Cajun Jambalaya

Nothing says Autumn like hearty soups and stews… and here in SoCal, the temperature is often still in triple digits at the end of October (not very Fall-like).  The solution?  A spicy, hearty stew that’s tasty all the time: Cajun Jambalaya!  The observant chef will notice that this dish bears a striking resemblance to paella, but somewhat simpler and with different ingredients.

Note:  This dish also works well served over pasta.  While not traditional, it’s quite delicious.  Simply leave out the rice and cook the pasta of your choice according to package directions.

Time: 60 minutes
Level: Easy/Intermediate
Cost: About $4-6 per plate
Serves: 6-8

Ingredients

  1. 1 TBSP olive oil
  2. 2 TBSP butter, divided
  3. 1 TBSP Creole Seasoning (I just use Emeril Lagasse’s version, found here
  4. 2-3 chicken breasts, cubed
  5. 12oz – 1lb Andouille sausage, sliced into 1/4 inch thick rounds
  6. 1/2 lb medium shrimp, peeled and deveined (optional)
  7. 1 large Spanish (or yellow) onion, diced (see How to Chop an Onion to streamline this process)
  8. 1 large green bell pepper, diced
  9. Roughly 1.5 – 2 cups celery, chopped
  10. 4-5 cloves garlic, finely minced
  11. 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  12. 1 tsp hot sauce (any kind will do depending on your flavor preference and heat tolerance)
  13. 1 14oz can petite diced tomatoes, drained
  14. 4 cups chicken stock
  15. 2 cups white rice

Instructions

Mix about 1/2 TBSP creole seasoning with chicken in one bowl, and in another bowl mix the remaining 1/2 TBSP with the shrimp.  Mix well.  Cover, and reserve in refrigerator.

Heat a medium saute pan or large skillet over medium high heat.  Add 1 TBSP butter and 1 TBSP olive oil to the pan.  When butter is melted, add sausage and brown nicely on all sides, 5-7 minutes.  Remove with slotted spoon and reserve.

In the same pan, add chicken.  Brown nicely all around.  Remove with slotted spoon and reserve.

Reduce heat to medium and add remaining 1 TBSP butter.  Once butter is melted, add onion bell pepper and celery.  Sauté, stirring constantly, until very fragrant and onions are mostly translucent, about 3 minutes.  Add garlic and sauté until fragrant, 1-2 more minutes.   Add hot sauce, Worcestershire sauce and canned tomatoes.  Cook all these ingredients together for about another 7 minutes stirring constantly to ensure nothing burns or gets stuck to the bottom of the pan.

Add rice and continue to stir into mixture for about 1 minute.  Add the chicken stock and bring to a boil, scraping up any brown bits stuck to the bottom of the pan.  Add chicken, sausage and any drippings back into the pan and give everything a good stir.  This is the last time you’ll stir it.

Cover, and reduce heat to a low simmer, about 30 minutes until the rice has filled the pan and is no longer crunchy.  (You can test the doneness of the rice by removing a grain or two with a spoon – if it’s crunchy but all the liquid has absorbed, add about 2 TBSP of water, give everything a good shake, recover the pan and wait another 5 minutes or so.  Repeat this process until rice is cooked, if neccessary).

Once the rice is cooked and has reached the desired consistency, tuck the shrimp into the mixture and cook, covered for about 5 – 7 minutes, until they are a nice orange color and no longer translucent.

Serve in bowls with crusty bread.  Enjoy!

 

Coq Au Riesling (Coq Au Vin Blanc)

A one-pot wonder ready in less than an hour, this dish is a riff on the classic French dish Coq Au Vin.  It is also a somewhat lighter dish, with a slightly tangy but still rich flavor profile, due in part to the use of Riesling, a white wine, rather than a French red.  Classic Coq Au Vin takes several hours to prepare (or if you follow Julia Child’s Recipe it will take you all day… still worth trying though!), but this dish should take you considerably less time.

