I love chicken francese, but it's a fairly last-minute intensive dish to prepare...frying those cutlets can really eat up time, especially if you're cooking for a crowd.
I tried a new twist for a "dinner party" (can you really call it a dinner party when you're eating off paper plates?) wherein I baked many chicken breasts that were seasoned with lemon pepper and served the lemon-caper sauce as a relish on the side. Captures the same flavors with far less work.
If you prep this in advance and put your chicken in a baking dish in the fridge, plan for extra cooking time (I screw up so you don't have to). The cold dish slows down the chicken's progression to an appropriate final temperature, and it took an extra 20-25 minutes of cooking to get my chicken up to temp. Better yet, prep the chicken, store it in a ziptop bag and put it in the baking dish at the last minute.
I don't have pictures because it was a dinner party and I had better things to do than take pictures of food LOL
Edited to note...this is evidently my 100th "freezer" recipe! I guess I do more of this sort of thing than I realized!
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Showing posts with label capers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label capers. Show all posts
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Friday, May 27, 2011
Salmon Pastrami: Condiments
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Salmon pastrami on a cracker with crême fraîche and raw capers |
Blanching onions takes the raw, heartburn-y bite out of them, but leaves their flavor and crunch. While briny, raw capers cut the richness of salmon, caramelizing capers transforms them into a sweet-but-tart condiment with a caviar-like pop in the mouth. Crême fraîche is a milder cousin to sour cream, but is often hard to find (and expensive when you do). Making it at home is a snap with buttermilk powder.
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"what do i do with",
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condiments,
creme fraiche,
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make-ahead,
onions,
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Sunday, April 17, 2011
Chicken Francese cookery pictures
Pictures courtesy of Darling Hubbie! I almost forgot to document the cooking of this dish. It's been a long week.
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Cutlets crammed into skillet...you'll space yours out more...do as I say, not as I do! |
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Browned cutlets, ready to wipe extra oil out of pan and add lemon juice-olive sauce to deglaze |
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Ready to serve |
Friday, April 15, 2011
Fish Burgers and Veggie Croquettes
The common theme with these two recipes is that if you make them ahead to freeze, they need to spend some time in the freezer firming up before you squash the daylights out of them with a vacusealer. Vacusealing will keep them both much fresher-tasting, but they're prone to going completely out of round if they don't freeze pretty solid first.
The veggie croquette is one of my faves for its dual vegetarian main/side dish status, its repurposing of leftovers that usually won't get consumed and its general old-fashioned-ness. In fact, the original recipe came from a WWII-era home economics textbook that belonged to my husband's grandmother. Reading old cookbooks and trying out vintage recipes is as close as I get to liking history, but I must say that it is such an insightful history lesson to cook as women did in another time and place. There's a moment of connection across generations when you realize that the face your husband made about Meatless Monday Rice Patties with Flourless Cheese Gravy is the same face somebody's husband made about the exact same dish in 1944. But I digress...
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The veggie croquette is one of my faves for its dual vegetarian main/side dish status, its repurposing of leftovers that usually won't get consumed and its general old-fashioned-ness. In fact, the original recipe came from a WWII-era home economics textbook that belonged to my husband's grandmother. Reading old cookbooks and trying out vintage recipes is as close as I get to liking history, but I must say that it is such an insightful history lesson to cook as women did in another time and place. There's a moment of connection across generations when you realize that the face your husband made about Meatless Monday Rice Patties with Flourless Cheese Gravy is the same face somebody's husband made about the exact same dish in 1944. But I digress...
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Labels:
"what do i do with",
beurre manié,
burger,
capers,
croquette,
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leftover,
leftovers,
side dish,
vegetables,
vegetarian,
white sauce
Monday, April 11, 2011
Chicken Francese
This is a quick and easy way to do chicken, unless you are starting with chicken breasts and have to pound them into cutlets. Even then it's not too bad, but cutlet-making is definitely a prep-ahead chore for me. I evidently didn't take any pictures of this one in prep-ahead process (oops), but I'll update with cookery pics when I make this dish.
If you've never done it, you take a chicken breast and cut it in half lengthwise. Put one half in a quart-size ziptop bag and press all the air out. Tip #1: Use the flat side of a meat mallet to pound...if you use the spiky part of the mallet or you'll puncture the plastic bag and it will be beyond messy. Tip #2: Pound the chicken from the side the skin used to be on, not the "meaty" side. Pound until the cutlet is about 1/4" thick. Set aside to fridge or freeze, and repeat until all your chicken is nice and thin.
