1 rotisserie chicken (I use the Plain Roasted Chicken found in the grocery deli or prepared foods section)
3 cups turkey or chicken broth
2 tsps minced onion (fresh.) -- If using minced dehydrated onion, only use 1/4 tsp.
1 stick butter
1/2 cup flour
salt, to taste
sprinkle of freshly ground black pepper
1 1/2 cups cooked carrots, sliced
1 1/2 cups cooked potatoes, cubed or bite-size pieces
1 butter-based pie crust or Jiffy or Betty Crocker pie crust
Preheat oven to 425
Cut chicken into bite-sized pieces and place in a large bowl. (See hint below)
Add carrots and potatoes
Melt butter in a pan, then add minced onion. Cook about 30 seconds.
Add flour and cook over medium-high heat, stirring with whisk until bubbly.
Add turkey (or chicken) broth to flour mixture and stir with whisk until mixture thickens.
Add salt and pepper -- taste to ensure desired flavor.
Pour broth mixture over chicken, potatoes and carrots, then carefully stir with a large spoon, being careful not to mash the potatoes and carrots.
Transfer to a 2 1/2 quart casserole dish
Roll out pie crust large enough to fit over the casserole dish.
Place the crust over the dish, and cut slits in the top, for steam to escape.
Lightly cover the edges of the crust with aluminum foil, to prevent them from cooking faster than the top of the pie. (optional)
Bake in 425 oven about 12 minutes, until crust starts to turn light golden-brown.
Lower heat to 350, remove foil from the crust (if used), and continue baking for 25-30 minutes.
Hints:
*Place a sheet of aluminum foil on the rack below the chicken pie in the oven, to catch any drips.
*Don't fill the casserole dish to the brim, as it will boil over during cooking.
*When you first buy the chicken, it'll be warm. Since it's much easier to remove the meat when the chicken is still warm rather than when it has cooled off in the fridge, I will cut the meat off the chicken and then refrigerate it, if I'm not going to make the chicken pie on the day I buy the chicken.
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Monday, May 23, 2011
Coq Au Vin
(This recipe can be doubled successfully - do not double the spices.)
1 frying chicken, cut up
flour to coat chicken + 3 TBsp flour
1/4 litre (1 cup) red wine
1/4 litre (1 cup) chicken broth + 3 TBsp broth
butter
1 Tbsp. vegetable oil
1/4 lb. mushrooms, sliced
2 small onions or about 8 pearl onions
1/8 tsp pepper
1/2 tsp. salt
1/16 tsp. ground nutmeg
2 bay leaves
1 tsp dried thyme
3 slices bacon, slightly fried
about 6-8 small potatoes (creamer, dutch yellow or red)
Coat chicken with flour
Melt 4 Tbsp butter and 1 Tbsp vegetable oil in frying pan, then add the flour-coated chicken, and brown on both sides. Start with the drumsticks, then thighs so they will be in the lower layer of the stewing pot.
Place browned chicken in stew pot and continue browning remaining chicken. Add onions (cut in pieces) (or pearl onions) to melted butter (add 1 Tbsp butter if there's no fat left in the frying pan) and saute about 3 minutes.
Add mushrooms, pepper, salt, nutmeg, thyme, and bay leaves. Simmer until onions are translucent or soft.
Add wine and chicken broth to frying pan with onion-mushroom mixture.
Bring to boiling, then pour into dutch oven, over chicken.
Add potatoes to dutch oven.
Bring to boiling then cover the pot - note the time - and lower heat to simmer on stove for 1 1/4 hours.
Roll bacon slices and fry them lightly.
Add bacon slices, cover and simmer coq au vin for another 15 minutes.
Mix together 3 Tbsp flour and 3 Tbsp chicken broth or water in a small bowl.
Add to coq au vin to thicken it. Cover and cook another 5 minutes.
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Bailey's Beef Stew
1.5 to 2 lbs. Beef chuck
1 small onion, sliced
1 slice bacon
1 TBsp vegetable oil
1/2 cup flour
McCormicks Unseasoned meat tenderizer
McCormicks Montreal steak seasoning
1 TBsp butter
1/2 tsp. French's Worcestershire sauce
2 cups beef broth
freshly ground pepper
1 1/2 to 1 3/4 cups sliced carrots
12 small "baby white" potatoes
2 TBsp flour
Preheat oven to 225 degrees.
Cut fat from beef, and cut the beef into 1 inch to 1 1/2 inch cubes.
Sprinkle the beef cubes with meat tenderizer, then Montreal steak seasoning.
Put flour in paper bag, add beef cubes and shake to coat them with flour.
Place the vegetable oil, beef fat, bacon, and onion into skillet..
Cook over fairly high heat (#8 of 10 on the stovetop dial).
When onion is soft and lightly browned, remove and put in dutch oven.
Remove bacon when it becomes crisp. (Discard bacon.)
Put the lowest simmering heat under the dutch oven (on the stove), just to keep it warm.
Continue to cook the beef fat until most of the fat has liquified (just a couple minutes more).
Discard fat from skillet and quickly place beef cubes in skillet.
Do not layer beef cubes.
Brown cubes on each side, then place in dutch oven.
Add 1 TBsp butter to skillet, followed by 1 TBsp flour (use the flour left over in the paper bag).
Whisk while cooking - about 1 minute.
Add beef broth, pepper, and worcestershire sauce to the butter-flour mixture, whisking to stir.
When broth mixture begins to boil, add to dutch oven, covering the beef cubes.
Bring beef mixture to a boil again (should take just a few seconds) then cover the dutch oven and place in the oven.
Note the time -- bake for 2 1/2 hours.
At the 2-hour point, prep and cook the vegetables:
Boil potatoes for 15 minutes.
Boil carrots for 10 minutes.
After the stew meat has cooked for 2.5 hours:
Add the drained potatoes and carrots to the stew.
Carefully mix vegetables into the beef stew
Note the time -- bake (covered) for another hour.
To thicken the beef stew juice, mix 2 Tbsp. flour and 2 Tbsp beef broth (or water) together. Mix into stew (if you use the whisk, careful not to break up the potatoes and carrots) and cook 5 minutes more.
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