Mediterranean Roast Chicken and Orzo
So, I watched the Food Network's Ultimate Recipe Showdown, which showcased home cooks across the country making their trademark recipes. Last night it was a Chicken Recipe Showdown; I saw Matzo Ball Soup, Chicken Gumbo, Chicken Stew, and Fried Chicken, but a Roast Chicken Recipe won. Roast Chicken is like a pin-up girl, revered saint, and cosmic gift all in one. It's a healer, a scene-stealer, and a close-the-dealer. Normally, I won't rhyme things like that, but I want you to understand how emotionally attached I am to that dish.
What I am also attached to, unexpectedly, are the cooks I saw on The Ultimate Recipe Showdown. They are home cooks, like you and me. They had a particularly good recipe to make it that far in a Food Network televised contest, but more importantly, they had the chutzpah to get up there in front of the world, against other home cooks, and let themselves and their food be judged. Let me tell you, it is difficult, especially if you are not a professionally trained chef, to carry yourself off on televison like you have THE culinary goods and maintain sufficient confidence to be that last cook standing. This may sound sentimental but I'll say it anyway; I am so proud to be in the home chef ranks with these people - college students and grandmothers to mothers of lots and lots of kids, distinguishing themselves not only in their own homes but on an intimidating, worldwide stage.
I always say, a good cook will find recipe inspiration anywhere, the same way a good writer sees a story in everything. When I fell asleep last night, still thinking about that pineapple-ginger-cilantro roast chicken, I was hoping I would wake up with a new roasted chicken recipe divinely seeded into my subconscious, food-obsessed, mind.
It didn't happen. I dreamed about a girlfriend of mine who strangely enough called me today. So I found myself assuming a typical home cook position; left hand on my hip, right hand holding the top of my open pantry door, weight shifted to my right foot, staring at my foodstuffs and invoking my hungry muse.
I seem to have more Mediterranean pantry items than anything, this is something I need to build upon in 2008. So Mediterranean Roast Chicken was born from availability. I took what I had on hand and multiplied it by media snippets of Nigella, Jamie Oliver, and of course, the Ultimate Recipe Showdown.
In my largest saucepan, I sauteed 4 minced garlic cloves in extra virgin olive oil. Then I added 1/2 cup of roasted red and yellow peppers. Next, 1/4 cup chopped pitted Kalamata olives, about 1/4 cup capers in their juice, 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar, and 2 tbsp. honey. Oh, I also added dried oregano, salt and pepper.
I cooked over medium heat for about 2 minutes.
To a whole chicken, I squeezed in the juice of a lemon, and stuck the two lemon halves into the cavity. I poured over the yummy stuff I sauteed in the saucepan over the chicken and roasted at 400 degrees for 1 hour, 20 minutes (it was a 4.63 pound chicken).
I should have put foil over the chicken so the capers, etc, would not burn but I was out of foil. My two-year-old, the ankle sock flusher, uses my aluminum foil to wrap around her favorite DVDs.
But my dish, the Mediterranean Roast Chicken, what flavor, how tender, and the pan juices, oh, some insanely good stuff. I strained the pan juices into a separate bowl, and reserved the peppers, capers and olives that roasted along with the chicken for later addition into some orzo.
When the chicken was cool, I ripped it off the bone. To the saucepan where I roasted the chicken, I added 8 oz. cooked orzo, the chicken, the peppers/olives/capers, and some of the pan juices. I warmed up over a low flame, added goat cheese (feta would work too!) and toasted pine nuts.
This is how trademark recipes are made. You see something you like, you make it you. You leave behind a legacy, televised or not.
However, the pineapple-ginger roast chicken recipe from The Ultimate Recipe Showdown, made by the Mom of four from Arizona, I downloaded that recipe this morning and it's marinating in my fridge right now. I won't deviate from that much, I find that recipe captivating. Just as captivating as the Grand Prize Winner, Amparo, and her fried yucca root, but I never thought of using pineapple juice, cilantro, ginger, cumin, soy sauce and chicken together. It spoke to me.
Besides, I used the pineapple rings that came with the 100% pineapple juice and made a pineapple upside down cake. Double-ingredienting empowers me.
Now, dinner is ready for when the kids get home from practice, and I can sit down and watch the Food Network again. Or maybe eat the crumbs of the pineapple upside down cake my kids were kind enough to leave behind.
When they like my food that much it's so...inspiring.
Posted by
Sam
at
17:45:03
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