Recipes On Rails: New Recipes tagged with Josh,chicken http://www.recipesonrails.com/recipes Recipes On Rails: New Recipes tagged with Josh,chicken Chicken Paprika http://www.recipesonrails.com/recipes/40 <p><img src="http://www.recipesonrails.com/images/ror_default_thumbnail.png " alt="default"/> </p> <strong>Ingredients:</strong><br/> <p> <em>Default</em><br /> 1.0 each Pepper, Bell <br/> 6.0 each Chicken Thighs <br/> 1.0 pint sour cream <br/> 1.0 pint Milk <br/> 2.0 tablespoon paprika <br/> 1.0 teaspoon salt <br/> 1.0 tablespoon Chicken Base <br/> 1.0 cup Flour, all-purpose <br/> 1.0 teaspoon salt <br/> 1.0 each Egg <br/> </p> <strong>Instructions:</strong><br/> <p> <p>Sauce procedure: <br />1) Cut whole chicken into it's constituent parts (breasts, thigh, <br />back, etc.) and remove skin. Remove skin from thighs.</p> <p>2) Trim fat deposits and rinse all chicken <br />thoroughly</p> <p>3) This step is critical. Cut all chicken pieces in half. I use a <br />cleaver . This exposes the crucial bone marrow. The more marrow you <br />expose, the better the sauce. I chop the wings into 4 or five pieces. <br />Do not add giblets and neck.</p> <p>4) In large pot, combine chicken, salt, Paprika, chicken base, and <br />enough water to just cover the chicken pieces. Cook, partially <br />covered, at such temperature that a simmer to very gentle boil is <br />achieved. You want just a bit of bubbling. Do so until the chicken is <br />thoroughly cooked and easily removed from the bone--About 1.5 hrs. (I <br />cook the chicken until it is on the verge of falling off the bone. <br />This extracts maximum flavor from the chicken.)</p> <p>5) Strain mixture to separate broth and chicken. Place chicken into <br />a warm serving dish. Return broth to pot and place on medium heat.</p> <p>6) In a mixing bowl, combine enough milk to sour cream to render a <br />mixture that is pourable. The consistency is roughly that of very <br />thick pancake batter and requires a sour cream / milk ratio of about <br />2:1. If you use a pint of sour cream, you'll use about 1/2 pint milk, <br />maybe a bit more. </p> <p>7) Vigorously mix sour cream and milk mixture into broth. I use a <br />whisk for this. Carefully bring the sauce to a boil and remove <br />immediately from heat (see note at end). Failure to remove promptly <br />will result in very messy boiling over! Set burner to it's lowest <br />setting and return pot to the burner to keep sauce hot. <br />The sauce is basically finished at this point. You may wish to <br />fine tune by adding more salt, sour cream, Paprika, and/or chicken <br />base. I sometimes add a 1/2 cup or so of heavy cream for added <br />richness. You may also want to skim most of the liquid fat from the <br />sauce surface.</p> <p>Noodles procedure: <br />1) Combine flour, salt, and eggs in a hemispherical bowl large enough <br />to accommodate mixing.</p> <p>2) Add about 1/2 cup water and proceed to blend ingredients with a <br />fork until well blended. The consistency you're striving for is such <br />that the dough is clearly wet, adheres to the bowl, and is loose <br />enough to slowly spread out when a dollop is applied to the cutting <br />board. Add enough water to achieve this. I've never measured how much <br />water I use, but think it's about 1/2 cup plus some. <br />Actually, the consistency is not critical. I'm guessing you've <br />made noodles (or dumplings) like this, and that additional, <br />excruciating explanation is not necessary.</p> <p>3) Set a dutch oven (good size pot) 2/3 full of water to boil.</p> <p>4) At this point, obviously the dough goes into the water. I place a <br />good size dollop on a small cutting board and use a gently curved, <br />sharp knife to cut perhaps 3/4 size blobs which are then vigorously <br />swept off the board into the boiling water. They are done when they <br />float to the surface. A perforated spoon is used to remove the noodles <br />from the water which are placed in a warm serving bowl. I cut perhaps <br />3-4 dozen noodles, let them cook (very quick), remove, and proceed to <br />add the next 3-4 dozen until all of the dough is consumed. If it looks <br />like boiling over is about to occur, add some cold water.