Saturday, February 12, 2022

Roast Pork w/Apples & Sauerkraut Thurs Feb 10, 2022

    Roast loin of pork. The words, alone, starts me salivating! Then, adding the garlic, apples and sauerkraut and man! The aroma slays me! 

    Years, and I mean year ago I was introduced to this delicacy by a family of German decent. They also introduced me to pierogis, but that’s another blog post, maybe, someday. Sad to say I don’t recall the family’s name, or much else except walking into their house and being bowled over by the aroma coming out of the kitchen. Mmm mmm good! 

    So, I learn that what’s cooking is a bone-in loin of pork - NOT a tenderloin- that’s a different piece of meat- and I learn that leaving the bone in takes this cut a whole level up- especially because, well, I hate to admit it, but I LOVE gnawing in the bones. Eww—when I think of it, but I own it- pork chops, rib steaks, lamb chops- leave the bones in - fish? Not so much!   But I digress! 

    Put little slits in the flesh all the way around the roast and stuff the little slits with slivers of fresh garlic. Mmm. You don’t have to do anything past that, as that combo alone is heavenly.  I dredged the roast in flour that is mixed with a small amount of salt, pepper, garlic powder and mustard powder. Brown the roast on all sides to start rendering the fat. 

    I took a jar of sauerkraut mixed in some diced apples- I always use Macintosh type  apples, and spread the apples and sauerkraut around the outside of the roast in a roasting pan. 

      Roast uncovered at 350 degrees - 20 minutes per pound. 

The meat was done in an hour (when you’re cooking for one it tends to go faster. ) I took the meat out to rest, but I popped the pan with sauerkraut back into the oven for about 15 minutes to get it browned. I’m normally not a fan of sauerkraut but when it’s sizzling in pork fat, and turned brown, omg! I’m in love. 

     
     I pulled the sauerkraut and apples out of the pan, added enough butter to the drippings to equal 3-4 tablespoons- then added flour (made a roux) cooked the flour to a medium brown, added some chicken stock. Whisk, bring to boil; boil and whisk until reduced slightly and thickened. 
    Served it with mashed potatoes. Put sauerkraut and apples over sliced meat. 
     It came out awesome, with enough leftover roast pork fir sandwiches. Sweat onions and garlic in olive oil, add thinly sliced pork and quickly sauté until hot. Served on rolls with duck sauce. Mmm mmm mmm. 
     That’s all she wrote!
      Let me know how yours came out! 
      Until next time! Manga’! 

Thursday, February 3, 2022

French Onion Chicken February 3, 2022

     My recent “windfall” of a decent price for boneless breasts of chicken allowed me to try out a few recipes that have been sitting in my inbox FOREVER.  This is one of those that caught my eye and I was determined to give it a whirl. 

     French Onion chicken is not much more than chicken cutlets, cleaned and pounded, dipped in a mixture of melted butter, Worcestershire sauce and dry mustard, coated with crushed French fried onions put in a baking dish with the excess dip poured over and around and baked for 20-25 minutes. That’s IT! And yet the flavor is to die for! 

     The aroma alone, while it was baking, drove me crazy. It came out tender, yet crispy on the outside and the combo of the Worcestershire sauce and mustard? Who knew?  Jan! I love when you stumble upon something that’s easy yet tastes superb! This meets both head on. 

  • Recipe courtesy of Taste of Home
  • 1/2,cup butter, melted
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 teaspoon ground mustard
  • 1 can (2.8 ounces) French-fried onions, crushed
  • 4 boneless skinless chicken breast halves (4 ounces each)


   You know the drill. Clean all the nasties off the breasts and slice them into cutlets (I get 2 per breast with a couple fingers or nuggets (depends on how accurate my knife skills are on any particular day). Put pieces between two pieces of plastic wrap or parchment paper, and pound with a mallet (or bottom of fry pan) to 1/4 inch thickness. The more even you get the pieces, the more evenly they will cook. Just takes practice. 

