More improvised cooking: this started as a variant on my "chicken a la something or other," which is basically strips of chicken, sauteed, onions, ditto, and flavorings including tomato paste. I decided that it doesn't count as chicken a la something or other without the tomato paste.

I cut about 2/3 of a red bell pepper into large chunks, and a large yellow onion into middle-sized ones, then went for a walk while the air in the kitchen cleared.

When I came back, I started the rice (long-grain white rice), then heated our covered frying pan. Next, I cut up about a third of a pound of chicken (the smaller part of a package of chicken cutlets) into middle-sized strips. I added olive oil to the pan, still on a fairly high light. Then the onion went into the pan, and sauteed for a while; some of the bits turned brown.

When the rice had about eight minutes to go, I put the chicken in, and browned it on all sides. Once it was brown, I added some white wine (I'd been going to use sherry, but it didn't smell right for this), let it boil off for a moment, then added a good couple of squirts of hoisin sauce. [Somewhere in here I reduced the heat.] I stirred all that, added a bit of water, then put in the red pepper pieces and a generous handful of dried cherries. Stirred that, stirred in some lemon juice (bottled, hence no pulp), and covered it until the rice was ready.

It was good. A slightly stronger flavor to the sauce might have been better--more lemon juice instead of the water? spices?

[cross-posting to [livejournal.com profile] off_recipe]
Tags:

From: [identity profile] ianmcdonald.livejournal.com


you're three-quarters the way to a Brazilian (more correctly Bahian) moqueca: all those ingredients minus tomato paste, a touch of chilli, garlic cumin, pepper (not too much, Brazilians don't like spicy food much) etc etc, then slowly add coconut milk (don't curdle) and finally a generous glug of dende, which is Brazilian palm-oil --I'm sure you can track it down in the metropolis. Eat with rice, and farofa, which is manioc flour fried in butter until it golds golden (recipes online) And everyone will think you're a genius,
.

About Me

redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
Redbird

Most-used tags

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style credit

Expand cut tags

No cut tags