
Hidden among the coconut groves of Takian Tia is one of Thailand’s least-known curries — a recipe that turns young coconut shell into an ingredient with a surprisingly crisp bite.
“แกงไก่กะลา”
Known as gaeng gai gala, or chicken curry with young coconut shell, the recipe has been passed down through generations in Takian Tia, a farming community in Bang Lamung district better known for its coconut groves than its cuisine.
At first glance, the curry looks familiar. Free-range chicken is cooked with aromatic curry paste, holy basil and cardamom stalks. The surprise comes from an ingredient that rarely appears on restaurant menus: the soft flesh of a very young coconut shell.
Before a coconut shell hardens, the inner layer remains tender enough to eat. Locals cut it into bite-sized pieces, boil it until soft, then add it to the curry. The result is a texture somewhere between bamboo shoot and water chestnut — lightly crunchy, subtly sweet and unlike anything found in a typical Thai curry.
For residents of Takian Tia, the dish is more than a local speciality. It is a reflection of the area’s agricultural roots.
For generations, families here cultivated coconuts and found creative ways to use every part of the fruit. Young coconuts that were too immature for other purposes were transformed into ingredients for home cooking. Over time, one particular recipe stood out and became the community’s culinary signature.

During a recent demonstration, local residents prepared the curry the traditional way over a charcoal stove. Chicken was stir-fried until nearly cooked before curry paste was added and fried until fragrant. Water, seasonings and chopped cardamom stalks followed, with the young coconut shell flesh added near the end. Fresh holy basil completed the dish.
The curry is known for its spicy flavour and the slightly crunchy texture of the young coconut shell, which locals say pairs well with free-range chicken and aromatic cardamom stalks.

While visitors to Pattaya can choose from countless international restaurants and beachfront seafood venues, few realise that one of the region’s most unusual dishes is waiting just inland, hidden among coconut plantations and local homes.
For travellers who enjoy seeking out authentic regional food, gaeng gai gala offers something increasingly rare: a taste that cannot easily be replicated elsewhere.
And for adventurous home cooks, it poses an intriguing challenge — finding the elusive young coconut shell ingredient and recreating a recipe that has survived for generations in a single corner of Chonburi.
Either way, it is proof that some of Thailand’s most memorable dishes are still found far from the tourist trail.










































