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Fried Asparagus with Miso Dressing


Found on Food 52, I made an adaptation of their adaptation of Nobu Matsuhisa's recipe in his cookbook "Nobu's Vegetarian Cookbook". I used onions instead of leeks and my sauce was thicker and reminiscent (in its consistency) of  Asparagus with Sauce Gribiche. Sauce Gribiche is a classic French sauce - a mayonnaise-based dressing with chopped boiled egg, herbs, and cornichons. I also used only about a 1" depth of oil for frying in a 10" skillet. My cooking compatriot (Lynn) wasn't as delighted with overall dish as I was, she loved the dressing and would also use it on a salad (I agree).


In Chef Matshuhisa's recipe, the leeks are deep-fried until browned, and then the asparagus is fried for a minute or two (depending on its thickness). While the asparagus tasted great, and except for the fact that the asparagus tips get crispy in such a delightful, delicious way, I will - while I will definitely make the other elements as indicated - likely roast the asparagus instead of frying it the next time. I fear neither the technique of frying nor the oil, but I hate dealing with a bunch of oil post-fry. I know you can re-use it but I use oil infrequently in that quantity. Yeah, a little lazy that way, but practical. If you do fry them, you will want to snap off all of the fried tips, dip them in a little dressing and eat them yourself. Just sayin'...

RECIPE: FRIED ASPARAGUS WITH MISO DRESSING

Adapted from Food52 and Nobu Matsuhisa (from "Nobu's Vegetarian Cookbook")
Serves 2-4 as a starter or a side

Ingredients
  • 1/4 cup white miso (or red grain miso - akatsubu miso)
  • 1 small garlic clove, grated
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce
  • 1/2 cup neutral oil, like grapeseed (I used olive oil - not exactly neutral, but you work with what you have, right?)
  • 1/4 cup + 2 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • A little raw agave nectar (optional - I didn't use it)
  • 1 small onion, cut in half along the pole and sliced thin - about 1/4 inch wide
  • Oil for frying (grapeseed, peanut or even olive oil), enough for 1" depth in a pot wide enough to hold the asparagus
  • 9-12 large spears asparagus washed and with the woody part of the bottom stem trimmed
Preparation - Miso Dressing
  • Add the miso, grated garlic, soy sauce and rice vinegar to a bowl. Add a little of the neutral oil and, using a whisk, whisk vigorously. Continue adding the oil in small increments and whisking after each addition until the sauce is emulsified, until you have added all of the oil Alternate: add all of the dressing ingredients listed above, except the neutral oil to a the cup attachment of a stick blender. Add the oil in small increments and blend with the stick blender after each addition until you have added all of the oil. Taste. Add a dash of the raw agave nectar if you wish. Set aside. This can be made ahead and refrigerated, covered, overnight. Remove from the refrigerator 30 minutes to 1 hour before service.

Preparation - Fried Onions and Fried Asparagus
  • Heat the oil for frying to about 300F. Deep fry the prepared onions until they begin to brown. Drain on a wire rack or paper towels. Set aside.
  • Increase the heat to 320F. Deep fry the prepared asparagus spears in the oil for up to 2 minutes. Note: we had pretty thin spears so I fried a 'sacrificial' spear to determine how long we should cook the rest. It came out to a little over a minute. Do not crowd the pan. When done, remove the spears to a rack to drain.
Serve
Arrange the fried asparagus spears on a plate or platter spoon a line of the sauce over the lower half of the spears and one over the upper half of the spears. Pile the browned onions between the two lines of sauce.


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Creamy Feta Mousse with Greek Salads ♥

Creamy Feta Mousse with Greek Salads
Some times, a salad isn't as much about the vegetables as what's served on the side, in this case a creamy-tangy "mousse" made with feta cheese. It's almost an excuse to make an extra-special salad, one that's as beautiful as it is appetizing. That said, the creamy feta spread is one of those little "something I cooked up" that's great to have in the fridge. You'll find ways to use it, I promise. And Weight Watchers? While it tastes ever-so-rich, a whole quarter cup is only 3 points.