Time: Around 60 minutes
Level:  Advanced
Cost: About $8 per plate
Serves: 4- 6

Ingredients:

  1. 8-10oz bacon, diced into lardons
  2. 4 chicken breasts, halved crosswise (or 8 chicken thighs, or 2 halved breasts and 4 thighs)
  3. 2 TBSP olive oil, divided
  4. 1-2 TBSP butter (or clarified butter, also known as ghee)
  5. 6 TBSP flour
  6. Salt and Pepper
  7. 2 TSP paprika
  8. 3 shallots, diced (see how to chop an onion, this trick works for shallots too!)
  9. 3-4 garlic cloves, minced
  10. 8oz Cremini or Bella brown mushrooms, halved or quartered, depending on their size
  11. Optional: 1/4 cup brandy, for flambé
  12. 2 cups dry or off-dry Riesling white wine (in a pinch, any dry white will do, and cheap is fine as long as you’d drink it).
  13. 1 cup decent, low sodium chicken broth
  14. 1 cup heavy cream
  15. 1 bunch chopped parsley

Instructions

Mix flour, salt and pepper, and paprika in a medium bowl and whisk together.  You’ll be using this to dredge the chicken in a minute.

In a large, heavy bottomed skillet, heat 1 TBSP olive oil over medium-high heat.  Add the bacon lardons and sauté until lightly browned but not crispy, and some of the fat has rendered.

Add shallots and sauté until mostly translucent.  Add garlic and sauté until fragrant, 1-2 more minutes.

Don’t burn the shallots and the garlic!  If you’re not sure if the pan is too hot, before dumping all the shallots into the pan you can test for temperature by tossing in one little piece of shallot.  If it doesn’t react much, it’s probably a good temperature.  However, if it crackles loudly, or if hot fat spatters everywhere, or if it jumps out of the pan, it’s too hot.  Reduce the temperature before adding in the rest of the shallots and garlic.

Sauté shallots, garlic and lardons until shallots are somewhat translucent and garlic is very fragrant, about 3-5 minutes.

Remove lardons, shallots and garlic with a slotted spoon and reserve in a medium bowl, leaving the fat behind in the pan.

Dredge chicken pieces in flour mixture.  Shake off the excess and place each piece into the hot pan with the bacon fat.  Brown chicken on all sides, remove and reserve.

You may need to work in batches; that’s okay – overcrowding the pan will reduce the overall temperature of the pan and make it harder to brown the chicken.  You may need to add about 1 TBSP of fat – either butter or olive oil – between batches; that’s okay too.  Also, note that the chicken doesn’t need to be cooked through at this point – it will finish cooking in the sauce at the end.

Once the chicken has been browned, removed from the pan and reserved, you should still have at least 1 TBSP of fat in the pan.  If you don’t, add 1 TBSP of butter and melt over medium heat.

Add mushrooms and continue to sauté over medium-high heat until they have absorbed most of the fat and begin to caramelize just a bit.

Optional Step*:  Add brandy (or whatever liquor you’re using) and flambe.

You can use a match or grill lighter to do this.  Simply add the liquor and then ignite your flame and hold it OVER the pan.  The vapors will ignite generating an impressive flame.  Don’t freak out!  Simply remove the pan from the heat and shake vigorously back and forth until the flames subside.  For safety reasons, I’d recommend keeping a lid nearby to extinguish any flames, should they become out of control, although this is unlikely to happen.  If this step causes you any trouble and you don’t get flames, don’t worry… just cook everything down for a minute or two until the raw alcohol has evaporated.

Add the Riesling wine and chicken stock to deglaze the pan.  Continue to stir with a wooden spoon and scrape up any brown bits stuck to the bottom of the pan (this stuff is called fond and it’s delicious).  Bring to a boil and return chicken and any drippings to the pan. 

 

Add reserved shallots, bacon and garlic back to the pan.

Partially cover, lower heat to a simmer, and allow to cook for about 45 minutes, keeping an eye on the liquid level of the pan – you don’t want it to reduce too much.

