This is the time of year many start making resolutions (plenty of which end up in the cutting room of life before the end of January). I have to make changes, but not resolutions--actionable things that cannot be negotiated. But I do resolve to do better with the blog because I know I have neglected it terribly this past year.
Here's hoping that your celebrations include friends and family and great food. And here's hoping that next year brings you health, merriment, and many forms of success, and good food--lots of good food!
Monday, December 30, 2019
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Turkey Drumsticks in About 30 Minutes
When
we make turkey wings or legs, we sometimes end up adding cooking time to make
sure we reach the safe standards for internal temperature. I don’t mind longer
cooking times, but with the Air Fryer, because it is a smaller appliance, this
may affect browning (and tenting isn’t always a deterrent to slightly scorched
meats). I like crunchy, but golden brown always beats slightly burnt.
And
while I love slow cooking for many things (stews, sauces, soups), sometimes you
want a quickie that only tastes like you spent hours working on a delicate
balance of tastes and textures. This is a good weeknight quick meal.
Turkey Drumsticks in About 30 Minutes
1
tablespoon each (see note):
Penzey’s
Poultry Seasoning
Penzey’s
Justice Seasoning
Penzey’s
Forward Seasoning
2
tablespoons garlic powder
½
tablespoon Goya powdered chicken bouillon
Extra
virgin olive oil
In a small bowl, mix the
seasoning and then add olive oil (about ¼ cup) a little at a time and stir
until it forms a loose paste.
Loosen the skin on the
drumsticks and place about a teaspoon or two under the skin, and then rub the
rest on the legs to season every inch of the surface.
I did something different
this time because a few other times I made turkey legs on the Air Fryer, I’ve
have to cook longer than I intended because the inside is not fully cooked and
we won’t eat pink turkey. So to prep the legs, I cooked in the microwave for
about 10 minutes at 80% power – and covered in a dome of plastic wrap so that
it steams in its own juices.
At this point, you can
transfer directly to the Air Fryer, or refrigerate for later cooking (think of
it as electronic blanching). Make sure to add the cooking juices collected from
the microwave dish over the drumsticks and into the Air Fryer.
To finish cooking, I left it
in the Air Fryer for 20 minutes on one side at 375°F on one side, flipped them
and cooked for another 10 minutes at 400°F. The juices collect on the bottom of
the basket, brown and savory. The skin is golden and crispy and the meat is
tender and juicy.
I served with sliced sweet
potatoes, which I find cook perfectly on our microwave—in under 10 minutes
while I let the drumsticks sit and collect its juices.
I made a simple Ranch
dressing to dip the turkey in (mayo, dill, crushed garlic, lemon juice, and
vinegar).
Note:
The Penzey’s seasonings are all salt-free mixes with a variety of herbs and
spices.
1.
Poultry Seasoning—sage, white pepper, bell peppers, lemon peel, savory, rosemary, dill
weed, allspice, thyme, marjoram and ginger.
2.
Justice Seasoning—shallots, garlic, onion, green peppercorns, chives, and green onion.
3.
Forward Seasoning—extra bold black pepper, onion, paprika, garlic, turmeric, spice
extractives (including oleoresin of celery, rosemary, black pepper, thyme,
basil and paprika).
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Chicken Gizzards in Garlic Sauce
Some of my friends cringe at the thought of eating “innards”
– any internal organs—which I find peculiar if they are willing to eat meats of
any kind. Having lived with grandparents and a great grandmother who lived
through the Great Depression, I can tell you that it was deeply ingrained in my
psyche that you wasted not a single shred of resources (be it food or anything
else).
But I also guess that it is a peasant tradition to make
use of every bit of a sacrificed beast—it gave its life and every bit of it
should have purpose, whether to feed, clothe, or create other tools or
materials. It is only the privileged that allow for the idea that foods may be
considered inferior and therefore waste, because only people who live with abundance
see no problem discarding food they wouldn’t eat because it’s not a choice cut.
That bothers me, but I cannot control people’s prejudice
when it comes to food. All I can do is try to share my enthusiasm and hope that
I am not just preaching to the choir.
