Last day of classes potluck

Last day of classes potluck; I brought chicken biryani. Lovely to end the semester with lots of shared food.

(Let’s see AI do that! 🙂 )

Sautéing sultanas and cashews in ghee for biryani.

Sautéing onions, curry leaves, cardamom, and cloves for biryani.

Adding spiced marinated chicken to sautéed onions.

 

Chicken Saag (Curried Spinach) with Rice

You’re tired, you want a good rice and curry meal, with both protein and veg, and you want to put minimal effort into cooking. Here’s my favorite hack — this got me through a fair bit of grad school. Also when the kids were little and I was exhausted. 20 minutes, no chopping.

Right now, it looks like you can make this for about $10-$15, depending on grocery prices in your area. I buy 12 pack cans of saag and keep them in the pantry — about $4 / can on Amazon, possibly significantly cheaper at your local Indian grocery.

Vegetarians can use a can of cooked chickpeas or a packet of frozen paneer instead of chicken. I haven’t tried it with green jackfruit, but I think that would work well too. Lamb and shrimp also work just fine, and are traditional.

*****

Chicken Saag (Curried Spinach) with Rice
(20 minutes, serves 2-4, depending on appetites!)

  1. Have leftover rice.
    (If you don’t have leftover rice, you can either make rice, or use naan, roti, paratha, etc. Those can be bought frozen and toasted to deliciousness very quickly.)
  2. Heat about 2 T oil, add up to 1 T cayenne (to your taste, you can skip it entirely if you want), stir for 5-10 seconds on high.
    (You probably want a vent fan going, as it’s likely to make you and everyone else around cough otherwise.)
  3. Dump in 4-6 boneless skinless chicken thighs. (You can trim them if you like, but you don’t actually have to.) Stir for a few more seconds until well-coated in chili oil and lightly seared.
    (Still cooking on high.)
  4. Dump in one 15 oz. can saag and stir in. (I like Jyoti, but there are various fine brands.)
    (Still cooking on high.)
  5. Rinse can and dump water (about 1/2 can) into pot. Stir in and bring back to a boil.
  6. Cover, lower heat to medium, and let cook 5-10 minutes, until chicken is cooked through.
    (You can wander away at this point and plop onto the couch for a bit — just set a timer if you’re likely to forget.)
  7. Uncover, raise heat back to high, and cook another 5 minutes or so, stirring occasionally, until spinach sauce is thick and happy. If you want, break up cooked chicken with your stirring spoon. Taste and adjust salt, etc. if needed, but I actually don’t do anything else to this; I like it as is.
    (Heat up your leftover rice if you’ve got it now, adding a few sprinkles of water before sticking it in the microwave, to help it hydrate. Or toast frozen bread now.)
  8. Serve chicken saag hot over leftover rice. (Or with bread!)

*****

Link to Jyoti saag on Amazon: https://a.co/d/0fvvjVvL

 

1/2 Recipe for Creamy Chicken with Pasta

Kavi messaged from college and asked for the recipe for the creamy chicken she likes me to make for her. She made it — well, a quarter-recipe, because the dorm pots and pans are so tiny she couldn’t even do that half recipe below, we have to get her some decent-sized pots and pans — and said it came out yummy, so we are feeling triumphant.

Passing the recipe along — it’s a pretty basic creamy chicken with pasta. She’s not really comfortable cutting up raw meat, so I told her to have the Safeway butcher cut it up for her, and she really suffers from cutting up onions, so I had her buy the fresh chopped onions.

(If she wants to be a Sri Lankan girl, she’s going to have to make her peace with chopping onions, but that can happen later.)

***

Remember that t. is teaspoon and T is Tablespoon.

1/2 Recipe for Creamy Chicken with Pasta

(makes 2-3 servings, 30 minutes if you know what you’re doing, probably more like 60 minutes if you’re just learning to cook)

1/4 c. olive oil
6 oz. (about 1 medium) chopped onion
3 cloves garlic, chopped
3 boneless skinless chicken thighs, cut into bite-size pieces
salt to taste (start with about 1/2 t., add more at end if you want after tasting)
1/2 t. ground black pepper (optional)
1/2 c. liquid (sherry or white wine or water) for deglazing the pan
1/2 c. heavy cream
1/2 box pasta (usually we use penne, but whatever you like)

(In a large pot, set water to boiling for pasta, along with 1 t. salt. (If it’s going to stress you out to try to track both, you can do the pasta first and just set it aside until you’re done with the chicken, but I’ll give it to you the way I usually do it.))

1. In a large frying pan, heat olive oil on medium-high. Add chopped onions, stir them in. After a few minutes, add chopped garlic. (If you put the garlic in at the beginning, it’s likely to burn — garlic is more delicate than onions.) Cook, stirring as needed, until onions are golden-translucent (about 5-10 minutes?)

2. Add cut-up chicken, salt, and pepper. Sauté on medium-high, stirring occasionally. You want to let the chicken sit a little bit, so it browns on the bottom, because that adds flavor. But don’t burn it. Cook about ten minutes, until chicken is cooked through and lightly seared.