After about 45 minutes, the chicken will be cooked through and very tender, and the liquid will have reduced somewhat.  Remove chicken (again) from the pan and stir in the heavy cream.  Reduce by 25-30%, stirring often, until sauce is desired level of thickness.  Return chicken to pan (again) and cook for 2 minutes more.  Sprinkle with chopped parsley.

Serve over mashed potatoes, egg noodles, or with a loaf rustic french bread.  Anything to soak up that sauce!

_________

*My original post omitted this step.  It still will work great without it.  However, this step adds a depth of flavor that is quite enjoyable.  In either case, don’t worry about it too much!

Penne with Chicken, Sausage and Sprouts

Looking for quick, easy and delicious one pot meal that will fill your stomach on a weeknight? Here you go!

Time: 60 – 90 Minutes
Level: Easy
Cost: $6-8/plate
Serves: 4-6

Ingredients:

  • 2 lbs boneless, skinless chicken breasts, chunked into roughly 1 – 1.5 inch cubes
  • 12 oz – 1 lb smoked sausage (try Cajun Andouille for a little kick), sliced into 1/4 inch thick ‘coins’
  • 1lb Brussels sprouts, lose leaves removed, and halved.
  • 1/3 cup Parmesan cheese (plus more for serving, if desired… who am I kidding, it’s desired).
  • 6 cloves garlic, minced, divided (i.e., two piles of minced garlic of roughly 3 cloves each)
  • 1 small shallot, minced
  • 2 TBSP powdered, dried oregano
  • 1 TBSP sweet paprika
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 1 cup chicken broth
  • Olive Oil

Prep

  1. Bring 4-5 quarts of water to a boil in a large pot, for pasta.  Leave it simmering with a lid on so it’s ready to go when you are.
  2. Preheat oven to 400F
  3. Dice chicken into cubes.  In a large bowl, using your hands, mix cubed chicken well with drizzle of olive oil, oregano, paprika and salt and pepper.  Set aside.
  4. Slice sausage and set aside in a separate bowl.
  5. Toss sprouts in dash of olive oil,  1/2 of minced garlic and Parmesan cheese.  Arrange in a single layer on a lined baking sheet.
  6. Combine white wine and chicken broth in a convenient container, set aside.

Cook

  1. On a lined baking sheet, roast sprouts in a single layer in 400F oven for 20 minutes total, stirring them around at the half-way point to ensure even cooking and browning.
  2. Meanwhile, in a large skillet or dutch oven, brown sausage over medium-high heat in 1 TBSP olive oil.  Once most of the (delicious) fat is rendered, remove sausage with a slotted spoon and reserve.
  3. Brown the chicken on all sides in the same pan.
  4. Add sausage back into the pan, along with white wine, chicken broth, minced shallot and remaining garlic.   Bring to a boil, and then simmer, allowing the liquid to reduce by about half.
  5. While mixture is reducing, cook penne pasta according to package directions, about 12 minutes.
  6. In the last two minutes, add sprouts to the chicken-sausage mixture and stir well.
  7. Serve over penne pasta.

The Best Grilled Chicken

Chicken – especially chicken breast – is one of those things that tends to strike fear into the heart of every enthusiastic backyard griller.  Grilled chicken though, should be moist and delicious and a simple alternative to burgers and dogs.  Never fear, this fool-proof recipe can take as little as 45 minutes to prepare start to finish, and is a guaranteed crowd pleaser.

Time: 60 – 90 Minutes
Level: Easy
Cost: $6-8/plate
Serves: 4-6

Ingredients

  • 6 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
  • 4 chicken drumsticks (if you have a few people who like dark meat)
  • 2 cups plain Greek Yogurt (I prefer the original stuff, not the low fat stuff)
  • Juice of 2 lemons
  • 2 TBSP olive oil
  • Pinch saffron or saffron salt (Trader Joe’s sells a decent little jar of Saffron for about 6 bucks)
  • 1 TBSP Dijon mustard (not that yellow crap)
  • 3-4 cloves fresh garlic, minced
  • bunch fresh cilantro

Instructions

Whisk all ingredients except chicken and cilantro in a large bowl until well combined.  Marinate chicken in mixture for at least 20 minutes, or up to 1 hour.  (You can do this by dumping the chicken in a freezer bag with the marinade, tossing it in the bowl with the marinade, etc – whatever works.  The key is making sure the chicken is well coated and gets to sit with the acidity of the marinade for a minimum of 20 minutes).

