Chicken Sesti

So there I was standing in a strange kitchen and a strange country all alone at 4pm (Italy time) facing about a 1/4 of a metric tonne (seriously! seriously!) okay it was about 1kg, but really like 1kg of chicken breasts and thinking “How am I going to turn this into anything edible?”

It must have been 32C in that kitchen and I hadn’t even turned the oven on.

It was hubris – the Lord strike me down! – I had offered to cook dinner for everyone well before we had set out for the week in Tuscany to celebrate my sister’s wedding – because I thought I was such a damned great cook and also I thought I’d be at my leisure because I was leaving my husband at home with my children.

But all that happened was that I spent days drugged up to the eyeballs on Nytol, occasionally “babysitting” my nephews (iPad) doing my hair for two hours a day and having 1.5hr naps. The rest of the time I was swimming and forgot entirely about this promise to cook on my last night.

I scavenged the main kitchen of the house and brought it down to the kitchenette in the funny little garden flat I had been assigned, just so that no-one could see me sweating and panicking and swearing about cooking dinner for 12 people using only chicken breasts, vegetable oil and paper doilies.

I am exaggerating – me? I had more than that. I also had about another kilo of mozzarella, a tub of the finest and sloppiest burrata I think I’ve ever seen, (and as you can imagine, I’ve seen some burrata), a huge tray of cherry tomatoes and a lot of that nasty unsalted bread you get in bloody Tuscany that is edible for about twenty minutes once it’s out of the oven and then hardens to a brick.

What’s vaguely interesting about this dinner was what I did with the chicken. I don’t like chicken breasts, they are just so annoying. Any other part of a chicken is easy and forgiving because it’s so fatty. But chicken breasts are lean and dry. You can poach them, but then you have to conjure up some kind of sauce to disguise their corpse-like appearance. You can fry them but there was so much of it, it would have taken me about 8,000 years and I was a bit foggy what with all that Nytol still washing around me. Not to mention hot, have I said how hot it was?

So I just shoved it all in the fucking oven with some lemon, garlic and rosemary, oil and salt at 180C for 25 minutes and then set about disguising it with something else.

I laboriously chopped up a lot of that hateful bread into teeny weeny bits, (there was an ancient food processor in a cupboard but I was so hot, you see, running with sweat I was, that I just couldn’t face getting it out and trying to make it work), and then fried it slowly with very finely chopped garlic and about 150g of butter. Then once the chicken was cooked and setting about cooling and turning into shoe leather, I covered it with the garlic crumb.

I’ve never really cooked in another country, not properly. But cooking that dinner in that kitchen made me realise why all Italian food is the way that it is. What you have at your disposal is a lot of quite good fresh produce and then these enormous bushes of sage and rosemary everywhere you look. (Not basil though, I didn’t see one basil plant in my 5-day tour of Tuscany, which makes me think that Italian snails are as keen on it as English snails).

So I went outside and pulled up huge branches of sage and rosemary and put them in everything. Gnocchi got covered in 300g of grated Pecorino and then I chopped in some fresh sage and also a handful of leaves fried in more butter. Then a huge tomato salad, just the cherry tomatoes chopped, a few slices of very finely-sliced red onion, with burrata spooned over and salt – this recipe was courtesy of next-eldest sister who had made it two days previously.

So in the end the shoe leather chicken was okay, with the gnocchi and the very wet tomato salad on the side. I call it Chicken Sesti because Sesti was the name of the place we were staying and it’s not a million miles away from Chicken Kiev.

And that’s what to do when you find yourself in Italy with no shops nearby and you have a lot of chicken breasts and 12 people for dinner.

Look at my sister’s fackin amazing huge dress:

Wigan chicken

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  • Serves: 2

  • Prep time: 5 mins

  • Cooking time: 15 mins

  • Total time: 20 mins

  • Skill level: Easy peasy

  • Costs: Mid-price

Wigan chicken is named after the town it was first created in. It is really quick to prepare and cook so it is a great simple meal if you are ever in a rush. It is a great treat to creating sticky chicken without a long marinade process. It only takes 15 mins to cook and is a speedy mid-week dish that is also perfect for cooking on the BBQ in the summer months too. Serve with mixed salad leaves and enjoy.

Ingredients

  • 2 chicken breasts
  • 2tbsp tomato sauce
  • 3tbsp dark soy sauce
  • 2 flour tortillas
  • Mixed salad leaves to serve

That’s goodtoknow

You could try to add cooked rice and sweetcorn to give it more of a burrito feel.

Method

  1. Cut the chicken into bite sized cubes and coat in the soy sauce and tomato sauce.
  2. Place the coated chicken and the sauce into a frying pan, cover with a lid and leave to cook.
  3. Meanwhile warm your tortillas in a warm grill.
  4. Place the cooked sticky chicken pieces into your tortilla, top with salad and wrap

By Nicolette Lafonseca-Hargreaves

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S?mores Cookies

S’mores Cookies

by Pam on October 14, 2012

We were headed out of town for the weekend to camp at the Oregon coast in our motor home with friends.  The weather was going to be rainy and stormy the whole time which meant we wouldn’t be building fires to cook s’mores so I went in search of a good alternative.  I found these s’more cookies on Kevin & Amanda’s[1] site that looked perfect.  I picked up the marshmallow bits at the store and baked these cookies right before we left town.  The dough was very crumbly when I made them and it made me worry that the cookies would be crumbly but they turned out to be thick, hearty, and absolutely delicious cookies.  They were a big hit with all the kids (and adults) all weekend long and nobody was too disappointed that we couldn’t make traditional s’mores over a campfire.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Use a food processor to crush the graham crackers to fine crumbs.  Combine the flour, graham crackers, baking powder, and salt together in a bowl; mix well.

Beat the butter with the sugars until creamy and smooth.  Add the egg and vanilla and beat until well combined.  Slowly add the flour mixture to the butter mixture until just combined.  Add the marshmallow bits and chocolate chips and mix.

Place spoonfuls of cookie dough onto a baking sheet about 2 inches apart.  Place into the oven and bake for 10-12 minutes or until golden brown.  Let the cookies cook for a couple of minutes before moving them to a cooling rack.  Enjoy dipped in ice cold milk.

Print[2]



S’mores Cookies




Prep Time: 10 min.

Cook Time: 10 -12 min.

Total Time: 22 min.



Ingredients:

1 1/4 cups flour
3/4 cup graham cracker crumbs (7 full graham cracker sheets)
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, softened
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup semi sweet chocolate chips
1 cup Jet Puffed Mallow Bits

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Use a food processor to crush the graham crackers to fine crumbs. Combine the flour, graham crackers, baking powder, and salt together in a bowl; mix well.

Beat the butter with the sugars until creamy and smooth. Add the egg and vanilla and beat until well combined. Slowly add the flour mixture to the butter mixture until just combined. Add the marshmallow bits and chocolate chips and mix.

Place spoonfuls of cookie dough onto a baking sheet about 2 inches apart. Place into the oven and bake for 10-12 minutes or until golden brown. Let the cookies cook for a couple of minutes before moving them to a cooling rack. Enjoy dipped in ice cold milk.



Adapted recipe by For the Love of Cooking.net
Original recipe by Kevin & Amanada

References

  1. ^ Kevin & Amanda’s (www.kevinandamanda.com)
  2. ^ Print Recipe (www.gordon-ramsay-recipe.com)

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