(Somewhere around here, your pasta water should be boiling. Add 1/2 box pasta to it, stir it in, check box for timing, set timer for appropriate time. I’d put a strainer in the sink at this point, so when the timer goes off, it’s easy to just dump the pasta in the sink.)

3. Add 1/2 c. liquid (sherry, white wine, or water) to the pan. It’ll probably hiss a little and if you dump it all in, it might splash, so pour gently. Scrape up (easier with wooden spoon than soft spatula) any browned bits sticking to the bottom (that’s called ‘fond’ and is a lot of what makes this tasty. We love fond).

4. Simmer another 5-10 minutes, stirring, letting the fond and liquid blend with the onions and garlic to make a nice sauce.

(Has your pasta timer gone off yet? Drain pasta in sink, then put pasta back in pot with a little bit of olive oil, stirring — that’ll keep it from becoming a sticky clump. Set aside until you’re done with chicken.)

5. Almost done! Add heavy cream, stirring it in, and then simmer another 5-10 minutes until it’s the texture you want. (I’d aim for fairly liquid-y, because it’ll thicken some when it’s mixed with the pasta.) Taste and adjust seasonings — this is where you add a little more salt if you want.

6. Carefully pour creamy chicken into pasta in pot, stir until well-blended. Enjoy!

(If you don’t have heavy cream, you can use butter and flour to make a roux, add milk, and then this sauce is called a béchamel. But that’s a lesson for another day. 😊)

(I don’t have a photo of the food, so here is a pic of me and Kavi that my dad posted recently.)

From the Skinny Taste air fryer cookbook

Made this tonight, from the Skinny Taste air fryer cookbook, because Kev got us an air fryer a while back and I figured I should learn how to use it. This was good, but dang, white people food makes a lot of mess to cook. So many dishes! And then you need utensils to eat it too…

Chicken curry and chili leeks

Didn’t sleep well last night, which is very frustrating, because while I made it through teaching okay, I’ve just been dragging since 3 p.m., too tired to do anything. But lying on the couch not doing things (and playing Polytopia while watching re-runs of New Girl with Kavi) eventually just makes me feel depressed. Gah.

I finally managed to eat some dinner, which helped, and Kevin made me tea, which helped, and then I came up and lay in bed instead of on the couch, and looked for a dumb but pretty movie to watch, and settled on Julia Roberts in Eat, Pray, Love, which is kind of perfect because what sounds really nice right now is jetting off to a foreign country, ideally a warm one.

She’s just made it to India, and I’m rested enough to pause and post a few photos off my phone from the last few weeks, clearing it out a little, which is sort of like being productive.

This is a mix of basmati and Sri Lankan red rice, served with chicken curry and chili leeks.

I Just Don’t Have the Willpower

Sigh. I wrote up a perfectly good vegan garlic curry recipe for the vegan cookbook. It was delicious. But then I thought…you know what this would be great as? The base for a chicken curry. So I cut up six chicken thighs and tossed them in, simmered for 15 minutes or so, and oh my god, that’s stunning.

I’m never going to manage to go fully vegan, folks. I just don’t have the willpower. I’ll have to settle for just reducing meat consumption, at least for now. (I still dream of discovering massive reserves of willpower in my old age….)

Sri Lankan Chicken Curry

This is a dish you can get in restaurants and homes all over Sri Lanka, just a classic. It’s my parents’ 50th anniversary today, and this is one of the dishes I learned from Amma. She made chicken curry probably once a week for my entire childhood, and my recipe is still pretty much identical to hers, almost thirty years later. Standing the test of time!

3-5 medium onions, diced
3 TBL vegetable oil
1 tsp black mustard seed
1 tsp cumin seed
3 whole cloves
3 whole cardamom pods
1 cinnamon stick, broken into 3 pieces
1-2 TBL red chili powder
1 TBL Sri Lankan curry powder
12 pieces chicken, about 2 1/2 lbs, skinned and trimmed of fat. (Use legs and thighs — debone them if you must, but they’ll be tastier if cooked on the bone. Don’t use breast meat — it’s not nearly as tasty.) (Alternately, use 6 pieces of chicken, and three russet potatoes, peeled and cubed)
1/3 cup ketchup
1 heaping tsp salt
1/2 cup milk
1 TBL lime juice

1. In a large pot, sauté onions in oil on medium-high with mustard seed and cumin seed, cloves, cardamom pods, and cinnamon pieces, until onions are golden/translucent (not brown). Add chili powder and cook one minute. Immediately add curry powder, chicken, ketchup, and salt.

2. Lower heat to medium. Cover and cook, stirring periodically, until chicken is cooked through and sauce is thick, about 20 minutes. Add water if necessary to avoid scorching. Add potatoes if using, and add milk, to thicken and mellow spice level; stir until well blended. (Be careful not to cook on high at this point, as the milk will curdle.)

3. Cook an additional 20 minutes, until potatoes are cooked through. Add lime juice; simmer a few additional minutes, stirring. Serve hot.