Set up grill for 2-zone cooking, shooting for 400F at grate-level on the hot side.  Lightly oil grill grates to ensure chicken doesn’t stick (if it does, it isn’t the end of the world – it just means you didn’t wait long enough before trying to flip it).  Using tongs, remove chicken from marinade, shaking of the excess, and grill on the hot side of the grill until nicely charred, 7-10 minutes (discard excess marinade).  Flip chicken with tongs and repeat on the other side.  Transfer chicken to cool side of grill and allow to cook through until an instant-read thermometer registers 155F – 160F for white meat chicken, or, for dark meat chicken, shoot for 165F- 170F – if you’re doing both, give the dark meat a 10 minute head start.  Remove chicken from grill, cover with foil, and allow to rest for 10 minutes.  While chicken is resting, finely chop cilantro.  Sprinkle chopped cilantro over chicken and serve.

I like to serve this dish Mediterranean style with rice pilaf, pita bread, and hummus on the side.

Note:  The yogurt marinade is a little messy on the grill.  For this recipe in particular, I recommend leaving the grill on high or medium high while the chicken is resting to allow the excess to burn off, and then scraping down the grill grates while they are still hot.

BBQ Chicken Quarters with ‘Bama White Sauce

Served with an authentic but lesser-known Alabama White Sauce, this BBQ chicken is succulent and tender on the inside with crispy, bite through skin on the outside.  Daintily eat with knife and fork, or gnaw off the bone caveman style.  Your choice.

Time: 120 Minutes
Level: Intermediate
Cost: $2-3/plate (chicken only and sauce only)
Serves: 4-6

 

I think one of the reasons people don’t like to eat chicken skin (my wife being one of these people; she pulls it off no matter what) is the general frustration associated with it.  There’s nothing worse than biting into a nice piece of BBQ chicken and having all the skin pull off all at once, dangling unattractively out of your mouth and covering your chin.  You know what I’m talking about.  This leaves eaters one of two choices:  Remove the skin and forget about eating it, or eat it by itself.

There is, however, a third option – bite through skin.  You get just want you want, nothing more, nothing less; this is the Holy Grail of BBQ Chicken – so much so, in fact, that professional competition BBQ teams will often go to great lengths to achieve it, using time consuming techniques including, but not limited to, all kinds of crazy things, like removing it, cooking it separately, and putting it back on.  Like I said, crazy.  Also unnecessary if you know the one trick in this post.

The secret to achieving bite-through skin is simply doing a reverse sear and then, during the searing process, making sure the skin has good contact with the cooking surface.  Chicken skin has a lot of fat in it, and underneath it, which is why if you sear first (especially on a BBQ grill) it’s all just going to cause flare-ups and catch fire before anything else has even had the chance to warm up.  What you’ve got to do is render 99% of the fat out of the meat before searing it, and at the last minute expose the chicken skin side down to a hot surface.  This can be done on the grill, or in the kitchen; both techniques are included here.