I remember a friend telling me once that she thought the
stuff that came in the little packet inside the chicken was garbage. She always
threw it out because she had no idea what to do with it. She wasn’t even sure
what that stuff was. She could identify the neck, though I think she was just
guessing; but the rest left her confused and cold. “A heart, gizzard, and
liver,” I pointed out the parts to her. She turned three shades whiter, making
her almost translucent, and she pushed the tiny plate away. “Gross!”
“Bullshit,” I said. This was a woman who would not skimp
on buying the most expensive pâté she could buy at Balducci’s just to impress
some of her more affected friends. “What do you think pâté is made out of?” Apparently
the cooking of the innards is chic only if the French do it, but they certainly
did not invent the concept.
Gizzards are the victims of such prejudice and it’s a
shame that most Americans ignore them—although in the last decade or so, people
like Anthony Bourdain and other celebrity chefs have elevated the status of
innards as edibles.
Poultry produces delicious gizzards and they are
available in a variety of world cuisines: the Portuguese stew them, Koreans
stir-fry them, Indians curry it, Ghanaians boil them, the Japanese grill and
fry them… And according to Wikipedia, it is eaten in some parts of the
Midwestern US and parts of the South (mostly fried, or boiled and added to
gumbo).
Both my maternal grandmother as well as my great
grandmother, prepared mollejitas
(little gizzards) in three different dishes: pickled with onions and green
bananas (escabeche
is made for Christmas), stewed, or boiled in soup.
They’re cheap, they freeze well, are rich in vitamins
and they are flexible enough you can have them as snacks or part of a complete
meal.
The secret is to “clean” them, by removing the layer of
thick skin on them (it makes them bitter and once cooked it turns into a chewy,
inedible mess), and boil them at least half an hour to make them tender.
Gizzards are flexible and very tasty once you perform these two actions.
1. Run gizzards through a cold water bath or some
vinegar and scrub to make sure there are no extraneous materials (this may
include sediment).
2. You may cut in half or quarters (some people prefer
to cut after cooked as they are tender and easier to handle). If there is a
yellowish, thick membrane attached, you can use a paring knife to pull it back
and discard. Remove any grease and discard.
3. Fill a pot with water and lightly salt (don’t overdo it
because you will season the gizzards later for cooking). Add gizzards and bring
water to a boil. Boil gizzards for a minimum of 30 minutes or until gizzards
become tender.
For safety, you want to cook them to 165F (74C). There
are various ways to get there, I tend to bring water to a boil and let it cook
for 15 minutes, and then I let it simmer at a medium low flame for an additional
30 minutes.
Some cooks boil gizzards for up to two hours, but that’s
really overkill. You may add a bay leaf, if you have any.
Once cooked, remove from the liquid and allow them to
cool. If you did not cut them and need to, chop to taste. Trim and discard any
leftover grease or membrane not disposed of before boiling.
When cool, you may freeze for later use. I drop them in
chicken stock for soup, and it adds a wonderful dimension to the dish.
Mollejas
al Ajillo (Gizzards in Garlic Sauce)
16-20 oz prepared chicken gizzards
4-6 cloves of garlic, crushed
6 oz white wine*
Saffron strands, to taste
White pepper, to taste
Salt, to taste
Extra virgin olive oil
1. Gently heat olive oil at medium heat and sauté
gizzards for 10-15 minutes.
2. Season gizzards with salt and pepper, and add a few
strands to saffron to the oil.
3. Add garlic and sauté for another 5 minutes, and add
wine (you may substitute with Vermouth, vinegar, lemon juice, or apple or
orange juice—each will render a slightly different flavor and give you a
nuanced dish).
4. Stir ingredients together and cook until wine is
almost completely reduced and garlic is golden and softened.
Serve immediately with rice, polenta, mashed potatoes,
or fried green plantains. Garnish with parsley or cilantro.
Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Air Fryer Sandwich Bread
Mom found a book of healthy
recipes for the Air Fryer. Coincidentally, it is by the author of the Air Fryer
cookbook I bought after we got our little magical appliance. This prompted some
research—because I’m a nerd and I research for fun. After some reading, it
became clear that anything made in a conventional oven can be recreated in an
Air Fryer. There are limitations, of course, because our Air Fryer is a small
model—though perfect for us.
So far, one of the things I
love the most about it is that I can have roasted chicken in the summer without
having to turn the oven on—we have no AC and turning the oven on in summer is
suicidal. A 2 ½ to 3 pound chicken fits the little basket and it generally
means dinner, lunch, and a soup (so about three meals from one chicken).
Of course, the faster cooking times are a great plus too!
So far, we’ve also made lemon chicken (breast), turkey breast, turkey legs and turkey wings, pork
tenderloin, and a small pork shoulder. There are at least
two dozen other things we want to try out—including cupcakes.
A turkey wing is almost a meal in itself.
A few weeks back I was toying
with the idea of making a tiny pizza in the Air Fryer. My plan was to make a tomato sauce with
lamb and topping it with Feta cheese. We ended up making lamb burgers instead,
but the idea danced in my head for days.
Then we hit a couple of
days when we were rained in and had run out of rolls. I’d just made a pernil in
the Air Fryer and was looking forward to the leftover sandwiches. And I got it
in my head that I should be able to make rolls in the Air Fryer. None of the
books had bread recipes and trying to find one in the Internet turned into a
comedy of errors. I found a video and a recipe for dinner rolls. Neither was
quite right but they helped guide my choices.
I wanted a substantial roll,
crusty but airy and soft inside. And the solution was fairly simple: ciabatta!
I made a basic pizza dough but added powdered garlic and Greek seasoning. I let
it rise for 45 minutes to an hour and it doubled in size. I cut the dough in
half and divided again so that I ended up with four rolls.
More blonde than golden, but for emergency bread it was perfect!
I shaped two as baguettes
and the second batch as rectangles. I scored them differently too—the baguettes
got scored twice along the width and the rectangles got a vertical score across
its length.
After preheating the Air
Fryer, I placed two rolls in the basket and cooked at 360-degrees from 15
minutes on one side and 7 minutes on the other side (it could have stayed in
for 9 or 10 minutes for a darker crust). The interior temperature should reach
between 190-200 degrees.
Photos
of my first attempt. I’ll do it again!
Friday, August 9, 2019
Mélange: Basque Cuisine
Mom and I share some
Basque heritage. The likelihood is that it comes from her maternal side. From
there, it is a crap shoot whether it is from my great grandmother’s family or
my great grandfather’s. And then again it could come from her paternal grandmother’s
side. We don’t know. We may never know, and that’s okay. We like a good
mystery!
To be sure, the Basque
are a mystery themselves. Established scholarship says they descend from early
farming settlers from the northwestern region of Spain to parts of southwestern
France―from Bordeaux to Bilbao―straddling the Pyrenees and nestled in the Bay of Biscay. And both
bordering and within Basque country there are several forests—all of this
influences a vast and rich mythology which survived the arrival of Christianity
and even the Franco years.
Although geography
allowed them to remain relatively isolated they were not exactly hiding either.
The Romans found met them in the northern Iberian peninsula as far back as 200
B.C. The Basque had been in the area long before. Theories as to their origin
are interesting―from claims that they are the 13th tribe from
Israel to refugees from Atlantis.
One thing has always been
clear. The Basque are different. Their language is one that matches no other.
And while they live in a so-called autonomous region, the politics of it is a
little more complicated, but no matter how you define it, it is unlikely that
the Spaniards will ever truly rule them. The Basque are not prone to submission
as such. They do what they want.
Basque contributions to
the world have included luminaries from Ignatius of Loyola to Pablo Picasso,
from Balenciaga to Saint Francis Xavier to Miguel de Unamuno… But perhaps the
biggest contribution that the Basque have gifted the world is their amazing
cuisine.
Basque country is
blessed with coastal waters leading to the north Atlantic and fertile lands on
her valleys—so the seafood is plentiful and the produce are magnificent. From
Basque tapas (pintxos) to my beloved salt cod a la Vizcaína, to bacalao al
Pil-Pil to the heavenly torrijas (French toast
elevated to an art form).
