Originally published April 27, 2010 at 7:00 PM | Page modified April 28, 2010 at 1:35 PM
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Recipe: Chicken with Rice (Arroz Con Pollo)
No need to mess up the entire kitchen to put together a good meal. This one pot recipe will save time, energy and cleanup.
Chicago Tribune
TV chefs toss pots here, skillets there. Saucepans bubble up on several burners. It's drama! It's intense! It's the foodie equivalent of "24."
It's not your reality. You don't need all those dishes, all that drama, all those pans to scrub — all those exclamation points.
You need a great one-pot meal. Most require nothing more than a knife, a cutting board, plus a good-size pot with a lid, perhaps a Dutch oven of enamel-glazed iron or a deep skillet. And with one pot, you'll use only one burner on the stove (read: less energy) and have fewer dishes to do (read: less soap and water).
Quite a few classic dishes are one-pot wonders, from beef stew and its wine-kissed sibling boeuf bourguignon on through cioppino, jambalaya and sancocho.
A good one-pot meal has several elements: a protein (meat, fish, tofu), aromatics (onions, garlic, herbs, spices), vegetables and a starch (potatoes, rice, grains, pasta).
Well made, it boasts balanced flavors and a variety of textures. To get there, maximize flavors, minimize effort and don't overcook the vegetables.
The Food Network's Daisy Martinez maximizes the flavors of ingredients by gently browning elements of a dish before combining them.
"I always brown the protein first because that coaxes out flavor," she said. "The caramelization on the surface adds another nuance of flavor to whatever it is that you're cooking."
That initial browning of elements such as proteins and aromatics also is the way restaurateur and lifestyle maven Barbara Smith begins a one-pot meal. The starch element, whether potatoes, rice or a grain, is important not only for the body it adds to the dish, but also, when the starch is released, for providing "a nice glossiness and a nice satin feel," said Martinez.
And vegetables? They deliver color and texture. Smith likes to add chopped kale to a one-pot meal, letting it steam on top of the other simmering ingredients before stirring it in. "It's OK to have a little crunch."
A one-pot meal is also, she said, "about creativity and not being afraid to try things."
Chicken with Rice (Arroz Con Pollo)
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Makes: 10 servings
1/4 cup achiote oil or olive oil
2 chickens, cut up
1 teaspoon salt
Freshly ground pepper
1 cup prepared sofrito, see note
1/2 cup chopped pimiento-stuffed olives
1 teaspoon ground cumin
Pinch ground cloves
4 cups long-grain white rice
6 cups chicken broth, as needed
2 large bottled roasted red peppers, cut in 1/4-inch strips
1. Heat oil in a Dutch oven over medium heat. Season chicken with half of the salt and pepper to taste. Place chicken pieces, in batches, skin-side down in the Dutch oven; cook, turning as needed, until well browned, about 10 minutes. Remove to a platter.
2. Add sofrito and olives to pot. Season with remaining salt and pepper to taste. Raise heat to medium high; cook until liquid has evaporated. Stir in cumin, cloves and rice. Return chicken to pot. Pour in broth to cover rice by 1 inch. Heat to a boil; cook over high heat until liquid level reaches top of the rice, about 5 minutes. Reduce heat to low. Cover; cook until liquid is absorbed, rice is tender but firm and chicken is cooked through, 15-20 minutes. Fluff rice with fork. Garnish with roasted pepper strips.
Note: You can make sofrito (a mix of chopped onions, peppers, garlic, cilantro and tomatoes) or purchase a prepared version at Latin American food markets.
For achiote oil, heat 2 tablespoons achiote seeds in 1 cup olive oil; when seeds start to sizzle, strain to use.
Adapted from Daisy Martinez's "Daisy: Morning, Noon and Night." Nutrition information: Per serving: 721 calories, 36 percent of calories from fat, 28 g fat, 6 g saturated fat, 114 mg cholesterol, 67 g carbohydrates, 46 g protein, 868 mg sodium, 2 g fiber
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