Showing posts with label butter chicken. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butter chicken. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Recipe: French Onion Chicken Stew

Had our annual general meeting for our strata last night. It was a JOKE.

Knowing that we basically had to go straight home last night, wolf down a quick dinner, then to the meeting, we knew that we had to have something preplanned. Something fast. Something that required no fuss!



Behold, Michael Smith's recipe for French Onion Chicken Stew. It looked interesting and simple enough when I had seen it on his show, Chef at Home while eating breakfast one morning. The ingredients were simple, I had a Costco-sized bag of onions to use up, and I've been dying to maximize effort and time to use the slow cooker!

I adapted the recipe to my slow cooker - it wouldn't hold the entire recipe, and also added some extra seasonings.

Ingredients (adapted from Michael Smith's recipe)
9 chicken thighs, skin on, bone in, rinsed and patted dry
8 garlic cloves
8 yellow onions, peeled and sliced
1 cup white wine (I used a Californian Sauvignon Blanc)
2 T ground thyme
4 heaping tablespoons of dijon mustard
1 t oregano
4 bay leaves
salt, black and white peppers
pinch of cayenne

Method
I used a cast iron pot to brown off the chicken thighs which were first seasoned with a generous amount of kosher salt and pepper. I did not use oil in the pot as I figured that the chicken skins would render off enough oil to cook the meat in. I was right.

I layered the ingredients into the crock pot, starting with a layer of onions. I scatted a couple cloves of garlic on top of that, then lowered in some chicken. I dotted the chicken with dijon mustard, then seasoned with thyme, salt and pepper, oregano and bay leaves. I repeated the layers once more, and topped everything off with a layer of onions.

This was all done the night before. Before I went to work, I removed the crock pot insert from the fridge, poured in a cup of wine, then plugged the slow cooker in, turned it to low, and went to work!



When we got home yesterday, I boiled up some pasta and served the chicken and onions atop noodles. It was one heck of a comfort meal!

...Before and after the annual strata meeting. :o\

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Recipe: Indian Butter Chicken (Chicken Makhani)

Everyone loves a good butter chicken! There is a reason why it is the most often ordered Indian dish - I love how even traditional dishes like this seem to fuse different cuisines together. Part of my psyche believes that this is inspired by French cooking techniques, which makes sense, as French occupied the Southeastern coast of India from the 1600-1800s. Butter Chicken, to me, actually resembles Chicken Blanquette. I use the term "resembles" as both dishes have chicken, butter, and cream, but that is where the similarities end. Butter Chicken is typically marinated in yogurt (or in my case, sour cream), where as Chicken Blaquette is dredged in flour or nothing at all.

After shopping at Costco over the weekend, we ended up with a freezer of food. Bread, sausages, chicken, and sandwich meat. The chicken was mine - originally I wanted to buy whole chickens for stock, poached chicken, and jerk chicken, but after seeing Ms contribution to the grocery cart / freezer I decided against it. After all, how much chicken can you possibly eat in two weeks??!



I had the chicken marinating in sour cream and spices, but I wasn't sure what I'd serve with it. It was a good coincidence then, that Angie at Sea Salt with Food posted a recipe for Cauliflower with Cumin and Asafetida. After all, did I not mention that I had bought a *huge* cauliflower at Costco as well?

When I got home, I started the brown rice first (since it cooked the longest - about 40 minutes! Then I got started on the cauliflower. I didn't have asafetida (but now I know where to get it!) so I used a generous sprinkling of garlic powder. Then I started off sauteeing the chicken. It turned out to be a great meal and I enjoyed all of it - making it, tasting it, eating it. We have leftovers for tonight!

Ingredients - Marinade
1 cup sour cream
2 t cumin powder
1 t cinnamon
2 t cayenne
2 t black pepper
1 T ginger powder
1 t garlic powder
1 t kosher salt
6-8 skinless boneless chicken thighs, cut into 1 1/2" cubes
Juice of half a lemon

The night before, combine marinade ingredients in a non-reactive container (I used a tempered glass container). Refrigerate overnight.

Ingredients - Gravy
2 T vegetable oil or butter
1/4 cup chopped onion
3-5 cloves of garlic, minced
1" of ginger, minced
1 jalapeno pepper, minced
1 tomato, diced
2-4 t ground cumin
1 t coriander
1 dried red chili, crushed (optional - I'd take this out next time)
2 t paprika
Salt and pepper to taste
1 cup half and half cream
1/4 cup cilantro, chopped

Heat 2 T of vegetable oil over medium heat in a heavy-bottomed saucepan. Cook chicken in batches, about 2-3 minutes per side. Reserve chicken.

In the same pan, over medium heat, saute onion, garlic, and ginger until fragrant. Add jalapeno pepper and tomato, cook 1-2 minutes. Add cumin, coriander, chili and paprika. Stir until spices are slightly toasted, and a thick paste is formed.

Add chicken pieces; stir, cover and allow to cook over medium-low to medium heat for 10-15 minutes. Uncover and stir in cream; heat over low heat until warmed through.

Serve over rice, garnished with chopped cilantro.



The smell of everything cooking up was amazing. I did lower the temperature of the cauliflower to 400ºF (that was plenty hot. I was so excited I nearly got a steam burn on my hand!!). I loved how pretty the cauliflower looked out of the oven. Yellow from the turmeric, slightly toasted from the heat of the oven. It was a great accompaniment to the butter chicken!

The butter chicken was a little spicier than I expected (I got heavy handed apparently), so next time I'd omit the dried red chili in the gravy. There's still a little to tweak here and there, but for the meanwhile, this is a nice homey recipe to fall back on. Here's to fusion food pioneers!

More photos at my flickr photo set.

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