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by Anja

Braised French Onion Chicken with Grilled Gruyère

February 6, 2013 in Carb-free, Chicken, Comfort Food, Easy, Main Course, Mid-week meal, Paleo

This dish is easy and delicious, especially if you are a fan of the traditional french onion soup. All you need is a little time, as the onions need a patient hand to braise and caramelize to the deep brown and richly flavoured stage that forms the base of this dish.
I find a glass of wine makes me all the more patient. Visit my blog for more recipe ideas!

French onion chicken gruyere recipe

French onion chicken gruyere recipe

serves 4 to 6

3 tablespoons unsalted butter
850 g onions, sliced into thin half-circles
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
4 garlic cloves, finely sliced
5 small sprigs thyme, leaves only
2 or 3 sprigs rosemary
2 cups chicken stock, divided
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1kg chicken pieces (thighs and drumsticks)
1 cup Gruyère cheese, finely grated or shaved

Melt the butter in a deep sauce pan with a lid over medium heat. When the butter has melted completely and starts foaming, add the onions and garlic. They will fill the pan to the top. Stir the onions to coat them in the butter. Season with salt and black pepper. Sweat the onions with a lid on for about 40 minutes over low or medium heat, stirring occasionally.

When the onions have developed an evenly light beige color throughout, add the garlic, thyme leaves, and whole rosemary sprig, and cook for a few minutes more, stirring frequently. Turn the heat up to high and cook for a further 5 minutes, stirring all the time. You want them to develop a rich brown color. When the onions get quite dark, add 1 cup of stock. Add it slowly, stirring and scraping the pan vigorously to incorporate any burnt or stuck-on bits. When all of the liquid has been added, bring it back up to a simmer and simmer lightly for 5 minutes, or until the liquid has reduced somewhat.

Pre-heat your oven to 170°C. Rest of recipe

 

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by Anja

Chicken a la Queen

September 19, 2012 in budget friendly, Chicken, Comfort Food, Easy, Main Course, Mid-week meal

This a royal deviation of the traditional a la King. Cutting out wheat means no flour for thickening white sauces, so I opted for double thick cream instead (and you don’t hear me complaining!). Also, the addition of bacon and mustard powder adds a flavourful twist that is balanced by a good squeeze of lemon juice added right at the end.

400g white button mushrooms, chopped
500g baby onions, roughly chopped
2 tbs butter
Splash of olive oil
Half a pack bacon, chopped
7.5 ml minced garlic
15 ml mustard powder
600g chicken thighs, skinless and boneless, cut into medium sized pieces
1 bay leaf
25ml  concentrated chicken stock or frond
125 ml double thick cream
Squeeze of lemon juice

Sautee the onions and bacon on medium heat in butter and olive oil.
Add the garlic and mustard powder after about 5 minutes and continue to sautee for another 15 minutes till the onions become glassy and the bacon is cooked.

Add the chicken, mushrooms, salt and pepper and continue to cook, stirring every few minutes. After about 10 minutes, add the stock ( just the concentrated stock, dont add any water as you will see the ingredients in the pot has created enough liquid already. If this not the case, you can add a little water), 125 ml double thick cream, bay leaf and simmer for another 15-20 minutes, untill nicely reduced. Add a good sqeeze or 2 of lemon juice. Serve with fluffy rice to soak up the sauce.

Delicious with a glass of Unwooded or lightly wooded Chardonnay. For more delicious recipes, restaurant and wine farm reviews,
visit The Opposite House!

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by Anja

Spag bog – the crowd pleaser

July 20, 2012 in budget friendly, Comfort Food, Easy, Main Course, Mid-week meal

I get bored quite easily when it comes to food, mostly when I am the cook.  I typically look for ingredients unknown, flavours not found in your standard spice rack and combinations construed out of a weird anti-conformist trait I am not sure where I picked up. This said, occasionally the situation does arise where a certain combination of ingredients are left in the kitchen, and lack of time, energy or both prevents any further experimental recipe development taking place. If I have spaghetti, mince and tinned tomatoes sitting in the cupboard, then spaghetti bolognaise it will be… but luckily I also have a few other ingredients lying around transforming this family favourite into a dressed up, smoky, creamy version of its former self, almost more like a lasagna bolognaise (which I am sure will have any true-blooded italian chef tearing his hair out ). So slightly corrupted or not, my version still uses all the classic ingredients combined with a few new ones to create a deliciously rich variation of the original, and I will say in my defense, I have never claimed to be a purist.