My friend Cindy loves the feta mousse at the St. Louis restaurant Remy's Kitchen & Wine Bar, but so far, Chef Lisa Slay is loathe to share a recipe with Special Request, my weekly restaurant-recipe request column for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. That's okay, I respect this chef's choice: some recipes, you just want to keep in the family. Well, maybe not bloggers. When we find a recipe we love, we can't wait to share it ...

So somewhere along the way, Cindy found a recipe in Food & Wine that she thought might be close to the feta mousse at Remy's. It called for feta and heavy cream, she found this too rich. I made it with feta and buttermilk and well, honestly, fell in L-O-V-E.

If you love feta, you'll love this "mousse" – though honestly, I'm not sure that mousse is the right name, for this isn't marshmallow-light. It's got that wonderful feta tang, made smooth, made spreadable, made try-not-to-gobble-it-by-the-spoonful.
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Friday Dinner: Chicken Pot Pie with Savory Crumble Topping


Typically, chicken pot pie comes with a pastry topping that never seems to provide a good ratio of topping to filling once you've served everybody. America's Test Kitchen solved this by creating a recipe that provides a savory, crunchy topping for all. Besides the crispy, tender biscuit-y topping, it's the type of pan in which it's baked that really does the trick. You want a 13" x 9" pan with sides no more than 2 1/2 to 3 inchies high.


I don't think I'm telling tales out of school but if asked, Lynn (my cooking cohort) would be happy with topping, gravy and baby peas. The girl LOVES her baby peas! The topping is comprised of savory biscuit pieces that are first par-baked and then fully browned when the casserole goes into the oven. In fact, all of the filling ingredients are par-cooked and then baked  with the topping to heat everything up and provide the time for the biscuit bits to brown.


We've made this dish three times now. The first time around we made it as written and found it delicious- with two notes: not enough salt and felt it would benefit from some herbs. The second time, it seemed like there wasn't enough filling - and we adjusted the salt and added some thyme (but not enough for us). In between and before we cooked it last Friday, I looked at the recipe. It calls for "3 medium carrots, about 1 cup". Three medium carrots is definitely more than 1 cup so our adaptation includes more salt, the addition of a diced russet potato, herbs and some modification in how the amount of ingredients are defined.


This time was wonderful - although we still think we could increase the amount of herbs. The entire recipe as published calls for 1/2 teaspoon of salt, at one point during cooking the vegetables. It does call for adjusting the seasoning for the gravy to taste but  - and I didn't invent this - it is a conventional recommendation to season as you go.


