Showing posts with label Chicken. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicken. Show all posts
Monday, July 25, 2011
Albania - Gjellë me Arra (Walnut Chicken) and friends
Sorry about the blurry photos! Everyone was hungry, and we wanted to get eating.
Albania, for a small country, has a lot of regional variation in cuisine. I went with a little of everything -- a fish dish from the coast, a chicken dish from... the north? (Albanian recipes are kind of hard to find, but I did find a general overview of ingredients used, and walnuts were mentioned, but not specified by region.) The pita bread is a bit of a stretch, but we decided that it was close enough, as Albania shares a border with Greece, and, well, we really like feta.
It would hardly be worth it to include a recipe for the salmon. It was just brushed lightly with olive oil and lightly sprinkled with salt and pepper. Albanian food is fairly lightly spiced, and spices are generally not mixed, it turns out.
Walnut chicken!
This dish never seems to look all that good, but it tasted great, so it sort of redeemed itself in the end. The sauce is thickened with roux and egg yolks, almost like a savory pudding (in the American use of the word "pudding".) Not something I've done before, and a little nerve-wracking on a night when I was planning on serving 6 or 7 people, but it turned out in the end.
Sauce:
Butter
Flour
Garlic
Egg yolks
Crushed walnuts
Sage (My addition; it complemented the walnuts well.)
Salt to taste
If you would like to follow along, here is the recipe I used. Enjoy!
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Chicken Lawang
There's something extremely evocative about a dish that's full of rich spices. I suppose it's the aromatic quality spices have -- that smell of foreign wood and earth -- that can almost transport you to a place you've only seen in photographs. Especially in a place like Afghanistan, which was pretty damn neat when it was at peace and which is pretty damn gorgeous despite all of the strife today.
I've never been, but these are the spices that sent people off in caravels before they even knew what they were bound to hit when they got there. I completely understand why.
This dish does take a couple of hours to make, but it is really wonderful.
Ingredients:
2 small onions, finely minced
4-6 cloves of garlic, also finely minced
maybe 1/4 cup olive oil
about as much chicken as you'd expect 3 or 4 people to want to eat, or about, what, 400-500g? I remember this being "about five dollars' worth of chicken".
turmeric
cumin, ground
coriander, ground
cloves, ground
cardamom, ground
black pepper, ground
(dried red pepper, to taste. This is not a traditionally spicy dish, but it does work well with a bit of heat, if you enjoy that kind of thing.)
1 large tub (about 450 g, but need not be exact) plain yogurt, and a couple coffee filters with which to strain it
salt
fresh cilantro/coriander leaves
1-2 cups chicken stock
1-2 tbsp lemon juice (bottled is fine)
1. Begin straining the yogurt. This will not only make it much thicker, but also remove some of the bitter flavor. Do this by carefully placing some coffee filters (I like to use a couple, for good measure) or some paper towels (in a pinch) in a strainer, and setting it over a bowl that can catch the liquid. This yogurt will continue straining for the next two hours.
2. Chop the onions. This is a lot of onion to mince. I wore a diving mask to avoid onion-eye. Yes, really. It was awesome.
3. On medium to medium-high heat, add about half of the olive oil and sprinkle lightly with salt. Stir occasionally for about 5 minutes.
4. Add the garlic, and continue stirring for another 5 minutes. If at any point your onions begin to brown, stop, because that is the point we are looking for. The onions should start to brown in the oil. Interestingly, this is also the beginning of the Qabili Palau recipe.
5. Add the other half of the oil and the chicken, and stir, turning the heat down so the mixture doesn't burn. Set a timer for 10 minutes, but come back in 5, just in case. Stir it then.
6. After 10 minutes, stir in the spices. At this point, the oil and onions should be forming a sauce, and you want to incorporate the spices into that mixture. Stir through evenly. It should be a really neat color. Double-check that the heat is on quite low. Cover with a lid.
7. Set a timer for 30 minutes, wandering back into the kitchen now and then to stir and to check that the sauce has enough flavor. Add a little chicken broth as the sauce begins to thicken, reserving a bit for the end.
8. After all this, if there is still oil pooling on top, strain it off with a ladle, by all means.
9. Turn off the heat, dump the lemon juice into the rest of the chicken broth, and add this mixture, stirring slowly.
10. Remove the lid and wait for the chicken to come down near room temperature -- perhaps another 25 minutes. This gives you the time to finish that episode of Psych you started in step 7. Now would also be a good time to put a pot of Basmati rice on to steam.
