How to Make the Best Greek Chicken
Test cook Bryan Roof cooks host Julia Collin Davison a Birmingham specialty, Greek Chicken.
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Lemon Sage Smothered Chicken Recipe
No oven? No problem! This is an easy and delicious chicken dish from the Southern United States. Get the recipe:
Equipment used:
12-inch pre-seasoned Pro-Logic Lodge Cast-Iron Skillet/Frying Pan:
Shun Multi Purpose Kitchen Shears for spatchcocking a chicken:
Breville PolyScience Control Freak induction burner for the ultimate temperature control:
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This chicken dish is cooked entirely on the stove top and is inspired by Craig Claiborne's Smothered Chicken recipe.
The recipe uses a unique braising technique. A spatchcocked chicken is sandwiched between two skillets to ensure that as much skin as possible comes into contact with the cooking pan while it fries in brown butter and that moisture is circulated during the braise.
I found Claiborne’s version of this dish while browsing the New York Times ; I loved the simplicity of this Southern dish, but it was a little too 1950s for me. This is my attempt to resurrect the recipe into the modern age.
I brightened up the gravy with some lemon, sage, and garlic; I further increased the flavour with celery and onion. I used the weight of another cast iron pan, plus random cans of food, to securely flatten the chicken to ensure that as much skin as possible made contact with the surface of the pan during the initial slow sear, resulting in extra crispy goodness.
The chicken is then braised in a gravy for the remainder of the cooking time; the heavy pan on top of the chicken acts as a makeshift lid, trapping in much of the moisture, allowing the entire bird to cook thoroughly.
The gravy if finished with a splash of lemon juice, some lemon zest, and a generous seasoning of salt and pepper.
Serve with potatoes, rice, or your favourite side of vegetables. Optionally, you can garnish with parsley.
* Spatchcocking is the removal of the backbone of poultry in order to open it up and allow it to lay flat for more even cooking. This is a useful technique for frying and grilling poultry. To spatchcock a chicken, simply take a pair of kitchen shears and cut out the backbone. Then flip the chicken, skin-side up, and apply force to the chicken breasts in order to flatten the chicken further. Freeze the backbone for future stock making.
Lemon & Garlic Chicken Breast recipe Grilled BBQ Pan fried Olive Oil super easy salad
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Below are a few Italian food words with English translations.
Zafferano: saffron Zampone: sausage-stuffed pig's foot Zenzero: ginger Zeppole: a fried pastry Verdure: green vegetables Vitello: veal (calf)Vongole: clams Taralli: round sweet or savory biscuits Tonno: tuna Torrone: nougat-type candy Torta: tart Salso: salt Saltari: sauteed Salumi: collective name for salami and similar cured meats Salvia: sage Sambuca: a colorless liqueur made from anise San Giuseppe: Saint Joseph Sarde: sardines Scaloppine: thinly sliced meat Sedani: celery Ragu: meat sauce for pasta Rapini: another name for broccoli rabe Ribollita: Tuscan bread and vegetable soup Ricotta: a fresh, mild cheese Ripieni: stuffed Riso: rice Risotto: rice cooked and stirred with broth until creamy Rollatini: small stuffed meat rolls, sometimes in a sauce Romano: a hard Pecorino cheese Rosmarino: rosemary
Rustico: country-style Pecorino: sheep's milk cheese Peperoncini: dried red chiles Pesto: a sauce from mashed ingredients, usually basil Piccante: spicy
Pignoli: pine nuts Piselli: peas Pizelle: embossed wafer cookies Pizza Dolce: cake or sweet bread Polenta: a type of cornmeal Polipi: octopus Pollo: chicken Polpette: meatballs Pomodori: tomatoes Porchetta: whole roast pig cooked with herbs and garlic Porcini: meaty wild mushrooms Primavera: springtime Prosciutto: salt-cured, air-dried pork Provolone: a straw-white cheese, sometimes smoked Olio: oil Olio di oliva: olive oil Origano: oregano