RECIPE: CHICKEN POT PIE WITH SAVORY CRUMBLE TOPPING

Adapted from: America's Test Kitchen
Serves 6

Filling Ingredients:
  • 1 1/2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts or thighs
  • 4 cups low sodium chicken broth
  • 4-5 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 4 sage leaves
  • about 1/4 cup (loosely packed) whole celery leaves
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 medium onion, cut in a small dice
  • 3 medium carrots washed, (if necessary) peeled and cut in a medium dice
  • 2 small celery ribs, cut in a small dice
  • 1 small russet potato, peeled and cut in a small dice
  • table salt and fresh ground black pepper
  • 10 ounces cremini mushrooms, trim the very bottom of the stem and slice thin, 1/4 inch
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon tomato paste
  • 5 tablespoons unsalted or salted butter (see head notes)
  • 1/2 cup + 1 tablespoon unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • 1 tablespoon
  • 4 tablespoons minced fresh parsley leaves (reserve 1 tablespoon for garnish)
  • 3/4 cup frozen baby peas
Savory Crumble Topping Ingredients:
  • 2 cups (10 ounces) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 3/4 teaspoon table salt
  • 1/2 - 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 1/8 teaspoon cayenne (optional)
  • 6 tablespoons butter cut into 1/2" cubes and chilled
  • 1 ounce Parmesan cheese, finely grated with a microplane grater (about 1/2 cup)
  • 3/4 cup + 2 tablespoons heavy cream, chilled
Preparation:
  • Chicken: add the chicken breasts, thyme sprigs, sage leaves, celery leaves and the broth to a large dutch oven and simmer (4-5 quarts) over medium heat. Simmer for 8-12 minutes until the chicken is just cooked (Internal temperature: 165F). Remove the cooked chicken to a large bowl. Remove the thyme sprigs, sage leaves and celery leaves. Pour the broth into a liquid measuring cup or a 1.5-2 quart bowl and reserve. Adjust  your oven's rack to the upper-middle and pre-heat to 450F.
  • Topping:  In a 3 quart (or larger) bowl, combine flour, baking powder, table salt and (optional) cayenne pepper. Whisk to combine. Sprinkle the chilled butter pieces over the flour and using the whisk to stir the butter cubes into the flour, coating them. Use your fingers to rub the butter into the flour until the mixture looks like very coarse cornmeal - it's okay (and even better) if it doesn't look exactly like cornmeal - a few rogue larger bits are okay. Stir in the grated Parmesan. Add the cream and stir until just combined. Using your hands, fold the dough over a couple of times to pick up the flour at the bottom of the bowl but don't be afraid to leave a few teaspoons in the bottom of the bowl. Without squishing the dough, break off clumps that are between 1/2 - 3/4" each on to a rimmed baking sheet. Back until the edges are just golden and the tops are still beige - about 10-12 minutes. Set aside.
  • Filling:
    • Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in the empty dutch oven over medium heat until the oil shimmers. Add the onions, carrot, celery, and diced potato and 1/2 teaspoon table salt all at once and stir to coat with oil. Reduce the head to medium-low, cover and cook stirring every couple of minutes until just tender, about 5 - 7 minutes. While the vegetables are cooking, cut the chicken breasts into 1/2 - 3/4" cubes. Transfer the vegetables to a bowl with the cubed chicken and set aside.
    • In the emptied dutch oven, heat the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add the mushrooms, sprinkle a medium pinch of salt over the mushrooms and stir to incorporate. adjust the heat to medium. Cover and cook, stirring every couple of minutes for about 5 minutes. Uncover the dutch oven and stir-in the soy sauce and tomato paste. Increase the heat to medium-high and cook, stirring about every minute until the liquid has evaporated and the mushrooms are browned again, about 5 minutes. Transfer the mushrooms to the bowl with the chicken and vegetables. Set aside.
    • Heat the butter in the dutch oven over medium heat. When the foaming subsides, add the flour and, using a whisk, combine. Cook the roux for 1 minute. Slowly whisk-in the the reserved chicken broth and milk. Bring to a simmer, scraping the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon to loosen any fond (browned bits). Continue to simmer until the sauce has thickened, about 2-3 minutes. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Remove from heat and stir-in the lemon juice and 3 tablespoons of the parsley.
    • Stir the chicken-vegetable-mushroom mixture and the peas into the sauce. Pour this mixture into a 13 x 9" baking dish or casserole of similar size - not too deep, no more than 3" Scatter the crumble topping evenly over the filling. Bake on a rimmed baking sheet until the filling bubbles and the topping is nicely browned - 12 to 15 minutes. Serve and sprinkle each serving with some of the reserved parsley.
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Farmers Market Quiche with Crispy Potato Crust ♥

Farmers Market Quiche with Crispy Potato Crust
A great quiche that's packed with bits of a variety of fresh summer vegetables, whatever's on hand. The eggs are sweetened with fresh corn, the quiche's crust is thin layers of potato, really good and crispy like good hashed browns. For Weight Watchers, the potato crust adds just 1 point to the quiche, versus 4 or 5 points for a typical pie crust.

Okay, okay, I get it, I finally get it! It really does take extra diligence to manage the constant arrival of new vegetables from a CSA. Week in, week out, it gets hard to keep up. At the end of the week, with another box due too soon, you don't want to still have last week's vegetables hanging around. So this summer I'm extra-keen on recipes that use up bits and pieces of vegetables since often, there's not enough of any one vegetable in each week's delivery to really "cook" on its own, just a small bag of green beans here, a smaller bag of broccoli there.