   Of course, don’t totally obliterate the chicken, which can be done. Do you have to ask how I know that? Trust me, refrain from wailing on these things you can lose them  - and at the cost around here, that’s not something  I’m interested in! 

   Bake them in a greased 11x7 dish  @ 400 for 20-25 minutes. You know the drill - until internal temperature reaches 165 degrees. I ALWAYS cut into a thick piece to make sure there’s no pink left- eating not fully cooked chicken can give you salmonella and that is not fun either. No, I cannot definitely say I’ve had it, but… I do have gastric issues after handling raw chicken. I swear it seeps through my skin. Oye vey, right? 

     I served this with buttered noodles and steamed broccoli. It was too too, too good. It’s going in my “often” list - was as often as I can find reasonably priced chicken, that is. 

   I thought the butter/Worcestershire/mustard combo was so good I’m thinking of trying that and dredging cutlets in breadcrumbs, and frying them . Why not, right? Take a piece of this recipe and mix it with a piece of another. Makes for new flavors. I think I’m gonna Give it a try. 

     Til next time ! 




Source: Retrieved 1/31/2022 from https://www.tasteofhome.com/recipes/tasty-onion-chicken/ 

     



    

    


Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Chicken Piccata February 1, 2022

    I rarely buy chicken since moving to the great state of Florida. I have NO idea WHAT they’re feeding them, but I’m thinking it’s gold plated because I cannot account for the price being DOUBLE what I was paying up North. True story. In NY I was buying chickens for $.99/ lb. The least expensive here that I found was $1.69, but usually closer to $1.99/ lb. I have no words, no explanation and it kills me to fork over that much money.

     Wait. Boneless chicken breasts in NY would go on sale, very often @ $1.99/lb., regular price about $3.99/ lb. We always waited for the sale. Here? I have only seen $1.99 boneless chicken breast twice. (because i no longer look at them) Their free range chicken (boneless) I've seen at $5.99/lb, to a staggering $8.99/ lb. Hey, Love you, Mr. George (founder of the big supermarket chain down south), and I know you only stock the BEST-BUT... $9 a pound for chicken ANYTHING???!! Wait! wings? Back in the '60's they used to give them away. Here? They're $4.99/lb. 

     Get the picture? I hate buying chicken since I moved to Florida. However, I came across one of those extremely rare weeks of boneless chicken breasts on sale for $2.39/ lb.!  That is only $.40 /lb. more than I paid 5 years ago. I'll write that off as inflation and pay that extra $.40.

     So, I got some boneless chicken breasts. Last night I made French Onion chicken, another recipe I highly recommend AND will blog about  sometime in the future. I had stumbled upon a recipe for chicken piccata on Sunday. Lemon...mmm. Yeah, chicken piccata went right on the "TO DO" list. And do it, I did. OMG! where did I learn English? (Let's write that off as too long away from the blog and expressing myself on topics I choose, as opposed to my last several years. Let's just leave it there; suffice it to say, I now have time to do "ME". I'll brush up on my English usage and sentence structure (which, as you can tell, is all over the place.) You know what? I don't give a HOOT. (Inside joke, there.) This is how I think, this is how I talk. If only all my talking (to other people) had the benefit of backspace, delete and edit. That would be awesome, but reading this you can tell what's going on in my brain (here's your hint.) You can't tell me that you don't have a conversation (in your head) with yourself while you're interacting with other people. Whether thinking about the drive home, the battle you're gonna have with one of your sons about a "party", saying a silent prayer you're not about to get bad news, I let you see where my brain veered off to. (OOPs!)

     Chicken piccata. The words alone bring a smile to my face. Chicken Piccata is Italian, and that's where I first had this. In Rome; I was 17, on a school trip to Rome and Florence (with a side excursion to Pompeii, Capri, and Naples for dinner.) I could talk about that trip forever, because it forever changed my life, but that story doesn't belong here, but it does on my other blog, the one about living a graceful life, so I'll leave that stuff to that blog. We went for 13 days/14 nights (or the other way around) with 2 meals a day, tours, a guide, Anieck. For a while after that trip I wanted to be a guide in Italy, but, well, you know...life. 