A
traditional Basque dish, which is easy to make and is also very adaptable
is merluza en salsa verde (hake in a green sauce). You can
have a simple and elegant meal on the plate in 20 minutes!
Hake
is a lean white fish, part of the cod family, and relatively easy to find
(including certified sustainable). You can substitute with fresh cod if whiting
is unavailable. The seafood is lovely, but for my money the sauce is the real
beauty of this dish. Certainly, this green sauce can be found in several dishes
from the region—it is easy to make, very hard to foul up, relatively cheap, and
it feels fancier than its preparation suggests.
Merluza
en Salsa Verde (Basque Hake in
Green Sauce)
2 fresh hake steaks
2-3 garlic cloves,
finely chopped
4 tbsp extra virgin
olive oil
1 tbsp flour (plus extra
for dredging steaks)
½ - ¾ cup fish or
vegetable stock (see note)
1-2 tbsp finely chopped
parsley
Sea salt to taste
Lightly dredge fish
steaks and set aside.
Heat 2 tablespoons of
oil on medium high flame. Cook steaks 2 minutes per side (lightly browned to a
golden hue). Remove fish and set aside.
Add remaining oil and
chopped garlic, one garlic begins to crackle in the pan remove chili (if used),
lower heat to medium low and add flour to pan, stirring constantly, and cook
for about 1 minute.
Gradually add stock to
pan and whisk until you get a smooth and velvety sauce. This may take a couple
of minutes – make sure flour is completely incorporated and there are no lumps
in the sauce. Adjust for seasoning and add salt to taste (a dash will do).
Add the fish steaks to
the pan and cover to heat fish through for about a minute.
At this point, depending
on your personal taste, you may add the parsley over the fish or you can add to
the sauce as you serve (remove fish to plate, add parsley, mix into sauce over
low heat. Pour sauce over fish and serve immediately.
Notes:
1. Hake steaks can be substituted with haddock,
grouper or mahi mahi. Each substitution offers a slightly nuanced change to the
dish but they all work well.
2. Typically the dish can be made with clams,
but shrimp are not an unusual addition. The dish may also contain kokotxas
(pronounces co-co-chas and literally the fish throat—and I realize it may be a
delicacy that some of you can live without).
3. This recipe does not include any heat
element, but you may add white pepper to the garlic as it cooks—this will keep
your sauce silky and smooth with just a little bit of heat. I’ve also seen
recipes include thinly sliced dried chili (which may also be substituted with
dried pepper flakes).
4. You can use ½ cup of stock (fish or
vegetable) plus ¼ cup of white wine (use a good dry). Add the wine first to let
the alcohol evaporate as it cooks.
5. If available, and if you wish, you may add
about ½ pound of clams (buy cleaned, if possible, or soak at least 20 minutes
to expel any sand). Add the clams as you have the sauce at about the right
consistency and let them open over the sauce (remove from pan as soon as they
open). Then add the hake and heat through before serving. The same principle
applies if using shrimp (¼ to ½ pound of small/medium).
6. While this dish can accompany a nest of
cappellini, rice, or couscous; it is also served with potatoes or with bread to
soak up the delicious sauce.
¡Buen provecho!
Thursday, May 23, 2019
Air Fryer Whole Chicken
Roasted chicken is an art form,
truly. I mean, you do remember the hoopla caused by Meghan Markle mentioning
Prince Harry proposed after she made him a roasted chicken and women of all
ages (who cook and have at some point read Glamour
Magazine or saw versions of it on Martha Steward, the Food Network or such)
were quick to shout in glee, “Engagement Chicken works!”
Because of course it does.
Chicken is magic, y'all!
And I have to admit that
there are few things I find more offensive, in a culinary sense, than someone
ruining a simple roasted chicken. There’s just no excuse for bad chicken.
As I mentioned last year,
we received a small Air Fryer as a gift and it is perfect for the two of us. I’ve
been playing around and have come up with the perfect combination. It not only
yields a great dinner, but there is enough left-over for healthy sandwiches the
next day, and the carcass and innards become the base for a bitching chicken
soup the day after that.