My master recipe for Homemade Vegetable Soup is a godsend, so is Summer Vegetable Stew and Finnish Summer Soup. But I'm looking for other recipes too, everyday healthy recipes. Like quiche!

"Like quiche, Alanna?" I imagine you questioning. "When did quiche get fast and healthy?" And you are exactly right, a traditional pastry crust adds a time element and calorie addition that makes quiche too time-consuming and too rich for every day. This Crustless Quiche is excellent, but y'know, some times you miss having a quiche crust!

Enter the potato crust. It's healthy – and uses the potatoes which have been in the last two CSA deliveries!
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Friday Dinner: Grilled Steak, Potatoes and Salad with Corn, Tomatoes and Avocadoes

Nothing new or difficult here (except that I added the final butter to the sauce too soon so it was a little 'broken' by the time we served), but just want to memorialize a fun dinner where everything tasted delicious from appetizers through the salad course.

APPETIZER:
Acme baguette slices spread with Heidi Swanson's, "Parmesan Cheese Spread" (left side of the plate) or misozuke tofu (right side of the plate) and garnished with sun dried tomato, quick preserved lemon, roasted red pepper, confit garlic and caper relish - this recipe is at the bottom of the post. It is delicious and could top anything from a baguette to fish or chicken.

 MAIN COURSE
Grilled steak with Marchand du Vin sauce, No-Name Potatoes garnished with creme fraiche. However you cook your steak, take it out of the refrigerator at least 30 (I prefer 60) minutes before  cooking. After patting them dry, we generously season with salt shortly before they go onto the grill or into a smoking hot pan on the stove top. Lynn reigns as the steak grilling chef supreme - she has the mojo.


SALAD
Baby greens with grilled corn, cherry tomatoes, avocado and red onion, dressed in a red-wine vinaigrette.

RECIPE: SUN DRIED TOMATO, QUICK PRESERVED LEMON, ROASTED RED PEPPER, CONFIT GARLIC AND CAPER SPREAD

 + Quick 'Preserved' Lemons
 + Confit Garlic


SUN DRIED TOMATO, PRESERVED LEMON, ROASTED RED PEPPER, CONFIT GARLIC and CAPER SPREAD
Makes: about 1 cup

If you use sun dried tomatoes preserved in oil, drain them well. If you used, as I did, sun dried tomatoes that are not preserved in oil, reconstitute them as you would dried mushrooms in nearly boiling water until they are softened, but not completely mushy - about 15 minutes, then drain and discard the water. This is best made a few hours or a day in advance.

Storage: This will keep in the refrigerator in an airtight container for 3-4 days.

Ingredients:
  • 1/3 cup reconstituted (see above) or well-drained sun dried tomatoes packed in oil and cut in a large dice
  • 1/3 cup preserved or quick 'preserved' lemon (see below), cut in a large dice
  • 1 clove garlic confit (see recipe below)
  • 1/2 prepared (and drained, if canned, roasted red pepper, cut in a large dice
  • 1 tablespoon small (non-pareil) capers
  • Small pinch cayenne pepper (optional)
  • Lemon juice
  • Extra virgin olive oil
  • Kosher salt
  • Fresh ground black pepper
Preparation:
On a cutting board, combine and roughly chop the reconstituted sun dried tomatoes, preserved lemon, garlic confit, roasted red pepper and capers until the pieces are a little smaller than 1/4" - not so much that it becomes a paste. Add the chopped mixture, and any juice to a bowl and add the optional pinch of cayenne pepper and mix. Add a couple of grinds of freshly ground black pepper. Combine well and taste. Add a squeeze of fresh lemon and if you think it's necessary (and you didn't use sun dried tomatoes packed in oil) a splash of olive oil and stir to mix everything together. Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate.  Remove from the refrigerator 30-ish minutes before you're ready to serve or use.

