chips and chicken from an Irish spice bag turned out onto a white plate
Click on the image, above to submit to Pinterest.

Mála spíosrach (Irish Spice Bag)

Mála spíosrach (Irish Spice Bag) is a traditional Irish recipe for a classic home-made version of the Chinese takeaway classic of salt and chilli chips and chilli chicken served with a spice bag for flavouring. The full recipe is presented here and I hope you enjoy this classic Irish version of: Irish Spice Bag (Mála spíosrach).

prep time

20 minutes

cook time

20 minutes

Total Time:

40 minutes

Additional Time:

(+60 minutes marinating)

Serves:

2

National:
Rating: 4.5 star rating

Tags : National Dish Spice RecipesChicken RecipesScottish Recipes

(click this button to prevent the screen from sleeping so Cook Mode is 'ON')



A spice bag (or spicebag, spicy bag, spice box or spicy box; Irish: mála spíosrach) is a fast food dish, popular in most of Ireland and inspired by Chinese cuisine. The dish is most commonly sold in Chinese takeaways in Ireland. Typically, a spice bag consists of deep-fried salt and chilli chips, salt and chilli chicken (usually shredded, occasionally balls/wings), red and green peppers, sliced chillies, fried onions, jalapeños and a variety of spices. A vegetarian or vegan option is often available, in which deep fried tofu takes the place of the shredded chicken. It is sometimes accompanied by a tub of curry sauce. According to RTÉ reporter Liam Geraghty, the dish was created in 2010 by The Sunflower Chinese takeaway in Templeogue, Dublin, with the first spice bag sold on Just Eat in 2012.

Ingredients:

2 free-range chicken breasts (or chicken thighs), sliced in long thin strips
100ml buttermilk (or regular milk with 1 tsp fresh lemon juice)
3 tbsp plain flour
4 large chipping potatoes, peeled (we like Kerrs Pinks, Maris Pipers or Roosters)
1 red chilli, sliced (de-seeding optional for lower heat)
1 white onion, sliced in 2cm half moons
4 garlic cloves, fine chopped
Vegetable Oil for frying



For the Spice Bag Blend:
1 tbsp Five Spice (which includes star anise, cassia, fennel, clove and Szechuan pepper already)
1/2 tsp Garlic Powder
1 tsp Chilli Powder
1/8 tsp each cardamom, cinnamon and ginger
2 tsp salt
2 tsp Siúcra (granulated sugar)
1/2 tsp white pepper

Method:

First, prepare your chicken by steeping it in buttermilk for an hour to tenderise. In another bowl, add 2 tsp of the spice bag blend to the flour to season it.

For truly crispy chips, it’s a three-step process, but worth it. Parboil the chips in boiling, salted water for two minutes to begin the cooking process as your oil gets to 170ºC. Drain the chips well and then fry for 4-5 minutes at this lower temperature to cook through, then remove. You don’t want a lot of colour, just a firm exterior (and they will be fluffy inside). Then, just before serving, crank the heat up to 190ºC to fry for a further 90 seconds or so to get that gorgeous golden colour.

For the chicken, you’re also going to fry at 170-180ºC for around five minutes. Take your chicken strips from the buttermilk (shaking off excess) and dunk into your seasoned flour to coat, then gently lower into the hot oil. You may need to do this in two batches. When golden brown and crisp, drain and remove to a wire rack over a baking tray, lined with kitchen paper.

For the flash-fried vegetables, heat a wok or frying pan to a high heat and add 1/2 tbsp of neutral oil. When the oil is hot, introduce the onions and keep moving, you want them to soften but not colour if you can help it. After a minute or so introduce the garlic and then just before you finish frying add in the sliced chilli. Remove from the heat.

In a large mixing bowl, sprinkle 1 tbsp (or two if you like) over the chicken, chips and onion, garlic and chilli mix and toss everything together to combine. Optional to serve it with curry sauce alongside or not.

Note: if you don’t have a deep fat fryer, you can shallow-fry the chicken pieces in a pan with about 100ml of vegetable oil on a medium-high heat. You will need to manually turn them half way through. Always take extra care with an exposed body of oil set over a high heat.