Ingredients

For the Chicken

  • 6-8 chicken quarters, trimmed of excess fat and skin
  • 2 TBSP (Tablespoons) olive oil
  • Classic BBQ Rub, to taste (I usually use 3-4 TBSP, click for the recipe)

For the Sauce*

  • 3/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 1/3 cup apple cider vinegar
  • Juice of 1 Lemon
  • 1/4 cup apple juice
  • 1 TBSP granulated garlic
  • 2 TBSP prepared horseradish
  • 1 TBSP coarsely ground black pepper
  • 1/2 – 1 TBSP Dijon mustard (not that yellow crap)
  • 1/4 TSP (teaspoon) Kosher salt
  • Ground cayenne pepper, just a dusting

Special Equipment

  • Bricks or a heavy cast iron griddle or skillet, for pressing chicken
  • Grill (you can do this in the kitchen, see bottom of post)
  • Disposable aluminum drip pan
  • Oven thermometer
  • Decent instant-read thermometer

How To: On the Grill

If using charcoal, build a 2-zone fire, banking the coals all to one side.  If using gas, light one or two burners only.   Toss a few wood chunks (I prefer a mixture of apple and pecan, no need to soak them first) onto the coals or into a smoker box.   Underneath the grill grates, on the cool side of the grill, place a disposable baking tray filled 1/2 – 3/4 of an inch of water; remember, a lot of fat is going to render so we want something to catch it in and cool it off immediately.  I typically remove one of the grill grates during 2-zone cooking (which, for me, is most of the time) so that I can slide the meat from one side of the grill to the other (cool to hot) without actually having to pick it up and move it around too much.

Shoot for a temperature of 275F – 300F at grate level (invest in an oven thermometer to be sure you’ve got an accurate read; even if you have a thermometer built into your grill, chances are it’s off by as much as 50F).

While the grill is coming up to temp, pull your chicken out of the fridge and place in a large mixing bowl with olive oil.  Toss to coat (you need something for the rub to stick to).  Add the Classic BBQ Rub and toss again.  (Alternatively, rub the chicken with olive oil on both sides and then rub the rub onto it, on both sides – tossing is easier).

Place the chicken on the cool side of the grill, skin side up, and cover.  Depending on the temp of your grill and how much chicken you’ve got on there, it could take anywhere between 1-2 hours to hit an internal temp of 160F, so start checking after about an hour or so.  During this time, make the sauce – simply whisk all the ingredients together in a small bowl and refrigerate.

About halfway through the cooking time (when the chicken’s internal temp is about 140F, use an instant read thermometer to test this), pour off a bit of your White Sauce into another container and head out to the grill.  Baste the chicken generously with the sauce and shut the lid.

When the chicken is up to about 160F, most of the fat should be rendered out of it, flip it over, skin side down, place something heavy on top of it to ensure good contact with the grill grates (I use a large cast iron griddle, but you could also use bricks or a heavy skillet – whatever works) and leave it to cook 10 minutes more on the cool side of the grill.  By this time it’s basically safe to eat, so you’re not going to screw anything up – we’re just perfecting the skin.  After about 10 minutes, slide the chicken over to the hot side of the grill and sear for 5 – 10 minutes.  Remove, and place on a serving platter skin side up.  Baste again with sauce.

Serve remaining sauce (the stuff still in the fridge, not what you used to baste) as a dipping sauce, if you like.

How To:  In the Kitchen

If you don’t have access to a grill, you can still make this delicious recipe in the kitchen (I’ve done it this way too, you just miss out a bit on the smokey flavor).  Begin by preheating your oven to 300F.  Fill a disposable aluminum tray with 1 inch water.  Place a cooling rack on top of that.  Place the chicken, skin side up, on the cooling rack and bake until chicken’s internal temp is about 160F.  When it hits the 160F mark, flip it over and plonk something heavy on top and return it to the oven for about 10 minutes.  During this time, heat a cast iron skillet or copper pan to very hot, over high heat.  After the ten minutes skin-side down in the oven, transfer the chicken to the skillet and brown for about 2-3 minutes, skin side down, and set aside.  Work in batches if necessary; don’t overcrowd the chicken quarters in the skillet.

Usually I’ll opt to drink a dry, crisp IPA with this meal, but the other night I drank a fairly robust Cabernet, and that was pretty good too.

Good luck!


*I would be remiss not to credit Amazing Ribs for the sauce recipe. As the author, Meathead, points out, this is just one version of what is an Alabama favorite. I’ve only modified his recipe ever so slightly. To check out his version, click here.  His version is pretty damn good too.