</p> <p>Finally: <br />At this point you should have a pot of wonderful sauce, a bowl full <br />of chicken pieces, and a bowl of noodles. For serving, place a good <br />serving of noodles and half (maybe less) as much chicken into a flat <br />bowl. Apply enough sauce to almost cover noodles and chicken. You may <br />want to salt to taste. My wife likes pepper on it. I do not. In any <br />case, Viola!</p> <p>That's it. I really want you to try this, as everyone on both <br />sides of our family loves it. My instructions are laborious because <br />attention paid to various details will produce a superb dish, while an <br />average effort with average ingredients produce a result that is only <br />very good.</p> <p>Sam <br />-------------- <br />Note: You may want to only add a portion of the sour cream / milk at <br />a time, testing as you go for taste. We tend to like a lot of sour <br />cream flavor, but you may desire less. In any case, the resultant <br />should be rich and satisfying, but not overwhelmed with sour cream. <br />Also, there may be some question about bringing the sauce to a <br />boil. It is not necessary, but imparts more complexity to the sauce. <br />Most premium sour cream brands will not separate, but if some <br />separation occurs, no matter--just whisk it back together and it will <br />be fine. <br />Finally, I hope the apparent complexity of this dish doesn't scare <br />you off. It's one of those dishes that is made with the gut, and is <br />therefore difficult to quantify in a way that permits precise <br />description in recipe form.</p> </p> <p> <strong>Servings:</strong> 1<br /> <strong>Prep Time:</strong> <br/> <strong>By:</strong> Warren<br/> For more info visit:<br/> <a href= "http://www.recipesonrails.com/recipes/40 " />http://www.recipesonrails.com/recipes/40 </a> </p> 2012-02-05 19:37:46 UTC Chicken Paprikas http://www.recipesonrails.com/recipes/10 <p><img src="http://www.recipesonrails.com/images/ror_default_thumbnail.png " alt="default"/> </p> <strong>Ingredients:</strong><br/> <p> <em>Default</em><br /> 2.0 each Onion <br/> 2.0 tablespoon Butter <br/> 1.0 each Pepper, Bell <br/> 1.0 can Tomatoes <br/> 1.0 tablespoon paprika <br/> 1.0 teaspoon salt <br/> 2.0 tablespoon sour cream <br/> 1.0 tablespoon Flour, all-purpose <br/> 2.0 cup Cream, Heavy <br/> </p> <strong>Instructions:</strong><br/> <p> <p>Use a 5 quart heavy casserole</p> <p>Onions should be medium sized, minced <br />Tomatoes should be whole, cut up. <br />Paprika should be a heaping tablespoon.</p> <p>Cook the onion in the butter, over low heat, covered, for about 5 minutes. <br />The onions should become almost pasty, but not browned at all.</p> <p>Add the cut up chicken and tomato and cook, covered for 10 minutes.</p> <p>Add the paprika, 1/2 cup water, and the salt. Stir, cover, and cook for 30 <br />more minutes. Towards the end of the 30 minutes, remove the lid to let <br />the steam escape, and the sauce thicken a little. Allow chicken to cook in <br />it's own juices until not quite done. Make sure the chicken doesn't burn.</p> <p>Remove chicken from the pan. Combine the sourcream, the flour, and 1 <br />teaspoon cold water, and then add this mixture to the sauce. Stir into the <br />sauce until the sauce is very smooth, and even in color. Return chicken <br />to the pot, adjust salt, and cook over very low heat until done.</p> <p>Add the cream just before serving.</p> <p>Serve with the dumplings. I like sour cream with it as well, but Josh <br />doesn't. </p> </p> <p> <strong>Servings:</strong> 6<br /> <strong>Prep Time:</strong> <br/> <strong>By:</strong> Warren<br/> For more info visit:<br/> <a href= "http://www.recipesonrails.com/recipes/10 " />http://www.recipesonrails.com/recipes/10 </a> </p> 2012-02-03 19:32:12 UTC