QUICK PRESERVED LEMON


For this I used Mark Bittman's  Quick 'Preserved' Lemons recipe. Not a true preserved lemon, but a quick lemon pickle, when you've got a hankering or need them for a recipe. Three hours is all you need. I add them to sauteed greens, salads, baked chicken dishes, stews and sometimes I just dip a spoon into the jar for a taste of lemony, salty, spicy goodness.

Makes: up to 1 8-ounce jar

Ingredients:
  • Two lemons, thoroughly washed + additional juice, if necessary.
  • 2 teaspoons sugar
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • Optional:
    • 4 whole cloves
    • 1 teaspoon black peppercorns, just slightly cracked with the bottom of a heavy skillet
    • 1 bay leaf (2 if small)
    • 1/2 inch piece of cinnamon
    • 1/4 teaspoons hot pepper flakes
 Equipment:
  • 1 8-ounce glass canning jar fresh out of the dishwasher (completely dry) or sterilized as you would for canning.  

Preparation:
Dice the thoroughly washed lemons, removing the seeds. Put the lemons and their juice in a bowl and sprinkle with the salt and sugar. If you are adding any of the optional ingredients, add them to the bowl now and toss well.

Transfer the mixture to the prepared canning jar, cover and let the mixture sit for at least 3 hours at room temperature, shaking periodically. Serve, use in a recipe or refrigerate for up to  1 week.
GARLIC CONFIT

Garlic confit is a delicious treat to keep in your 'refrigerator pantry' and it's easy to make. To 'confit' something, it just means you've submerged it in a substance for flavor or preservation.The verb confire - to preserve, was first used in Medieval France to describe fruits cooked and preserved in sugar (Reference: Wikipedia).

Mash and slip some of the cloves under chicken skin before roasting, mix it in your mashed potatoes, mash with butter (or the olive oil in which you made it) and spread it on a toasted baguette slice - or any place where you would use roasted garlic. The world is your garlic clove.

 ** FOOD SAFETY NOTE** 
FOR ANY INFUSED-OIL OR GARLIC CONFIT PREPARATION

Now don't freak out - but you must follow these rules for ANY infused oil preparation, including garlic confit. I make garlic confit in small batches - about 24 cloves garlic at a time and write the date I made it on a piece of painter's tape in Sharpie and stick it on the jar before it goes into the refrigerator. In 1989 the FDA mandated the addition of an acidifying agent to all commercial infused oil, or garlic-in-oil preparations and ordered the removal of products from store shelves that did not contain such an agent.
  • Wash all produce before adding it to an oil infusion or confit (homemade preparations)
  • Add an acidifying agent such as lemon juice or vinegar to the recipe as it is being prepared: 1 tablespoon per cup of oil (homemade preparations)
  • Store in an airtight container
  • Keep oil infusions or garlic confit refrigerated. Always. Olive oil generally thickens if refrigerated but that's not a bad thing. (homemade or commercial preparations)
  • Use a clean spoon or tongs to remove items from a confit (homemade or commercial preparations).
  • In the case of garlic confit, top off the jar with olive oil if any of the garlic is exposed. (homemade or commercial preparations)
  • Wipe the rim and lid with a clean paper towel after removing cloves from a garlic confit
  • Discard if the oil becomes cloudy, there are gas bubbles or it just doesn't smell right (homemade or commercial preparations)
  • When in doubt, throw it out. (homemade or commercial preparations)
(Reference: Colorado State University Extension)

Ingredients:
  • 1 cup olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice or vinegar
  • 24 fresh garlic cloves, peeled - they should all be about the same size
Equipment:
  • 1 8-ounce glass canning jar fresh out of the dishwasher (completely dry) or sterilized as you would for canning.  
Preparation:
 In a small saucepan, heat the olive oil over medium-low. Add the garlic cloves and vinegar and cook at a very very, low heat for 40 minutes and up to one hour - checking frequently to make sure they are not browning. Remove any browned cloves and discard. Allow the garlic and olive mixture to cool in the pan for just a few minutes. Using a clean spoon, add the garlic cloves to the prepared jar and then pour the oil over to cover. Keep refrigerated. Use a clean spoon to remove the cloves from the jar and top off with olive oil to ensure that the cloves are always submerged, if necessary.