If you're making a freezer kit, you can get one of the small cans of sliced olives, label and store it in the pantry as part of the kit, or you can freeze a large handful of chopped olives with the rest of the ingredients.
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If you've never done it, you take a chicken breast and cut it in half lengthwise. Put one half in a quart-size ziptop bag and press all the air out. Tip #1: Use the flat side of a meat mallet to pound...if you use the spiky part of the mallet or you'll puncture the plastic bag and it will be beyond messy. Tip #2: Pound the chicken from the side the skin used to be on, not the "meaty" side. Pound until the cutlet is about 1/4" thick. Set aside to fridge or freeze, and repeat until all your chicken is nice and thin.
If you're making a freezer kit, you can get one of the small cans of sliced olives, label and store it in the pantry as part of the kit, or you can freeze a large handful of chopped olives with the rest of the ingredients.
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Labels:
"what do i do with",
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lemon,
low carb,
olives,
prep-ahead
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Muffaletta, or Really? You don't have time to make a sandwich?
If I think back 2 1/2 years, I know that's the question I would have asked after reading what I am about to write. How can you possibly be so tired, so disorganized, so worn-out that you can't make one little sandwich? Any soon-to-be first-time parents who are reading and wondering the same thing, please take note of the response I have for my pre-baby self...HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Call me back in 3 months and let me know how that "sleeping through the night" thing is going.
Anyway...freezing sandwich fixings is mostly about having something in the freezer so that you don't have to go grocery shopping and possibly snagging a good sale on deli meat. But deli meat, sliced cheese and rolls do freeze really well (provided you've packaged them airtight), so put an easy-peasy dinner in your back pocket for those days when even take-out is too hard.
Hummus is a good veggie sandwich option that freezes nicely, too. You can even assemble some cheese sandwiches for grilling (go ahead and butter the bread) and wrap them invidually in plastic wrap to freeze. Total lifesaver when there's a screaming baby, a hungry toddler and no lunch plan.
For something a little more interesting than a plain ol' bologna sandwich, I love muffaletta. Love the New Orleans Central Grocery muffaletta, love this one too. It's adapted from Emeril Lagasse's muffaletta recipe. I double the amount of olive relish since the giardiniera called for only comes in containers twice the size required by the recipe at my local stores. Work once, eat twice. I also hate standing in line at the deli counter -- Publix...Boca Raton...Parkinsonian retiree with half a loaf of bread stashed in her purse wanting "samples"...'nuff said -- so I'd rather buy twice as much deli meat and freeze it so that I've got all the making for TWO of these delectable sandwiches on deck. You can make this ahead the night before even, so it's a shop-ahead, prep-ahead and make-ahead meal...fabulous for parties, too.
Emeril calls for some authentic Italian-type deli meats that we just don't get in my neck of the woods, so I sub out a spicy ham for capicolla and P&P loaf for mortadella.
Muffaletta (makes 2 sandwiches, each serves 8)
Olive Relish:
2 cups pimento-stuffed olives, plus 1/4 cup of liquid from the jar
2 cups giardiniera (pickled Italian vegetables), plus 2 tablespoons of liquid from the jar (a 16-oz jar is about 2 cups)
1/4 cup drained capers, plus 4 teaspoons of liquid from the jar
1 cup pitted black olives
4 cloves garlic
1 small minced shallot
2 teaspoons dried oregano
2 teaspoons dried parsley
Pinch of dried thyme
Pinch of crushed red pepper
3/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
Pulse the garlic cloves and shallots in a food processor until finely chopped. Add the olives, giardiniera, capers in the processor and pulse several times until coarsely chopped. It's ok if there are some big chunks left.
Combine the brines, olive oil and herbs and spices in a medium bowl. Add the chopped vegetables and stir well. Divide into two zip-top bags.
Deli Meats/Cheeses:
1/2 pound sliced fresh mozzarella
1/2 pound sliced capicollo or prosciutto (or spicy ham)
1/2 pound sliced Genoa salami
1/2 pound sliced mortadella (or P&P or bologna)
1/2 pound sliced mild provolone cheese
Divide each type of meat and cheese in half and put them in zip-top bags.
