Enjoy!
CHICKEN PAPRIKASH
This comes from Sam Sifton in The New York Times cooking e-newsletter. Sam wrote, “Spices lose their flavor over time but few as quickly as paprika, which starts out tasting of pepper and sunshine but deteriorates in but a few months to sawdust and bitterness. For this recipe, get some new at the market: sweet or hot Hungarian paprika is best, but the generic article isn’t terrible and the smoky Spanish varieties known as pimentón de La Vera would not be out of place either, lending a deep, woodsy aroma reminiscent of cooking over an open fire. It’s a dish that pairs beautifully with butter-slicked egg noodles.” Yield: Serves 4 - 6; Time: 1 hour.
This was featured in “The Fresher the Spice, the Better the Chicken Paprikash” and can be viewed online here.
Ingredients
3 to 4 pounds chicken thighs and drumsticks, or whole chicken legs
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 tablespoon neutral oil, like canola
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 large yellow or Spanish onion, peeled and diced
3 cloves garlic, peeled and minced
3 tablespoons Hungarian paprika, sweet or hot, or a combination
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 cup canned crushed tomatoes or 1 large ripe tomato, chopped
1 cup chicken broth, homemade or, if not, low-sodium
1 pound egg noodles
3/4 cup sour cream
Preparation
Heat oven to 400. Season the chicken aggressively with salt and pepper. Heat the oil and 1 tablespoon of the butter in a large, heavy, oven-safe sauté pan or Dutch oven set over high flame, until the butter is foaming. Sear the chicken in batches, skin-side down, until it is golden and crisp, approximately 5 to 7 minutes. Then turn the chicken over, and repeat on the other side, approximately 5 to 7 minutes. Remove chicken to a plate to rest.
Pour off all but a tablespoon or 2 of the accumulated fat in the pot. Return the pot to the stove, over medium heat, and add the onion. Cook, stirring frequently with a spoon to scrape off any browned bits of chicken skin, until the onion has softened and gone translucent, approximately 5 minutes. Add the garlic, and stir again, cooking it until it has softened, approximately 3 to 4 minutes. Add the paprika and the flour, and stir well to combine, then cook until the mixture is fragrant and the taste of the flour has been cooked out, approximately 4 to 5 minutes.
Add tomatoes and broth, whisk until smooth and then nestle the chicken back in the pan, skin-side up. Slide the pan or pot into the oven, and cook until the chicken has cooked through and the sauce has thickened slightly, approximately 25 to 30 minutes.
Meanwhile, set a large pot of heavily salted water to boil over high heat. Cook noodles in the water until they are almost completely tender, approximately 7 to 8 minutes. Drain the noodles, and toss them in a bowl with the remaining butter, then toss again to coat.
Place the chicken on top of the noodles, then add the sour cream to the sauce, stir to combine and ladle it over the whole.
BBQ CHICKEN
This comes from the folks at GE Appliances, and begins, “This BBQ chicken recipe is a simple classic that will be the star of your next summer gathering.”
To view this online, click here.
Ingredients
1 pound chicken drumsticks
1 pound chicken thighs
2-3 cups Italian dressing
2-3 Cups BBQ sauce (homemade or store bought)
Directions
Marinate the Chicken:
Combine drumsticks and thighs in a bowl and add Italian dressing until chicken is covered. Let sit overnight (ideal) or for 3-4 hours.
Cooking:
Fire up a gas or charcoal grill to medium heat, put chicken on, and cook for 20 minutes (about 10 minutes per side). After 20 minutes, brush on your favorite BBQ sauce. Turn chicken and add more BBQ sauce. Cook for an additional 10-15 minutes. Watch closely, so you don't burn the BBQ sauce.
CHICKEN POT PIE TURNOVERS
This is from Melissa d’Arabian of The Food Network’s Ten Dollar Dinners. Total Time: 1 hr 25 min; Prep: 20 min; Inactive: 10 min; Cook: 55 min; Yield: 4 servings;Level: Easy
Read more at: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/melissa-darabian/chicken-pot-pie-turnovers-recipe.html?oc=linkback
Ingredients
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 onion, chopped
1 carrot, chopped
1 stalk celery, chopped
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 teaspoons dried thyme
1 tablespoon flour, plus more for dusting
1/2 cup white wine
1 cup chicken stock
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1/2 cup frozen peas
1 1/2 cups cubed or shredded cooked chicken
1 sheet frozen puff pastry, thawed
1 egg
Directions
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.
