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Some (read: many) years ago, I saw Jeff Smith make an
oriental chicken appetizer on TV. I have almost all of his books, but can't seem to locate it. It involved boiling and then chilling a chicken breast. Slicing it longwise and then crosswise to make 6-8 pieces. Placed in a "boat" (like they bake ziti in) it was covered with roasted sesame oil, in which was salt and ground ginger. Chill and serve. Anybody recall this or know a pointer to where I might find it? TIA Alex |
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On Jun 14, 11:35*am, Chemiker > wrote:
> Some (read: many) years ago, I saw Jeff Smith make an > oriental chicken appetizer on TV. I have almost all of his > books, but can't seem to locate it. > > It involved boiling and then chilling a chicken breast. > Slicing it longwise and then crosswise to make 6-8 > pieces. Placed in a "boat" (like they bake ziti in) > it was covered with roasted sesame oil, in which was > salt and ground ginger. Chill and serve. > > Anybody recall this or know a pointer to where I > might find it? > Sounds like cold poached chicken appetizer. Here's the version I have used for a banquet. It calls for a small whole chicken, but you could adapt it to a breast. It doesn't call for sesame oil but you could use that instead of the dipping sauce, or maybe just add a touch of it to the dipping sauce. Alternatively, you could brush sesame oil sparsely all over the chicken after it's cooked and cooled but before you cut it up. Boil 7 or 8 cups of water in a large pot. Cut 3 scallions into sections and add them, along with 4 or 5 slices of fresh ginger, 2 teaspoons of salt and 3 tablespoons of sherry or rice wine. Place the chicken in the water. The water will initially stop boiling, then return. Reduce the heat so it stops short of a boil. Barely simmer for about 15 minutes, then turn off heat, cover, and let cool in the water. It will finish cooking as the water cools and will be juicier than other ways of cooking chicken. When it has cooled, remove the chicken, drain, and chop it into large bite-sized pieces. Arrange on a platter so it looks (again) like a chicken and serve with the dipping sauce. (Note: the easiest way to chop it is first to section it into legs, thighs, wings, breasts and backs, and then chop each of those into appropriate sizes. Then reassemble.) Sauce: 2 tablespoons peanut oil, heated in a small saucepan, to which add 2 cloves garlic, crushed, 1/4 cup soy sauce, and 1 TB prepared mustard (English or Chinese). (Note: if you're making up the mustard just for this recipe, make that the first thing you do so it can sit as long as possible.) -aem |
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On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 11:57:36 -0700 (PDT), aem >
wrote: >On Jun 14, 11:35*am, Chemiker > wrote: >> Some (read: many) years ago, I saw Jeff Smith make an >> oriental chicken appetizer on TV. I have almost all of his >> books, but can't seem to locate it. >Sauce: 2 tablespoons peanut oil, heated in a small saucepan, to which >add 2 cloves garlic, crushed, 1/4 cup soy sauce, and 1 TB prepared >mustard (English or Chinese). (Note: if you're making up the mustard >just for this recipe, make that the first thing you do so it can sit >as long as possible.) -aem thanks. This isn't it, but I think I'll keep it. Caught me in mustard making mode. Started two batches yesterday, one a german take, 1:1 yellow/white and brown mustard seed, the other a scandanavian creamy yellow mustard with dill. Of course, it will take months before they become mature. (sigh!) Alex |
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