     Anyway, being in Italy everyone was expecting tomato/pasta heavy foods: ravioli, lasagna, spaghetti and meatballs, Manicotti- you get the picture, but that is not what was for dinner. It was my introduction to Mediterranean food. Oh, man! We go to the table (complete with cloth tablecloths and napkins- although this is ITALY, no take-out; no to-go; and no ice! Yikes!). We’re NOT being served tomato sauce and pasta and cheese. And there it was! chicken piccata sitting on my plate. Served with a rice pilaf, mixed green salad and asparagus. Lemon slices, with the fresh lemon aroma wafting up into your nostrils. Okay, stop.

    And that is what I attempted, and, well, yes, nailed!

    As my head is still not completely back to thinking straight, I kept losing the recipe I had found that was exquisitely simple. But I remembered SOME of the ingredients. This happened a total of 3 times. Something in Ina Garten's version caught my eye. Then a recipe off the Food Network intrigued me, and finally I found the original one that I wanted to try. 

   Well, I liked different parts of each. So I took out the parts I thought would work really well and the result?

    No word of lie: FABULOUS!

    I was cooking only for myself so I used only 1/2 chicken breast (boneless) "which I slice down and "fileted" I got 2 nice size cutlets and 2 "fingers" or maybe nuggets. (Pound them between wax paper to 1/4 inch thick- YES you must flatten the cutlets- tenderizes them- skip it and you might have chewy chicken which is NG in my book.)

    Here's the ingredients:

  • the prepared boneless chicken as described above   

  • 1/4 cup flour  
  • 1/4 cup parmesan cheese
  • 1/3 cup fine bread crumbs seasoned 
  • black pepper - 5 or 6 twists
  • 1 egg beaten w/1 T water
  • 1/8 t hot sauce 
  • 2T avocado or grapeseed (or vegetable oil)
  • 2 T butter
  • 1/4 cup very dry white wine
  • juice of 1 lemon (i had just under 1/4 cup) use the nuke and tongs method
  • remainder of 2 lemon halves
  • 1/2 cup reduced sodium chicken stock or broth
  • 1 T capers, rinsed and drained 
  • fresh parsley, chopped 
  • sliced lemons for garnish   


  Mix the flour, parmesan, bread crumbs, black pepper in a shallow bowl or dish. 

  In a separate dish beat egg, hot sauce & water.

pat chicken dry, dredge in the flour mixture, into the egg mix and back into the flour mixture. Set aside on a rack to dry while you coat the rest of the chicken. 

   Heat oil in sauté pan. Brown chicken for 3-5 min each side until juices run clear. Drain on paper towel set aside but keep warm. Finish all the chicken.

    Wipe out pan. Add butter to same pan. When it melts and starts to boil add the wine, then the lemon juice, the half lemons, then the stock. Bring back to boil and simmer until reduce by 1/3 - remove the lemon halves and discard. Toss in the capers. Stir and remove from heat.

    Plate chicken, drizzling sauce over, place lemon slices, twisted and sprinkle w/fresh chopped parsley. Serve with buttered noodles, rice pilaf (or rice), green beans, broccoli or asparagus.  The lemon sauce goes nicely on the vegetables, too.

   Mind you, there is not a lot of sauce, so if you're thinking of drowning your chicken and/or veggies, you need to at least double, if not, triple the recipe.  

   Word of advice: do not use jarred lemon juice- just does not cut it.

    I want more. 


    Admittedly I forgot the parsley on top. 

    Oye! Am I out of practice! Not a question. 

    So I put the rest of the chicken in the freezer in each their own little bag. I need only one breast per meal, so I got a few more meals. Of course my signature dish, chicken cutlets w/Swiss cheese sauce is a definite maybe! And I will blog about the French Onion chicken, too, That, too was good! And easy.
     Maybe I should just post  the recipes and shut up. Nah! 

     Until next time: enjoy! Mangia!

~Aunt Barbara aka No-No. (Nonna)