Melt the butter in a large saute pan over medium heat. Cook the onions, carrots, and celery with salt and pepper, to taste, until the carrots soften, about 10 minutes. Add the garlic and thyme and cook for an additional minute, stirring frequently. Add the flour and cook off the raw flavor, about 1 minute more. Turn up the heat to medium-high and deglaze the pan with the wine. Whisk in the stock and Dijon mustard. Add the peas and chicken and cook on a very low simmer until the sauce thickens up into a gravy, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove from the heat and set aside.
On a lightly floured surface, unfold the pastry dough and cut into 4 even squares (cut once horizontally and once vertically). Gently roll out each square, increasing the size of the square by about 20 percent. Place the squares on a baking sheet and spoon the chicken mixture in the center. Fold the squares diagonally to create triangles. Pinch the edges together to create turnovers (use a little water if needed to bind). Press the edges with a fork to create a decorative border. Whisk the egg with a splash of water and brush the turnovers with the egg wash. Cut a small slit in the top to allow the steam to escape during baking. Bake the turnovers until golden brown, about 30 minutes. Let cool at least 10 minutes before serving as the insides will be very hot.
CRAIG CLAIBORNE’S SMOTHERED CHICKEN
Along with being the founding editor for NYT Cooking and writing about food in the Sunday Times Magazine, Sam Sifton posts a ton of good food recipes in The New York Times cooking e-newsletters. With this recipe, Sam wrote, “Craig Claiborne was a child of Mississippi who started as food editor of The Times in 1957 and did as much as anyone to help bring home cooking into the spotlight. The dish “belongs in the ‘comfort’ category,” he wrote in 1983, “a food that gives solace to the spirit when you dine on it.” You could give your smothered chicken some European flair with mushrooms and small onions in the gravy, as Claiborne did in his experiments with Pierre Franey, then his kitchen co-pilot. Or you could send yourself south to the Creole tastes of the Delta, with a blend of tomatoes, chopped celery, onion and green peppers added to the sauce. But sometimes the easiest way is the best. Try it.” Yield: 4 servings; Time: 1 hour 20 minutes.
This was featured in “Make Dinner: A Home Cooking Manifesto” and can be viewed online here.
Ingredients
1 chicken, about 3 1/2 pounds, spatchcocked (split down the backbone, breast left intact and unsplit)
Kosher salt, to taste
Freshly ground pepper, to taste
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups chicken broth, ideally homemade
Preparation
Craig Claiborne believed a cast-iron skillet to be essential for the authentic preparation of this dish. Sprinkle the chicken on both sides with salt and pepper. Select a skillet large enough to hold the chicken comfortably when it is opened up, as for broiling. Fold wings under to secure them.
Melt the butter in the pan and add the chicken, skin side down. Cover chicken with a plate that will fit comfortably inside the skillet. Place a heavy can, stone or brick on top of the plate to weigh it down. Cook over low heat, checking the chicken skin, until it is nicely browned, about 25 minutes.
Remove weight and plate. Turn chicken so skin side is up. Replace plate and weight and continue cooking for about 15 minutes more.
Remove chicken and pour off fat from the skillet, leaving about 2 tablespoons in the pan. Add the flour to the fat, stirring with a wire whisk over medium heat. Gradually add the chicken broth and, when thickened, return chicken to the skillet, skin side up. Add salt and pepper to taste. Cover with the plate and weight and continue cooking over low heat about 20 to 30 minutes longer or until the meat is exceptionally tender. Spoon the sauce over it.
Cut chicken into serving pieces, and serve with the sauce and fluffy rice on the side.
BUFFALO CHICKEN GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICH
This comes from Jennifer Meier, About.com’s Cheese expert. Jennifer wrote, “Perhaps this isn't a traditional grilled cheese sandwich - maybe it's just a sandwich - but either way it's delicious. This buffalo chicken grilled cheese sandwich recipe takes everything we love about Buffalo Chicken (spicy, crispy chicken, creamy blue cheese dip, celery on the side) and turns it into a memorable sandwich.” Prep Time: 20 minutes; Cook Time: 25 minutes; Total Time: 45 minutes; Yield; 4 sandwiches
Jennifer also added a note about using mayo on grilled cheese sandwiches, as well as what to do with leftover buttermilk.
To view this online, click here.
