But back to the gumbo. Serve over rice. Add gumbo file and hot sauce to taste at the table.
Monday, April 12, 2010
Chicken Andouille Gumbo
But back to the gumbo. Serve over rice. Add gumbo file and hot sauce to taste at the table.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Chicken Fajita Soup.... the hurry up, it's time for dinner edition!
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Chicken Cabbage Salad with Peanut Sauce... sans gallbladder!
Guess what makes you not feel like cooking? Or eating? Getting your gallbladder yanked out! With complications! So while I recuperate, my girl Diet Buddy Daily is going to hook us all up with this delicious recipe for...
Chicken Cabbage Salad with Peanut Sauce
THE INGREDIENTS
1/3 cup rice wine vinegar
¼ cup olive oil
2 teaspoons sesame oil
¼ cup bottled Thai peanut sauce
½ head napa cabbage
1 cup shredded carrots
4 scallions
1 whole rotisserie chicken (completely cooled)
2 teaspoons black sesame seeds
Pepper to taste
(Optional: If you like dressing sweeter, add Splenda to taste – I do!)
Step Two: Chop your cabbage and carrots (or buy the shredded kind) and place them in a bowl.
Step Three: Shred your rotisserie chicken and place on top of the cabbage and carrots.
Step Four: Toss the salad with the dressing, divide onto 6 plates.
Step Five: Thinly slice your scallions and divide evenly on plated chicken and cabbage mixture. Sprinkle with sesame seeds, add pepper to taste, and serve.THE VERDICT:
DietBuddyDaily – I could eat this ALL DAY! Light and yummy.
DBD’s Hubby – “Needs more lettuce” Duh, it has no lettuce…
DBD’s Son – Didn’t even offer it to him. Veggies would kill him, I’m sure.Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Classic Chicken Casserole
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Don't You Forget About... Chicken Corn Chowder
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Green Chile Chicken Enchiladas with Sassy Sauce
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Savory Chicken Biscuits
Debone and dice your chicken. I combined white and dark meat. This is a one-cup measuring cup, filled past the one-cup line. So maybe a cup and a half of chicken? I'm trying to be good about measuring as I go along, but bear with me. I don't usually measure in the kitchen.
Four ounces of cream cheese = 1/2 the eight ounce container. In case you were wondering.
Place one scoop of filling on each triangle of dough. I used an ice cream scoop and it was the perfect size.
And, voila, the finished product. They were actually quite lovely.
I served these to two girlfriends, with a bottle of Prosecco, an assortment of cheeses, warm brie with marmalade, grapes and baguette. It was thoroughly delightful. I'll definitely be making these again, though I may add a little more seasoning to the filling in the future, to make it more savory and less chicken salady.
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Sometimes? A chicken is just a chicken
I never have fresh produce "on-hand," just waiting around to be prepared. If I buy something on a whim in the store, thinking, ooooh, this will be so good in whatever, it ends up going bad. And I hate nothing more than throwing out produce that was allowed to rot by my lazy and disorganized self. So I tend to buy what I need, when I need it, and then use it. Which means I go to the grocery store multiple times in the week, unlike those of you who are all organized and such and go once a week and "stock up." I never have stock. It's how I roll.
My "need it, buy it, use it" approach is awesome if I would actually, you know, *make menu plans* and then *implement* said menu plans. Which, in theory, sounds like a fabulous way to live your life but which, in reality, is always too much of a pain in the ass for me.
But, I digress...
I decided to start my chicken odyssey in the middle of eating an unphotographed chicken dinner. So I went back to the grocery store and purchased another $5 ($5!) chicken and prepared yet another chicken dinner today.
And though it was not a very auspicious start to the process of repurposing the store-bought roasted chicken, it was quite tasty. And it will serve as our benchmark chicken dinner by which all future chicken creations will be judged. The deciding factor of whether or not a repurposed chicken recipe was a success will be, "Was it better than just having a plain, old chicken dinner?"
So, you see, this chicken dinner has meaning. It's not a lazy start to this blog. It was planned.
And now, behold, the goodness of WEEK ONE:
Roasted chicken ($5!), mashed potatoes and beet salad.
The ingredients:
What's with all the chicken?
Originally posted on my blog, So Not Zen, January 8, 2009.