Non-conformist Lasagna Bolognaise (serves 4) :

1 large onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
4 small carrots, chopped
2 sticks celery, chopped
2 tsp butter and a dash of olive oil
2 tsp smoked paprika (very important for yummy smoky flavour!)
1 tsp mustard powder
1 to 2 sticks fresh rosemary (depending on size)
4 tsp brown sugar
600g minced meat
150 ml cream
50g tomato paste
410g chopped peeled tomatoes
1 pack spaghetti (500g)
salt and pepper
Gruyere cheese (100g), grated
For the rest of the recipe, please go to The Opposite House 

Notes on cooking the best pasta (the purist way):

Forget exact cooking times. Forget measuring out salt or olive oil by the tablespoon. There are really just two main tricks to keep in mind when cooking any kind of pasta.

Cook pasta in a large amount of boiling water. An ample amount of water will dilute the starches coming off the pasta and prevent it from becoming gummy and mushy once cooked. For a box of pasta, use at least a 5.5 liters of water.

Salt the water heavily. And we mean heavily! For a 6 liter pot, throw in a healthy handful (or more) of kosher salt. You want pasta water “salty like the sea.”

The salt doesn’t do anything in terms of cooking the pasta; it’s there entirely for flavor. The salt gets absorbed into the pasta during cooking, seasoning from the inside out and ultimately giving you a tastier final dish.

Trust us on this one. Salting your pasta water (heavily) makes a huge difference!

Aside from these two tips, remember to taste your pasta frequently to check on its cooking. Drain the pasta right before it’s cooked to where you like it. The only time you should rinse pasta after draining is when you are going to use the pasta in a cold dish, or when we are not going to sauce and serve it immediately. If the pasta is going to be used later, or in a in a salad, rinse it under cold water to stop the cooking process, and drain well. Dont toss it in olive oil. This is a common misconception, but the olive oil actually makes the pasta slippery, with the result that the sauce can’t cling to the pasta, but slides off.

The other way, the method used by restaurant chefs and Italians:

When you cook pasta you should always undercook it by one or two minutes.
You should remove some (a cup or so) of the pasta water before draining it. Once drained, you should add the pasta to the sauce, and not the other way around, with a few splashes of the pasta water that you put aside.
You sould incorporate the sauce into the pasta and allow it to cook on a low heat for the remaining pasta cooking time. The pasta will absorb all the sauce then and cook to perfection as pasta tends to swell up in the last remaining minutes. Add more cooking water if needed. Finish the pasta with a little bit of olive oil, butter, or both,” says Andrew Carmellini of New York City’s Locanda Verde. “In Italian it’s called mantecare, which means ‘to make creamy.’ ” He adds cold butter to the pasta and sauce in the pan, off the heat, to give it an unctuous texture.

Hope this helps. It certainly helped me!

Avatar of Anja

by Anja

Extraordinary mid-week Bangers and baby potatoes with a chicken liver cream sauce

June 22, 2012 in budget friendly, Comfort Food, Easy, Mid-week meal

Not your average bangers nor mash…

In the last few moths I have been trying to cut out bread, and that leaves one in a bit of a lurch when the chicken liver pate craving hits.Who doesn’t love the rich comforting earthiness of chicken liver pate made with some brandy or sherry….

What to do? Smear it on a baked potato, scoop it up with a gherkin? I was not convinced.
And thats when inspiration hit…

Quick, easy (also on the pocket) and very comforting, this recipe has become a firm favourite of ours, as I hope it will with you!

(serves 2 with a bit left over)

6-8 pork sausages/bangers (about 3 or 4 pp depending on size, the ones I bought shrunk considerably)
a dash of olive oil
8-10 baby potatoes
2 tsp garlic butter
125g ready made chicken liver pate
150 ml cream
2 tsp wholegrain mustard
4 medium to large ‘sweet and tangy’ gherkins/pickles, diced
Salt and pepper


For the rest of this easy and delicious recipe, visit the Opposite House


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