Posts filed under 'leftovers'

What a tea/dinner/supper*

*delete as appropriate, depending on perceived class status. For me it’s tea.

The bestest Tea
I’d never boiled a chicken until yesterday. I’d fried, sautéed, wrapped in parma ham and made soups from leftovers, but why boil a whole bird when you can roast it, right? Wrong. I’d got a chicken in for the weekend, but as you found out in yesterday’s post, I ended up having a Christmas Sunday lunch. So, having got home at around 8ish on Monday night with the chicken still in the fridge, I was hungry and wanted something fast. Boiling rather than roasting is quicker due to the direct contact of the hot water. It also gives you a ready-made stock, and that means soup.

Here’s what I did. Kettle on, and whole chicken into my largest stockpot with chunkily chopped-up carrot, celery, and parsnip. To that I added a bay leaf, four cloves of garlic, one segment of star anise, and a few sprigs of parsley, plus a peppercorn. The chicken was cooked in about 30 mins. Just like with roasting, use the juices from around the thigh as a guide to whether it’s cooked through. A word of warning here, though - take great care when lifting it out of the boiling water as it can drop back into the pot easily and splash hot stock everywhere. You might be better chopping it up raw and cooking in sections (this improves speed, too). You can go anywhere from this basic recipe. Add fresh chopped chillies and udon noodles and you’re in the Orient, a handful of pasta takes you to Italy, and the addition of leeks sets you on the high road to Cock-a-leekie.

I added cubed potato chunks to thicken the base, and after the chicken was cooked I let it cool before shredding the breast meat and straining off the root veg. I ate this too, but you can chuck it if you like. Into the still-hot broth I threw the shredded chicken meat and some very finely shredded pointed cabbage and put it back on the boil. Mmmm.

So that was yesterday, and today was the left-over soup. I also had an English Camembert that needed eating up (I ‘ve spoken about the joy that is hot cheese before). So far, so naughty, but the addition of half a head of raw broccoli ought to bump up the goodness value…

Yin and Yang
This is good for me… honest.


2 comments 5 February, 2008

Some chicken leftovers

A few final thoughts, facts and tips concerning chickens. In Channel 4’s chicken-related schedule last week, Hugh’s Chicken Run got 3.5m viewers three nights running, Thursday’s Dispatches on food labelling got 3m and Jamie’s Fowl Dinners got 4m. With such good figures, it’s clear that food provenance is something the public is desperate to find out more about - which is good news for Eating Albion and this whole project. To put those figures in some sort of context, around 800,000 tuned in to see Jade’s eviction on Big Brother’s Celebrity Hijack (anything BB is seen as ‘an earner’ for the channel).

Chicken and Veg

I’d like to end this chicken escapade (for now) with a recipe and how I cooked the chicken from my weekend ordeal. To recap, I had one chicken, some carrots, leeks, onions, tarragon, thyme, and potatoes. I stuffed the chicken with half a lemon, some tarragon and thyme, and four crushed garlic cloves, and rested it on a base of the chopped vegetables. I tried Toby’s ex-girlfriend’s sister’s French boyfriend’s tip (phew!) of popping a crust of bread in the bird’s rear. You can’t use any old ‘coggy-ender’* of Mother’s Pride, however - it’s got to be something like the end of a baguette, something with a crust that can take it. I had a small walnut and onion loaf from the Blackbird bakery, so used the domed end of that.

I roast my chickens upside down for the first 30 minutes, then flip them over. It’s then that I up-end them and drain off a little of the garlicky-lemony-fatty-herby goodness from inside the cavity into the gravy tray. With this particular chicken, the bread crust acted like a bath sponge at this point, letting the juices through, but taking them on as well. But because the end stuck out for the rest of the cooking time, it crisped up too. I pulled it out while the bird rested and ate it with the carrots and parsnips the bird was roasted on. Oh my god, it was good! Good interesting bread, augmented by all the juices. I think out of the whole meal, I enjoyed shoving hot, gooey-yet-crunchy, chickeny, nutty bread in my mouth with some caramelised parsnips the most. It was a great appetiser, in the sense that it stimulated my appetite - a lot.

The second off-the-internet tip I tried was dusting my parboiled roasties with polenta. This tip came from the BBC food message boards. They turned out OK, but tasted a little like those frozen McCain home-style roast potatoes. They did crunch up my poor-quality spuds from Berwick Street Market, but I should have just bought better spuds. Having said that, I think they’d be really popular with kids. But if you don’t try, you’ll never know.

Anyway, here’s the finished result - and yes, I did overcook the leeks. Below is the other meat and 1.5 litres of stock that I got from the rest of the bird. Enough for tea on Sunday, sandwiches for Monday, two tubs for the freezer, and stock for risotto and something else. That’s not bad from a £10 bird.

Chicken dinner

Chicken 'leftovers'

* This is what my mother and grandmother called each end of a loaf of bread. Apparently the official name is the heel, but I like coggy-ender better.


4 comments 14 January, 2008


NEWSFLASH! I'm now on Channel 4

EA's time in the sun has ended as I'm busy doing the Big British Food Map for Channel 4. Take a look, it's way cool

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