Air Fryer Whole Chicken
3 ½ lbs chicken fryer
1 Tbsp 21 Seasoning Salute
1 Tbsp minced garlic
1 Tbsp three onion rub
½ Tbsp freeze dried shallots
½ Tbsp poultry seasoning
½ Tbsp garlic and chili flake seasoning
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
1 lemon
(see notes below for specific
information about spices used and alternatives)
In a glass jar, mix all the
dry seasonings and stir with a fork to mix well. Add olive oil and stir to mix.
Close jar and let stand for a few hours (I let mine sit overnight). You want
the garlic, shallots and onions to rehydrate and bloom in the oil.
Remove innards package from
chicken cavity and reserve for later use (for stock). Using your finger or the
back of a wooden spoon, loosen the breast skin to create a pocket and spoon a
couple of teaspoons of seasoning mix under the skin on both breasts. Rub about
two or three teaspoons of the seasoning inside the cavity. Using a fork, make
punctures on the lemon and stuff inside the cavity**. Rub the remainder of the seasoning all over the chicken.
At this point, you may
start cooking, if you wish. I placed the chicken in a container
and refrigerated overnight. If you refrigerate, make sure you take the chicken
out 15-30 minutes so that the meat is closer to room temperature when you are
ready to cook.
Preheat Air Fryer. Place
chicken in basket and Air Fry at 360-degrees for 30 minutes, breast down. Air
Fry for another 30 minutes breast side up. Let it rest for 10 minutes and carve—the
chicken should come right off the bone and the meat will be juice and tender.
Remove lemon from cavity and press down with spoon to squeeze out juices, and
combine with pan juices to drizzle over chicken. The skin will turn not only
golden brown, but extra crispy!
Notes (*some Amazon
affiliate links below, if you want to help a girl out with a click or two):
1. I used McCormick’s minced garlic, though if I’d
been using fresh garlic, I’d suggest at least three cloves.*
2. Trader Joe’s
21 Seasoning Salute is a salt free blend
of onion, black pepper, celery seed, cayenne pepper, parsley, basil, marjoram,
bay leaf, oregano, thyme, savory, rosemary, cumin, mustard, coriander, garlic,
carrot, orange peel, tomato, lemon juice and lemon oil.*
3. I used
Pampered Chef’s three
onion rub, a gluten free blend of yellow, red and green onions (contains 40
ml sodium).
4. Penzeys
offers freeze dried shallots and poultry seasoning (a salt free blend of sage, white pepper, bell peppers,
lemon peel, savory, rosemary, dill weed, allspice, thyme, marjoram and ginger).*
5. Brandless has a great, organic garlic and chili flake seasoning blend.
6. The combination
of spice blends used makes the addition of salt and pepper unnecessary.
** As the
lemon is not exactly “stuffing”, there’s no need to secure it inside the cavity—but
I still use two or three toothpicks to close the flap over the top and allow
the lemon to steam and also to get an even crisp on the skin all around.
Monday, May 20, 2019
Mélange: Sardinian Cuisine
3. Sardinian Cuisine
Mom has a trace of Sardinian ancestry. Although at this point we’d be
guessing, it is a safe bet that this is form her maternal side—specifically her
maternal grandfather’s side of the family.
I half expected Corsicans, but Sardinians caught us both by surprise. Admittedly,
I know very little about Sardinia. The fact that there is a Catalan connection
is news to me, and I found the Wikipedia
entry fascinating and a gateway to all sorts of knowledge I did not possess
before and now I must have! Every hyperlink lead to another epic page of
fascinating facts—including an aside to the page about the giants of Mont’e
Prama who reminded me of The Iron
Giant.
From its ancient history to its beautiful architecture
to the beautiful beaches, Sardinia is immensely interesting. But, of course, it
is the food that we wanted to know more about…
It actually turns out that we already have a dish in our
repertoire that is very much the ringer for one of Sardinia’s national dishes.