Orzo: small, seed-shaped pasta Ostriche: oysters Manzo: beef Marinara: a plain tomato sauce Marinare: to marinate Marsala: a rich brown fortified wine Mascarpone: creamy, soft, mild cheese Melanzane: eggplant Minestra: soup (usually thick) Minestrina: thin soup Minestrone: thick mixed vegetable soup Mortadella: a large cured and spiced pork sausage Mosto Cotto: grape juice cooked to form a thick dark syrup Mozzarella: a pure white soft cheese
Lauro: bayleaf Lenticchie: lentils Limone: lemon Gamberetti: shrimp
Gardiniera: mixed pickled vegetables Garofani: cloves Gnocchi: dumplings eaten with a sauce or in broth Grana Padano: a cow's milk hard cheese
Granchio: crab Grappa: liqueur made from the must of grapes Griglia: grill Grissini: breadsticks Fagioli: beans Farcita: stuffing or filling Farro: an ancient grain similar to spelt Fegato: liver Festa: holiday Fico: fig Filetto: fillet Finocchio: fennel Focaccia: flatbread served plain or with various toppings Formaggio: cheese Fra diavolo: literally 'of the devil' Fragole: strawberries Frittata: an open-faced omelet Frittelle: fritters Fritto: fried
Frutta: fruit Frutti di mare: seafood Funghi: mushrooms
Dolce: sweet Dolci: sweets and pastries Cannellini: white kidney beans Cannoli: filled pastry tubes Capocollo: a hot spiced ham Caponata: eggplant relish Capozzelle: lamb's head Capperi: capers Cappone: capon Carciofi: artichokes Carnaroli: a medium-grain rice used for making risotto Carne: meat Cassata: a Sicilian cream-filled layer cake Cavolfiore: cauliflower Cavolo: cabbage Ceci: chick peas Cioppino: shellfish stew Cipolle: onions Conserva: preserves Cotolette: cutlets
Balsamico: an aged Italian vinegar Basilico: basil Bigne: fritters Biscotti: literally 'twice cooked,' it refers to all kinds of cookies Bistecca: beefsteak Bollito misto: mixed boiled meats served with various sauces Bottarga: preserved roe of tuna or mullet Braciolette: small beef rolls Braciole: stuffed meat rolls Brodo: broth
Bruschetta: toasted bread served with various toppings Budino: pudding Affumicato: smoked Aglio: garlic Aglio e olio: garlic and oil Agnello: lamb Agrodolce: sweet/sour Al dente: firm (literally to the tooth) Amaretti: crisp cookies made with bitter almonds Amaretto: a sweet liqueur flavored with almonds Anace/Anice: anise
Anguille: eel Anisette: a colorless liqueur flavor with anise Antipasto: literally 'before the meal' Arborio: a medium-grain rice used for making risotto Arogosta: lobster Arancia: orange Arancine: fried rice balls with meat or other filling Ardente: hot, piquant Arrostito: roasted
Sautéed Chicken with Sage Browned Butter | Dinner Tonight | MyRecipes
Get the recipe:
The full-bodied flavor of sage browned butter dresses up classic sautéed chicken.
4 (6-ounce) skinless, boneless chicken breast halves
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
Cooking spray
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
3 tablespoons butter
2 sage sprigs
1 tablespoon minced shallots
1 teaspoon chopped fresh thyme
2 tablespoons lemon juice
Fresh sage leaves (optional)
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Chicken Breasts That Don't Suck | Basics with Babish
Chicken breasts: one of the most perplexing pieces of poultry for a new chef in the kitchen. Here’s the Basics on how to make juicy, tender, flavorful, and crispy chicken breasts with a rich, lemony pan sauce.
Recipe:
Music: Stay Tuned by Wuh Oh
Watch the rebroadcast of the Twitch livestream for this episode here:
Grocery list:
-One whole chicken
-Salt
-Pepper
-Oil
-Shallots
-Sherry
-Chicken stock
-Freshly chopped thyme
-Freshly chopped sage
-Butter
-Lemon
Equipment list:
-Chef knife
-Kitchen thermometer
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Citrus-Mustard Baked Chicken Breasts Recipe
Super easy and quick Citrus Mustard Baked Chicken Breasts Recipe - this is a how to video from Meal Plan Star.
Original recipe: