Showing posts with label garlic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garlic. Show all posts

Friday, November 30, 2012

Chicken with Red Wine Sauce


Real connoisseur's will wince at this admission, but I love cooking wines.

When my brother and I were children, on a few rare occasions, we were allowed sips of red wine. Usually it was connected to the holidays, but sometimes my father just indulged our curiosity. While I loved pretending to be drunk, I always hated the taste - an unfortunate prejudice that followed me into my adulthood. Forget the Manischewitz...I didn't drink anything with alcohol in it at all.

For years, I avoided recipes that included wine in its ingredients, assuming I wouldn't like them either...but finally I gave in and tried one, and I've been hooked on Holland House ever since.  So, if you're like me and know nothing about wine but want to try something new, this recipe is for you. :)

Chicken with Red Wine Sauce

Ingredients : 
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon minced garlic
  • 1/4 cup chopped onion
  • 2 lbs boneless chicken breast
  • 1 tablespoon paprika
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1 cup red cooking wine 
  • salt and pepper to taste
  Directions:

Cut chicken into small strips.

 
Heat oil in skillet over medium/high heat. Stir fry chicken with garlic and onion until chicken is no longer pink and its juices run clear. Sprinkle with paprika and brown sugar.  *I* use two heaping tablespoons of minced garlic, myself...but then, I love garlic.


Pour red wine around chicken. Lower the heat to medium, cover and simmer for 20 minutes, lightly basting chicken as you cook.


 The wine will slowly thicken and your chicken will pick up a beautiful caramel color. Towards the end, you can leave the lid off to help the sauce thicken if you like.


Season to taste with salt and pepper, but keep in mind that cooking wines have a higher salt content than regular wines. You might not want to use any at all. I serve mine over white rice (I serve everything over white rice because I have a microwave rice cooker, and that thing is the bomb!) but this goes perfectly with spaghetti as well.


Easy, tasty and fabulous looking!!  Make it this weekend. It will be a perfectly yummy surprise for your hungry family!






Thursday, April 12, 2012

Beef Bourguignon


When I first moved out of my childhood home to live on my own, I knew very little about cooking. While my mother was a perfectly good cook, she never really taught me how to make anything other than pancakes, scrambled eggs, grilled cheese and french toast, and so it was that I actually lived on those few things for about a month. Hot dogs, hamburgers, spaghetti, soup and frozen pizza eventually rounded out my menu that year. Finally growing sick of those things and determined to cook something more wholesome, I progressed to 'the instructions are right here on the box, just add this packet of gunk' prepacked items like Shake & Bake, Hamburger Helper and bagged Pot Roast.

Truth was, I would have liked to eat real food, but any time I looked at a cookbook I was intimidated by ingredients and terminology I wasn't familiar with, and assumed only actually cooks could make those things. 

It wasn't until my then mother-in-law gave me a fantastic book called "Best Recipes from the Backs of Boxes, Bottles, Cans and Jars" that I actually attempted to cook something from scratch. Luckily, it was a very simplistic cookbook. It told you exactly what the products were that you needed, and used brand names I recognized, and that was where the revelation took place. It was specifically saying 'Holland House Red Cooking Wine' in a recipe for Beef Bourguignon. I always wanted to cook with wine, but not being a drinker and knowing nothing about them, I didn't dare try it. Cooking wines...I had seen them in the store, but never realized I could use them. And so...it became the very first real recipe I tried to cook, and after achieving spectacular results, I positively went insane and made everything in that book. 

I make my Beef Bourguignon a little differently now, based on my personal taste, but I will still credit Ceil Dyer's book for the basic premise underneath. It's a great book to give to someone who lives in grilled cheese. However, since this is actually my own recipe now, I give to you:

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Jodi's Beef Bourguignon

Ingredients: 
  • 1 lb of stew meat (or plain old top round..chopped into bite sized chunks)
  • 6 slices of bacon - cut up
  • 1 small onion diced 
  • 2 beef bouillon cubes (or 2 tsp beef bouillon powder) - dissolved in 1 1/2 c hot water.
  • 1 small can tomato paste
  • 2 tsp sugar
  • 1 tsp thyme
  • 1 tsp pepper
  • 2 tsp crushed garlic (that stuff in the jar)
  • 2-3 tsp flour 
  • 1 1/2 cup Red cooking wine
  • Dash of Worcestershire sauce (optional)
Raw bacon doesn't like to be sliced up into 1/2 inch sized bits. It will fight you. So use a sharp knife or at the very least a serrated one, and be prepared to saw at it a little. (Not the finest looking slices of bacon here..but it was on sale so I won't complain.)


Toss this bacon into a deep pan, add in the garlic and onion and fry on medium high heat. While that's going on, coat your beef chunks in flour and throw them in the pan as well. Beef fried in bacon grease with garlic and onion smells incredible. Husbands will peek in your kitchen and mention they love you. Strangers will stare longingly at your home from the street. You'll have it going on like that!



Stir this all occasionally until the beef is browned and the bacon is at least semi-crisp. Then add the red wine, bouillon, tomato paste, sugar, pepper and thyme (and the Worcestershire sauce if you like it,) and mix it all together well. (See..it's just this kinda stuff...nothing scary.)


    
Reduce heat and cover. Let simmer for three hours, but you want to check on it and give it a stir every hour or so.


The ideal thing is for the bottom to get ever so slightly burned and stir that in, because that is part of what gives this its amazing flavor. (Just my opinion, as I like that burned flavor, but of course, if you don't...don't...do that..)  This is tender enough to eat at the 2 1/2 hour mark if you're in a hurry, but to really get the 'fall apart in your mouth' beef, go the full three hours. The sauce will be nice and thick by the time it's done.


                                          Serve over egg noodles or white rice! Delicious!