According to Sardinia
Unlimited, a “typical [S]ardinian pasta” . . . fregola is made of semolina and rolled into balls, and one of the
most delicious ways to serve it is with seafood in a saffron broth. To me, the
Sardinian delicacy looks very much like my Mom’s seafood medley with pearl
couscous. The difference, apparently, is that fregola is toasted—but Mom actually toasts the pearl couscous
before cooking it, so I expect we’ve already achieved the taste profile for the
dish (toasting the pasta makes it taste a little nutty).
I am toying with making malloreddus (Sardinian gnocchi) with sausage. In one of the recipes
I consulted, it was suggested to substitute with cavatelli—though specialty shops will likely have malloreddus. There are two recipe
variations that I want to play with, in each you’ll cook the pasta to al dente
in salted boiling water to package instructions. Always reserve ½ cup of pasta
water to add to the sauce at the end of cooking.
Malloreddus
del Pastore (Sardinian Gnocchi with Sausage and
Ricotta)
½ lbs
whole milk Ricotta
¼ cup
freshly grated Pecorino (recipe calls for Sardinian Pecorino, but in a pinch
Romano will do)
Pinch of
freshly ground black pepper (to taste)
½ lbs
spicy pork sausage, casings removed
2-3
cloves of garlic, minced
1 TB extra-virgin olive oil
In a bowl, mix cheeses and pepper, and beat until smooth.
Heat oil in a pan over medium-high heat and cook sausage.
Crumble with the back of a spoon or spatula, and turn to make sure pork browns
and cooks through evenly (between 8-10 minutes). Add garlic and mix in for
about a minute. Fold in pasta, the pasta liquid, and the cheese mixture
stirring to coat pasta with sauce. Remove from heat and serve.
Note: there is no salt in the sausage mixture
because there’s enough salt content in the cheeses and the pasta. To serve
drizzle extra virgin olive oil over pasta.
Malloreddus
alla Campidanese (Sardinian Gnocchi with Sausage,
Tomatoes, and Saffron)
½-1 lbs
fresh tomatoes
½ cup
of grated Pecorino
½ tsp
saffron threads
½ cup
water
1
onion
2-3
garlic cloves
1 lbs pork
sausage
Extra-virgin
olive oil
Basil leaves
Salt and pepper to taste
Have a bowl of ice water on the side. Heat up water to a
boil. Score the bottom of tomatoes with a knife and add to boiling water for
about 30 seconds. Remove from pot and immediately add to ice water. Reserve ½ cup
of warm water, add saffron, and set aside.
Mince onion, garlic. Peel tomatoes (see note), chop into
small pieces and set aside.
Heat about 1 tablespoon of olive oil on medium-high
heat, sauté garlic and onion until onion is translucent. Add sausage, brown lightly
for 4-5 minutes and crumble. Add tomatoes and basil leaves, the saffron water,
and salt and pepper to taste (it’s safer to under-season and adjust at the
end). Stir and simmer on low heat for 30-45 minutes.
Note: peeling the tomatoes is not absolutely
necessary, and if you are skipping that step then do not boil or immerse in
iced water. To serve, fold in pasta and Pecorino, stir to coat pasta in sauce
and remove from heat. Drizzle with olive oil, garnish with fresh basil leaves
and additional cheese and freshly ground pepper.
Saturday, May 11, 2019
Mélange: Senegalese Cuisine
2. Senegalese Cuisine
Both my mother and I have a trace of ancestry shared
with folks from Senegal. It is difficult to determine whether this is entirely
from my maternal side or if I also share a little bit from my paternal DNA. But
then, the African ancestry is problematic because all the multicultural mixing
means we strayed far from the motherland in many ways.
Senegal is the westernmost point in continental Africa
(a nice swim across from Cape Verde). A base of operations used by the
Portuguese, Dutch, and British slave traders; Senegal was eventually taken over
by the French. Whether any Portuguese and French ancestry is attached to
Senegal is unclear—we’ll never know!
Because of its colonial history, Senegalese cuisine is
influenced by Northern African, French and Portuguese culinary traditions. And
because Senegal is one of the most ethnically diverse nations in the African
continent, regional variations of dishes abound.
