Thread View: rec.food.cooking
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6 total messages
Started by Michel Boucher
Mon, 05 Jan 2004 00:50
Best Chicken (so say all)
Author: Michel Boucher
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 00:50
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 00:50
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Chicken breasts in peanut sauce 3 chicken breasts halves, split lengthwise 1 medium to large red (bell) pepper 1/2 cup smooth or chunky "only peanuts" peanut butter (do NOT use homogenized or pre-sweetened crap or I will hunt you down :-)) plus 1/2 cup water, mixed 1 tablespoon brown sugar or maple syrup or jaggery 1 heaping teaspoon Vietnamese garlic chili sauce 2 tsp. oil 1 largish onion, halved and sliced thin Heat oil in non-stick pot. Brown chicken lightly, remove and sauté onion until starting to caramelize. Return chicken and cover with the peanut butter, sugar and chili sauce. Bring to boil and let simmer, covered, 20-25 minutes. Check once for possible dryness at 15 minutes. Add 1/4 cup water if needed. Add red peppers cut into 1 inch long strips. Finish simmering uncovered for 5 minutes. Serve with rice. Or on rice. Or under rice. -- "I'm the master of low expectations." GWB, aboard Air Force One, 04Jun2003
Re: Best Chicken (so say all)
Author: Blair P. Houghto
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 02:15
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 02:15
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Michel Boucher <alsandorz@rogers.com> wrote: >1/2 cup smooth or chunky "only peanuts" peanut butter (do NOT use >homogenized or pre-sweetened crap or I will hunt you down :-)) plus I wonder how hard it is to make the stuff using a stick-blender. I have a stick blender I don't use nearly enough, and a bag of shell-on goobers left over from baseball season. >1 heaping teaspoon Vietnamese garlic chili sauce There's your secret ingredient. Chili-garlic sauce is one of the great discoveries in all of cuisine. What is it that makes this one Vietnamese (as opposed to the generically Chinese versions like Lee Kum Kee brand?) --Blair "Fish sauce?"
Re: Best Chicken (so say all)
Author: rmi1013934@aol.c
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 03:05
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 03:05
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>Subject: Best Chicken (so say all) >From: Michel Boucher alsandorz@rogers.com >Date: 1/4/2004 5:50 PM Mountain Standard Time >Message-id: <Xns9466C9D9084CDmortimertherat@130.133.1.4> > > >Chicken breasts in peanut sauce > >3 chicken breasts halves, split lengthwise >1 medium to large red (bell) pepper >1/2 cup smooth or chunky "only peanuts" peanut butter (do NOT use >homogenized or pre-sweetened crap or I will hunt you down :-)) plus >1/2 cup water, mixed >1 tablespoon brown sugar or maple syrup or jaggery >1 heaping teaspoon Vietnamese garlic chili sauce >2 tsp. oil >1 largish onion, halved and sliced thin > >Heat oil in non-stick pot. Brown chicken lightly, remove and sauté >onion until starting to caramelize. Return chicken and cover with >the peanut butter, sugar and chili sauce. Bring to boil and let >simmer, covered, 20-25 minutes. Check once for possible dryness at >15 minutes. Add 1/4 cup water if needed. Add red peppers cut into 1 >inch long strips. Finish simmering uncovered for 5 minutes. Serve >with rice. Or on rice. Or under rice. > >-- > Michel, this sounds wonderful. I will try this very soon with the brown sugar, what is jaggery anyway > Thanks, Rosie
Re: Best Chicken (so say all)
Author: Michel Boucher
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 03:18
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 03:18
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Blair P. Houghton <b@p.h> wrote in news:rN3Kb.3772227$be.591397 @news.easynews.com: >>1 heaping teaspoon Vietnamese garlic chili sauce > > There's your secret ingredient. Chili-garlic sauce is > one of the great discoveries in all of cuisine. I use it in a lot of stuff. > What is it that makes this one Vietnamese (as opposed to > the generically Chinese versions like Lee Kum Kee brand?) It's actually Californian, Huy Fong Foods, Inc. of Rosemeade CA (not Canada), the makers of Sriracha and Sambal Oelek. This is the most common brand here (maybe in fact the only brand) in Asian food stores. The product name is Túóng Ót Tói Viêt-Nam, a registered trademark. http://www.huyfong.com/no_frames/garlic.htm Strangely enough the company does not refer to it by its registered trademark. A holdover from those Nam days? ;-) -- "I'm the master of low expectations." GWB, aboard Air Force One, 04Jun2003
Re: Best Chicken (so say all)
Author: Michel Boucher
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 03:30
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 03:30
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rmi1013934@aol.com (RMiller) wrote in news:20040104220545.23043.00001426@mb-m27.aol.com: >>Chicken breasts in peanut sauce [snip] > Michel, this sounds wonderful. I will try this very soon with the > brown sugar, what is jaggery anyway > Thanks, Rosie Indian sugar. Not as refined as white sugar. However, it can be replaced by brown or demerara sugar. Food Reference website says: Jaggery, Jaggary Jaggery or jaggary is an unrefined crude brown sugar obtained from the sap of the East Indian jaggery palm. Produced by boiling the sap of the palm, it is popular in India and Southeast Asia as a sweetener and ingredient in curries, especially vegetarian curries. Jaggery tastes somewhat like a winey dark brown sugar, and is shaped into balls, or solid cakes. Also known as palm sugar. Next time I go buy achar, I'll ask the merchant about jaggery. -- "I'm the master of low expectations." GWB, aboard Air Force One, 04Jun2003
Re: Best Chicken (so say all)
Author: sf
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 07:45
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 07:45
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On Mon, 05 Jan 2004 02:15:51 GMT, Blair P. Houghton <b@p.h> wrote: > Michel Boucher <alsandorz@rogers.com> wrote: > >1/2 cup smooth or chunky "only peanuts" peanut butter (do NOT use > >homogenized or pre-sweetened crap or I will hunt you down :-)) plus > > I wonder how hard it is to make the stuff using > a stick-blender. I have a stick blender I don't use > nearly enough, and a bag of shell-on goobers left over > from baseball season. I haven't ever tried making peanut butter with a stick blender... but if there were just a few peanuts (maybe 1/4 C), I suppose it would work. If you have more, I suggest trying a blender - which I know works well. The seasoning is up to you. > Practice safe eating - always use condiments
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