While I certainly haven't been blogging this last two weeks plus, I have been doing a bit of cooking. I've a backlog of "recipes to try" that would keep a small country fed for a year. Tonight's recipe is courtesy of Jacques Pepin, chicken thighs in a spicy tomato/vinegar sauce.
Chicken Diablo
6 large, bone-in, skinned chicken thighs (if you insist, you can use breasts, or even boneless, skinless breasts, but honestly, learn to eat dark meat - it is so much more flavorful, and thighs are actually easy to eat with a knife and fork off the bone)
3/4 teaspoon salt, divided
3/4 teaspoon pepper, divided
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1 tablespoon olive oil
4 garlic cloves, crushed and finely chopped
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar (or 1/4 cup vinegar and no wine)
2 tablespoons dry white wine
8 ounces tomato sauce (or 3/4 cup tomato puree)
1/4 cup water
1 teaspoon Tobasco sauce
1 tablespoon chopped fresh tarragon
Cook chicken:
Sprinkle both sides of chicken with 1/2 teaspoon salt and pepper. Heat butter and oil in a large, heavy, deep skillet over medium-high heat. Add thighs, cover and cook five minutes. Turn, cover and cook an additional 10 - 15 minutes, reducing heat and turning as needed, until done (check near the bone - for more even cooking, before putting them in the pan, make a 1/2" cut on the backside of the thigh on each side of the bone, not going all the way through). Remove from pan and put somewhere to keep warm.
Make sauce:
Add garlic to pan drippings and cook, stirring, about 30 seconds, without browning. Deglaze pan with vinegar and wine, stirring to melt the solidified juices. Cook 1 to 2 minutes; most of the liquid should have evaporated. Add water and tomato sauce and bring to boil over high heat. Cover and boil 1 minute. Stir in remaining 1⁄4 teaspoon salt and 1⁄4 teaspoon pepper, Tabasco and tarragon. Spoon sauce over the chicken and serve.
Serves 4
Diane's take: The tang from the vinegar and the heat of the Tabasco combine to give you spicy, but not overly so (maybe my Tobasco is old - I put in closer to two teaspoons). Don't skip the fresh tarragon - it adds needed depth.
I wasn't sure I'd like bone-in chicken with a sauce on it, but as I said above, chicken thighs, having pretty much just the one, round bone, are very easy to eat with a knife and fork. They also cook up very juicy and flavorful. There was rather a lot of chicken juice/rendered chicken fat in my pan when I took the thighs out; though I left it in the pan, the sauce wasn't unduly greasy. My one change would be to serve this with something to soak up more of the sauce - rice, couscous or some other grain. While I made oven baked fries, they didn't soak up as much of the sauce as I'd have liked.
This is a keeper.
2 comments:
I have to say, bone-in chicken IS tastier. Have cooked chicken pieces in a Cacciatori sauce and while the meat has literally fallen off the bone making it messy, goodness, it's good. Must try your recipe. Sounds wonderful.
I have to say, bone-in chicken IS tastier. Have cooked chicken pieces in a Cacciatori sauce and while the meat has literally fallen off the bone making it messy, goodness, it's good. Must try your recipe. Sounds wonderful.
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