chicken

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Our first meal of 2012 was brunch at Papagayo. It was fabulous, and contrary to what  I said about writing about food this year, I did take pictures, and I will be blogging about it. A make-your-own Bloody Mary bar is worth writing about.

Unfortunately, brunch, followed by shopping for new running shoes, followed by grocery shopping, was too much for my illness-worn body, and by the time dinner rolled around on January 1, I was back in bed. At 6:00.

Thank goodness for Sex and the City marathons to pass the time. Oh yeah, and Homeland and Midnight in Paris. Clearly, I had an active weekend. I pretty much did nothing for three days, but I don’t feel at all relaxed. Does that even make sense?

Anyway, I woke up Monday with my 10th day of a sore throat but feeling better. I was determined to make something delicious for dinner, even though my appetite was still missing.

whole chicken

I started by cleaning a whole chicken and popping it into a large tupperware container for brining. On my way home from Ireland, I watched a Jamie Oliver Christmas special on the plane, and I had been thinking about his jerk ham brine ever since. I used some elements of it as inspiration for my own brine.

Brugal

I coated the chicken in salt and let it sit out in the open air while I mixed up its bath for the day.

Ingredients:

About 1 cup of Brugal white rum – I planned to use more, but I think it evaporated because most of the rum was gone.

A ton of spices – fresh black pepper, garlic powder, cayenne pepper, chili powder, paprika, cinnamon, and more salt

spice blend

I added the spice mixture and rum to the chicken, rubbing it on with the back of a spoon and filling the cavity with some of the mix. Then I poured in enough water to cover the chicken, added more salt, some cumin, mixed it all up, and then put the sealed container in the fridge for about six hours.

brine

Before I was ready to get cooking, I set the oven to pre-heat to 375 and got started on some veggies. I found these beautiful sweet peppers at Market Basket, and they were the perfect thing for roasting, along with some yellow onions.

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Once the chicken was out of the brine, I stuffed it with a few pats of butter and let it cook for about an hour and 20 minutes until crispy and golden. In the meantime, I mashed up a bunch of sweet potatoes with SO Delicious coconut milk. I highly recommend.

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The chicken smelled amazing, and the peppers cooked down really nicely. Apologies for the mangled drumstick, I went to check it, and it fell off.

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Yum. I served the chicken atop the sweet potatoes and alongside the peppers and onions, topped with a simple homemade gravy. It was such a satisfying, delicious, and somewhat healthy meal and a great way to kick off the New Year. Lots of leftovers mean lunch for both of us today!

What was the first thing you cooked in 2012?

Tags: brine, Brugal, chicken, dinner, Food, peppers, roast chicken, rum, spices

 

For the past few weeks, I have had Eastern European food on the brain. We stopped into a Slavic café in Galway (which was not serving food at the time), and I have been dreaming of visiting Café Polonia again. This week I decided to make paprika chicken, and while I wanted the creamy comfort of the traditional recipe, my marathon training made me lean towards lightening up and adding nutrition.

To get started, I consulted about a dozen recipes online before deciding on how to make my chicken. While doing so, I also started making slow-cooker sweet and sour purple cabbage as a side. My Lithuanian nana would have been proud! I can share that tangy vegan recipe in another post. Sooo good!

I started off by cooking four chicken breasts in a bit of olive oil until brown on both sides, dusting them with paprika as I went along.

paprika chicken

Once the chicken was browning, I chopped up some carrots, about three cups’ worth, and one large yellow onion and tossed them on top of the chicken. In went two cups of organic chicken stock, and then I left this on the lowest flame possible while I went back to work.

paprika chicken

Every time I went to check on the chicken, I added a few more teaspoons of paprika, ensuring that my chicken was flavorful and colorful.

paprika

paprika chicken

When it was time to serve, I cooked  up a bag of egg noodles (some for dinner and some for leftover lunches), topped the noodles with heaping portions of chicken and the resulting sauce, then stirred in something different than the typical sour cream required for this dish. . . Fage Greek yogurt.

Fage Greek yogurt

To each dish, I added about two tablespoons of yogurt and stirred thoroughly, finishing the dish off with a dash of smoky paprika.

paprika chicken

This dinner was every bit the comfort food I was craving after a long workout and day of work. As an added bonus, it warmed me up in our freezing house! I don’t think the yogurt made much a difference from paprika chicken made with sour cream, and I was excited to have an extra bit of protein and calcium in my dinner. Leftovers were plentiful  and will serve us both for lunch for a few days.

Have you healthifed any traditionally heavy recipes lately?

Tags: chicken, dinner, Food, paprika, recipe

Meet your newest comfort food. I haven’t made a soup I loved this much in a very long time, and ever since I made it last week, I could not wait to share. I’ve made chicken tortilla soup in the past, but I was browsing through the Wine & Food Affair Cook Book (Which is AMAZING!), saw a recipe for chicken tortilla soup that included cornbread mix, and had to add it to my regular old recipe.

jalapenos

I find spicy food to be incredibly comforting, so I started the recipe by chopping 3 large jalapenos, seeds and all. I also chopped half of a white onion and added both to my Le Creuset French oven with some olive oil, letting them sizzle on low for about 10 minutes. Once the onions were softened, I poured in 32 ounces of low sodium veggie stock, Trader Joe’s brand. I love their pre-made stocks and keep a bunch on hand for recipes.

jalapeno and onion

I got the veggie stock bubbling and then poured in the winning ingredient, 1/2 cup of Arrowhead Mills corn bread mix. I was afraid that it would clump, but I quickly whisked it in, and it became one with the stock.

corn bread mix

Next up I poured in about 3/4 cup of my homemade salsa, one of my major addictions. I might make salsa every single day.

homemade salsa

To the soup, I added three chicken breasts chopped into bite-sized pieces, then brought the soup up to a nice bubbling boil, making sure to stir it so that the corn bread mix didn’t sink to the bottom.

chicken tortilla soup

I also tossed in a little bit of cumin and chili powder. I let it all bubble away on a low flame for about 30 minutes until my husband got home, and then served nice big bowls topped with crumbled tortilla chips and cilantro. We later also added scoops of Greek yogurt as topping.

chicken tortilla soup

I love chicken tortilla soup, but the corn bread mix made a huge difference in this. It made the broth super rich and much thicker than a regular soup. It warmed me from head to toe, and I could not wait to chow down on the leftovers for lunch the next day.

I am tempted to cook every single recipe in the Wine & Food Affair book, it is that good.

What types of soup are you looking forward to this season?

Tags: chicken, dinner, recipe, salsa, soup

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