Popular ingredients range from chicken and lamb (which
make up for plenty of stew recipes). A coastal nation, Atlantic fish is also an
important part of their diet. Their biggest crop is peanuts, and certainly
there are plenty of peanuts sauce recipes in their repertoire. They also grow
couscous, white rice, yams, lentils and peas. I like all of this, which adds to
the mystery of why I don’t have more Senegalese dishes in my own catalogue.
Because they are predominantly Muslim, though, they have no pork in their diet.
Other than that, their food seems pretty tasty.
While it is entirely possible, I don’t specifically
recall having any Senegalese food. I have had my eye on a recipe for a few
years but it still hasn’t made the rotation: chicken stew (poulet yassa). My interest has not waned but we have encountered a
problem: Mom seems to have developed an allergy to mustard and this means
rethinking the marinade.
The beauty of Chicken Yassa is that it is such a
versatile dish:
1. it can be made with
thighs, legs, breasts or a whole cut up chicken,
2. it can be in winter or
summer (grilled or in the oven), and
3. there are enough
variations that adaptations are easy to conceive.
Chicken Yassa requires four important steps: (1) marinade
(for taste as well as tenderizing), (2) brown meat, (3) sauté onions, and (4) simmer.
The marinating can be done overnight, and the dish requires light hands-on
work. You won’t have to stand watch over the stove while it cooks. So, if you
make this for guests, you can enjoy their company—plus it can be made ahead and
reheated.
And while the recipe and its taste profile seem familiar
enough, what distinguishes this dish is the onion marinade. It gives it a nice
kick. The dish is said to have originated in Southern Senegal, but I suspect a
Northern African influence because the marinade resembles scabetche (or escabeche for my Latino cousins).
Poulet
Yassa (Senegalese Chicken Stew)
For marinade:
4-6
onions thinly sliced
½
cup vegetable or peanut oil (divided)
5-6
cloves of garlic, minced
½
cup lemon juice (approximately 4 lemons)
½
cup red wine vinegar
1
chile pepper (or a jalapeño) chopped* (see notes)
2
tablespoons Sriracha mayonnaise* (see notes)
Salt
and pepper to taste* (see notes)
1
whole chicken cut in serving pieces or 3-4 lbs in chicken thighs, legs, and
breasts (skin on)
½ cup water (or low sodium chicken stock)
Optional:
One large carrot cut in ¼-inch slices
¼ cup of salad olives
Mix ¼ cup of oil and all ingredients together to create
marinade and rub onto chicken. Refrigerate overnight.
Remove chicken from marinade. Grill chicken 10-15
minutes per side (brown but do not fully cook).
Heat ¼ cup of oil in pan on medium and sauté onions
until soft and translucent. Add rest of
marinade, carrots and olives (if using), and water (or stock), bring to a boil.
Cover and cook for 5-8 minutes.
Add chicken to pan, reduce heat to simmer. Cook until
chicken juices run clear (20-30 minutes).
Notes:
1. To make the
Sriracha Mayonnaise: mix 1 cup of mayonnaise, 2 teaspoons of powdered garlic, 1
tablespoon of Sriracha, 1 lemon juiced (if you have no lemons, you may use
limes for a slightly different tartness, or substitute with a tablespoon or two
of vinegar), and a pinch of sea salt (alternatively, you may substitute salt
with a few dashes of Worcestershire sauce). This can be made ahead and keeps
well refrigerated.
2. If using
Dijon mustard (or my Sriracha mayonnaise alternative) you may wish to curtail
additional salt—especially if you’ll also add olives at the end. The same can
be said for pepper—it depends on how much heat you enjoy. Taste the marinade
before adding to chicken, do not over-season.
3. Most yassa
recipes include a cube of Maggi or chicken stock, but we omitted and used water
instead to keep the sodium content relatively low.
4. You can use
bell peppers, if you prepper a milder taste.
You may serve with additional lemon slices (if you like
it tart). Serve over rice (white or brown) or couscous. Bon appétit, mon ami!