Ingredients
2 skinless, boneless chicken breasts, pounded to 1/8-inch thickness. Or, make your life easier and buy 4 thin chicken breasts
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
2 eggs, whisked
1 cup panko
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 cup celery, very thinly sliced (plus any leaves you can pull from the stalks)
1/4 of a red onion, thinly sliced
1 tablespoon finely chopped parsley
3/4 cup mayonnaise, divided, plus more for spreading on the outside of the bread slices
1 tablespoon buttermilk
2 teaspoons hot sauce, or more to taste
4 tablespoons vegetable oil
4 ounces blue cheese
8 slices of sourdough or country bread
Preparation
Generously season chicken breasts with salt. Cut each pounded chicken breast in half, so you have 4 pieces of chicken.
You’ll need three shallow bowls or dishes for dredging the chicken. One for the flour, one for the eggs, and one for the panko, salt and cayenne pepper.
Working with one piece of chicken at a time, dredge both sides of the breast in flour, shaking off excess. Next, dip the chicken into the egg, coating both sides and letting excess drip off.
Lastly, dredge through the panko/salt/cayenne mixture, pressing gently so the panko sticks to the chicken. Set the coated chicken pieces aside.
In a food processor, combine the celery (plus celery leaves if you have them), red onion, parsley, 1/4 cup of mayo and the buttermilk. Pulse just a few times until the celery and onion are roughly chopped. Don’t over-process or the mixture will get too mushy. Set aside.
In a small bowl, mix the remaining 1/2 cup of mayo with the hot sauce. Start with 1 teaspoon of hot sauce and then add more according to how spicy you want it. Set aside.
Heat 2 tablespoons vegetable oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add 2 pieces of chicken to the skillet and cook until dark golden brown on both sides, about 8 minutes. Remove from the pan and set aside. Heat the last 2 tablespoons of oil in the same pan and cook the remaining pieces of chicken. (If you have a very large pan, you might be able to cook all the chicken pieces at once)
Return all the chicken to the pan.
Top each piece of chicken with crumbles or slices of blue cheese. Turn the heat to low and put a lid on the pan.
Spread a thin layer of regular mayonnaise evenly on one side of each piece of bread. Flip the slices over and spread the spicy mayo on the other side of each slice of bread.
When the blue cheese on the chicken is warm and very soft, remove the chicken from the pan (use a wide spatula) and set one piece of chicken on the spicy mayo side of 4 slices of bread.
Top each breast with a scoop of celery slaw and another slice of bread, with the side spread with regular mayo on the outside.
Over medium heat cook the sandwiches until the bottom is golden brown. Flip. Brown again. Slice the sandwich in half and serve.
Why Use Mayo on Grilled Cheese Sandwiches?
Spreading the outer slice of bread with mayonnaise instead of butter or oil makes the perfect slice of toasted bread; crispy, flaky and evenly browned.
Leftover Buttermilk?Buttermilk is the slightly sour liquid that remains after milk is churned into butter. It adds a tangy flavor to recipes that always punches the flavor up a notch or two. Buttermilk is usually sold in 1 quart containers, which means you're likely to have some leftover when you buy it for a recipe. How can you use up the buttermilk before it goes bad? Try my favorite buttermilk salad dressing, or one of these recipes for using up buttermilk.
CHICKEN CACCIATORE
Servings: 6
View recipe: http://diabeticgourmet.com/recipes/html/64.shtml
Source: Cooking Healthy and Fast
Ingredients
1 cup sliced mushrooms
1 cup tomato sauce
1 16-ounce can whole plum tomatoes
1/2 cup white wine (or cooking wine)
1/4 tsp. basil
1/4 tsp. oregano
1 bay leaf
2 tsp. minced garlic
1 chopped onion
4 half chicken breasts, skinned, boned
2 Tbsp. fat-free chicken broth
Directions
Heat liquid chicken broth in a non-stick skillet and brown chicken, onion, and garlic.
Add all other ingredients except mushrooms. Bring to a boil, then cover and simmer about 30 minutes.
Add mushrooms, cook 10 minutes more.
Remove chicken from pan, boil down sauce until slightly thickened.
Serve over cooked rice.
Nutritional Information Per Serving: Calories: 217; Protein: 28 g; Fat: 3.5 g; Sodium: 382 mg; Cholesterol: 73 mg; Carbohydrates: 15 g; Exchanges: 1 Starch; 4 Lean Meat
No comments:
Post a Comment