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The Miracle of Squash Blossoms

The Miracle of Squash Blossoms
"I blog, therefore I learn. I learn, therefore I blog." That's been my yin-yang mantra here at A Veggie Venture since 2005, a long time ago in blogging years! So hey, let's learn about squash blossoms, shall we? Now I'm not the gardener, I'm not the farmgirl, this is just me, a curious cook, learning a little bit more about the plants emerging from the garden – learn with me and together we'll never take a "simple" zucchini for granted again!

PHOTO COLLAGE [Top] Two zucchini, the "blossom" ends on the left, the "stem ends" on the right. [Left] Squash blossoms hidden amid the plant's leaves. [Right] Two bees collecting nectar from a male zucchini flower, at the same time gathering pollen.

MALES & FEMALES Squash plants flower with boy squash blossoms and girl squash blossoms. Squash plants produce more boys than girls but just like in humans, it's the girls who bear the "babies" - the fruit of the plant, what we cooks call zucchini and other kinds of squash. (Aha! This actually makes the Famous Zucchini Baby even more funny than it already is! That shot is from Iron Stef, a fellow St. Louis food blogger. From now on, for simplicity, I'm going to call that fruit, that baby, "zucchini".)
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Friday Dinner: Coq Au Vin - Chicken Stew, to You


In the days of Yore (you know "Yore", it was before your parents' parents were born), when your rooster was too old to chase the hens, you cooked it. Old roosters make for a difficult chew so roasting was out of the question. Tough meat = braise, so maybe you dumped the dregs of your wine barrel (depending on where you lived, the wine might be white or red), some onions and mushrooms (or celeraic or carrots) cooked in the rendered lard of a hunk of salt pork into the pot and cooked Monsieur le Rooster (a 'coq') having been separated into his component parts, until the meat was edible and, "mon Dieu!", you have a sauce. Serve some chicken with a ladle of sauce on top, break off a hunk of bread to sop up the sauce and you have a tasty, filling meal.


One of the first published recipes for coq au vin was in Edmond Richardin's, "La Cuisine Française: L'art du Bien Manger" where he calls for mushrooms AND truffles, in 1906. I'd wager that as long as there has been wine, folks have used it to cook a hearty meat stew, using whatever vegetables were handy to extend the dish as well as for flavor. The preparation for coq au vin is similar to boeuf bourguignon. To thicken a stew, if flour wasn't in your pantry, you used blood from the former Monsieur le Rooster, at the end of cooking.


Nigel Slater wrote, "I once worked in a restaurant that, at the time, was considered to be the best in the land. At least several of the guides thought so. The chef patron had learned to make this dish in France, he understood its roots. We made coq au vin every week (believe me when I say that this is one of those dishes that improves, rather than deteriorates, after a few days in the fridge). I have never made it better than I did under his beady eye, but then we made it with the dregs of the glasses and bottles from the customers' tables. So whether it was the quality of the local birds, the excellent wines or that soupçon of saliva from each glass that made the difference I will never know."


Modern recipes can be tortured and time consuming. We have made it previously, using Julia Child's recipe - actually two recipes: one a "master" recipe for a ragout of chicken and onions in red wine, and the recipe for coq au vin. Not too long ago, we tried the version from America's Test Kitchen, "Modern Coq au Vin" and it was delicious.  The ATK recipe takes less time, but for us, it provided all of the flavor components from a traditional rendition and suits another Nigel Slater quote, "The sort of good-natured food that will fit in with us rather than us having to plan our day around it; the sort to eat off plain white plates on a paper tablecloth. The sort whose juices you mop up with bread and a plain, garlic-scented salad. In other words, a sound recipe that makes all the right noises." Mr. Slater's Coq au Vin recipe can be found here and if I ever run across an old rooster, that's the one I'll use.