To serve:
for each sandwich, one large round loaf (10"-12") of sourdough or Italian bread, split lengthwise
When you're ready to make the sandwich, thaw all your fixings. Cut the bread in half and scoop out some of the crumb from the top and bottom halves of the bread.
Fill the scooped out part with olive relish.
Cover each half with slices of cheese. Arrange each type of meat in a layer over the cheese. CAREFULLY close the halves together. Wrap in plastic wrap and put this in the fridge for at least a couple of hours, if you have time. To serve, cut into wedges.
FYI...if you want to make your own bread for this sandwich, I made a half recipe of the Pain Ordinaire Carême from Bernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Breads. Pin It
Anyway...freezing sandwich fixings is mostly about having something in the freezer so that you don't have to go grocery shopping and possibly snagging a good sale on deli meat. But deli meat, sliced cheese and rolls do freeze really well (provided you've packaged them airtight), so put an easy-peasy dinner in your back pocket for those days when even take-out is too hard.
Hummus is a good veggie sandwich option that freezes nicely, too. You can even assemble some cheese sandwiches for grilling (go ahead and butter the bread) and wrap them invidually in plastic wrap to freeze. Total lifesaver when there's a screaming baby, a hungry toddler and no lunch plan.
For something a little more interesting than a plain ol' bologna sandwich, I love muffaletta. Love the New Orleans Central Grocery muffaletta, love this one too. It's adapted from Emeril Lagasse's muffaletta recipe. I double the amount of olive relish since the giardiniera called for only comes in containers twice the size required by the recipe at my local stores. Work once, eat twice. I also hate standing in line at the deli counter -- Publix...Boca Raton...Parkinsonian retiree with half a loaf of bread stashed in her purse wanting "samples"...'nuff said -- so I'd rather buy twice as much deli meat and freeze it so that I've got all the making for TWO of these delectable sandwiches on deck. You can make this ahead the night before even, so it's a shop-ahead, prep-ahead and make-ahead meal...fabulous for parties, too.
Emeril calls for some authentic Italian-type deli meats that we just don't get in my neck of the woods, so I sub out a spicy ham for capicolla and P&P loaf for mortadella.
Muffaletta (makes 2 sandwiches, each serves 8)
Olive Relish:
2 cups pimento-stuffed olives, plus 1/4 cup of liquid from the jar
2 cups giardiniera (pickled Italian vegetables), plus 2 tablespoons of liquid from the jar (a 16-oz jar is about 2 cups)
1/4 cup drained capers, plus 4 teaspoons of liquid from the jar
1 cup pitted black olives
4 cloves garlic
1 small minced shallot
2 teaspoons dried oregano
2 teaspoons dried parsley
Pinch of dried thyme
Pinch of crushed red pepper
3/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
Pulse the garlic cloves and shallots in a food processor until finely chopped. Add the olives, giardiniera, capers in the processor and pulse several times until coarsely chopped. It's ok if there are some big chunks left.
Combine the brines, olive oil and herbs and spices in a medium bowl. Add the chopped vegetables and stir well. Divide into two zip-top bags.
Deli Meats/Cheeses:
1/2 pound sliced fresh mozzarella
1/2 pound sliced capicollo or prosciutto (or spicy ham)
1/2 pound sliced Genoa salami
1/2 pound sliced mortadella (or P&P or bologna)
1/2 pound sliced mild provolone cheese
Divide each type of meat and cheese in half and put them in zip-top bags.
To serve:
for each sandwich, one large round loaf (10"-12") of sourdough or Italian bread, split lengthwise
When you're ready to make the sandwich, thaw all your fixings. Cut the bread in half and scoop out some of the crumb from the top and bottom halves of the bread.
Fill the scooped out part with olive relish.
Cover each half with slices of cheese. Arrange each type of meat in a layer over the cheese. CAREFULLY close the halves together. Wrap in plastic wrap and put this in the fridge for at least a couple of hours, if you have time. To serve, cut into wedges.
FYI...if you want to make your own bread for this sandwich, I made a half recipe of the Pain Ordinaire Carême from Bernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Breads. Pin It
Labels:
"what do i do with",
capers,
capicolla,
cheese,
deli meat,
giardiniera,
hummus,
make-ahead,
mortadella,
mozzarella,
muffaletta,
olives,
provolone,
salami,
sandwich,
sandwiches,
shop-ahead,
substitute
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