cliff of snow rising above the plains of central Turkey is actually the “Cotton Castle” – a mountain coated with calcified carbonate and thermal hot springs bubbling through it.

read more