8. Go get that yogurt that's been straining. Mix it slowly into the sauce. Once the yogurt is thoroughly incorporated, begin to heat this back up to serving temperature.
9. While heating, stir. While stirring, mix in the cilantro/coriander leaves. I like to reserve a few for use as a garnish.
I've never been, but these are the spices that sent people off in caravels before they even knew what they were bound to hit when they got there. I completely understand why.
This dish does take a couple of hours to make, but it is really wonderful.
Ingredients:
2 small onions, finely minced
4-6 cloves of garlic, also finely minced
maybe 1/4 cup olive oil
about as much chicken as you'd expect 3 or 4 people to want to eat, or about, what, 400-500g? I remember this being "about five dollars' worth of chicken".
turmeric
cumin, ground
coriander, ground
cloves, ground
cardamom, ground
black pepper, ground
(dried red pepper, to taste. This is not a traditionally spicy dish, but it does work well with a bit of heat, if you enjoy that kind of thing.)
1 large tub (about 450 g, but need not be exact) plain yogurt, and a couple coffee filters with which to strain it
salt
fresh cilantro/coriander leaves
1-2 cups chicken stock
1-2 tbsp lemon juice (bottled is fine)
1. Begin straining the yogurt. This will not only make it much thicker, but also remove some of the bitter flavor. Do this by carefully placing some coffee filters (I like to use a couple, for good measure) or some paper towels (in a pinch) in a strainer, and setting it over a bowl that can catch the liquid. This yogurt will continue straining for the next two hours.
2. Chop the onions. This is a lot of onion to mince. I wore a diving mask to avoid onion-eye. Yes, really. It was awesome.
3. On medium to medium-high heat, add about half of the olive oil and sprinkle lightly with salt. Stir occasionally for about 5 minutes.
4. Add the garlic, and continue stirring for another 5 minutes. If at any point your onions begin to brown, stop, because that is the point we are looking for. The onions should start to brown in the oil. Interestingly, this is also the beginning of the Qabili Palau recipe.
5. Add the other half of the oil and the chicken, and stir, turning the heat down so the mixture doesn't burn. Set a timer for 10 minutes, but come back in 5, just in case. Stir it then.
6. After 10 minutes, stir in the spices. At this point, the oil and onions should be forming a sauce, and you want to incorporate the spices into that mixture. Stir through evenly. It should be a really neat color. Double-check that the heat is on quite low. Cover with a lid.
7. Set a timer for 30 minutes, wandering back into the kitchen now and then to stir and to check that the sauce has enough flavor. Add a little chicken broth as the sauce begins to thicken, reserving a bit for the end.
8. After all this, if there is still oil pooling on top, strain it off with a ladle, by all means.
9. Turn off the heat, dump the lemon juice into the rest of the chicken broth, and add this mixture, stirring slowly.
10. Remove the lid and wait for the chicken to come down near room temperature -- perhaps another 25 minutes. This gives you the time to finish that episode of Psych you started in step 7. Now would also be a good time to put a pot of Basmati rice on to steam.
8. Go get that yogurt that's been straining. Mix it slowly into the sauce. Once the yogurt is thoroughly incorporated, begin to heat this back up to serving temperature.
9. While heating, stir. While stirring, mix in the cilantro/coriander leaves. I like to reserve a few for use as a garnish.
Monday, July 11, 2011
The Adventure Begins! To Afghanistan!
We decided to start with a fairly simple dish -- Qabili Palau. I admit that this sounded appealing to me from the minute I saw the name. The Scrabble possibilities alone...
To be honest, this is just the kind of thing I was hoping to get from this project. It's a good, solid, traditional dish, and yet it has a certain mystique.
It starts with a sauce based on caramelized onions, chicken broth, cumin, black pepper, and cardamom. The sauce was absolutely beautiful -- pungent with that sweet onion/cardamom kick. My only complaint was that it simply didn't come out when the rice was baked in it later on. If I did it again, I'd make more sauce, and possibly keep some aside for finishing at the end of the dish.
Ben (the boyfriend) made it as well, and he said his turned out almost dessert-level sweet. He liked it, but perhaps the sugar's also something to watch.
Traditionally, this is served with the chicken underneath, and the carrot/raisin/almond mixture on top, but I opted to plate the elements separately to better showcase them.
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