We served our coq au vin with a spinach salad with raisin bread croutons, egg, toasted pecans, red onion and avocado and a red wine vinaigrette. Oh yeah, and bacon.
 RECIPES: MODERN (AND QUICKER) COQ au VIN
from: America's Test Kitchen, "Modern Coq au Vin"
Serves 4-6

We used a Pinot Noir but a Cote du Rhone or a Rhône Valley Grenache will work well in this recipe.The ATK recipe calls for boneless, skinless chicken thighs but we found that boneless, skinless chicken breasts work just fine. This time we used both. We also used frozen pearl onions. I always have problems finding frozen pearl onions and when I do I buy several bags. We served ours over campanelle noodles, but mashed potatoes, smashed, roasted small or new potatoes or polenta would work just as well. If you do serve with noodles, have a baguette (or bread) slice on hand to mop up any left-over juice on your plate.

Ingredients:
  • 1 bottle red wine (see recipe head notes), reserving 1 tablespoon for later use
  • 2 cups low-sodium chicken broth or hearty stock
  • 10 sprigs fresh parsley leaves and stems + 4 tablespoons minced parsley leaves.
  • 2 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 4 ounces bacon, thick-cut and cut crosswise into 1/4" pieces
  • 2.5 pounds of boneless, skinless chicken pieces, whole.
  • salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 5 tablespoons butter
  • 24 frozen pearl onions, thawed, drained and dried.
  • 8 ounces cremini mushrooms, cleaned, stems trimmed and quartered
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tablespoon tomato paste
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour.
Preparation:

Remove the chicken pieces from the refrigerator 30 minutes before you start your preparation and lay them on a tray.
In a 2-quart saucepan add the wine (save 1 tablespoon for later use), chicken broth, parsley, thyme and bay to a simmer over medium-high heat and simmer until reduced to 3 cups and remove  and discard the herbs.

In a heavy-bottom dutch oven (5 quarts or larger), heat on medium for several minutes and add the bacon pieces. cook until browned. Transfer the bacon pieces using a slotted spoon to paper towels to drain. Pour off the bacon fat and reserve two tablespoons in a bowl but leave the fond (browned bits) from the cooked bacon on the bottom surface.

Pat each of the chicken pieces with a paper towel to dry them off and season lightly with salt and pepper. Add back 1 tablespoon of the reserved bacon fat to the dutch oven and adjust the heat to medium-high until it's just smoking. Add one-half of the chicken pieces (don't crowd the pan) and cook on each side until lightly browned. This takes about 2-minutes per side. You're not looking for an overall browning - that will cook the chicken pieces too much. Remove the chicken pieces to a plate and add the second reserved tablespoon of bacon fat to the pot. Cook the second batch and remove to the plate.

Add three tablespoons butter in the empty dutch oven. When the foaming has subsided, add the pearl onions and mushroom to the pan. Stir once to coat and then stir every couple of minute until they are lightly browned - somewhere up to 8 minutes. Reduce the heat to medium. Add the garlic and cook for about 30 seconds while stirring. Add the tomato paste and flour together. Stir this along with the mushrooms and onions until well combined, 1 to 2 minutes.

Add the reduced wine mixture and, using a wooden spoon or paddle, scrape the bottom of the  pot until it feels smooth. Return the chicken pieces, any accumulated juices and the cooked bacon pieces to the dutch oven. Increase heat to high and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and cover the pot so that the mixture is simmering. Cook for 10 minutes and turn the chicken pieces, if they are not completely submerged. Check the chicken after 20 minutes. Thighs and breasts are cooked when the internal temperature is 165. When done, remove the chicken pieces to a large platter or bowl and tent loosely with foil.

Bring the sauce in the uncovered dutch oven to high until it boils, decrease until the liquid is at a strong simmer and reduce until the mixture is thick and glossy - about 3 cups.Turn off the heat and stir in the remaining two tablespoons of chilled butter, one tablespoon at a time and then add the 1 tablespoon of reserved wine and 2 tablespoons of the minced parsley and stir to incorporate. Taste and season with additional salt and freshly ground pepper to taste. Set the heat on the lowest possible heat and return the chicken pieces to the pot to re-warm. Serve immediately and garnish each serving with additional minced parsley.
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