THE STINKING ROSE'S 40 CLOVE GARLIC CHICKEN
From The Stinking Rose Web site: "You heard it right. 40 cloves! But don't let that number scare you, because they add just the right amount of zest and aroma to make this one of The Stinking Rose's® most popular dishes! " I LOVE GARLIC!!! MMMM! Prep time depends on if you bought already peeled garlic or not, and if not, how fast you can start peelin'!
Provided by ThatSouthernBelle
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 1h5m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Heat butter and olive oil in a deep, heavy skillet.
- Season the chicken with salt, pepper and rosemary. Toss in flour.
- When the pan is hot, but not smoking, add the chicken, skin side down.
- Sauté chicken until golden brown on both sides. Remove from pan.
- Add garlic cloves and sauté until light brown.
- Add white wine and chicken stock. Return chicken to pan.
- Cover and simmer for 30 minutes.
- Remove chicken and keep warm, turn heat to high and reduce liquid by 66%. Remove to blender, add cream and puree sauce. Adjust seasoning and serve over chicken.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 799.5, Fat 47.3, SaturatedFat 17.1, Cholesterol 162.5, Sodium 488.7, Carbohydrate 45, Fiber 1.7, Sugar 4.8, Protein 37
CHICKEN WITH 40 CLOVES OF GARLIC
If you like garlic, you will love this chicken!
Provided by Anonymous
Categories Meat and Poultry Recipes Chicken Whole Chicken Recipes
Time 2h5m
Yield 8
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Preheat an oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- Melt the butter with the olive oil in a large Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add the chicken to the Dutch oven and brown on all sides in the butter and oil, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove the chicken to a cutting board.
- Drain all but 2 tablespoons of liquid from the pan; stir the garlic cloves into the reserved liquid. Return the chicken to the pan; sprinkle the water, lemon juice, salt, thyme, and black pepper over the chicken; cover tightly.
- Bake the chicken in the preheated oven until no longer pink at the bone and the juices run clear, about 90 minutes. An instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh should read 180 degrees F (82 degrees C). Remove the chicken from the oven, cover with a doubled sheet of aluminum foil, and allow to rest in a warm area for 10 minutes before slicing.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 384.4 calories, Carbohydrate 5.4 g, Cholesterol 116.8 mg, Fat 23.9 g, Fiber 0.4 g, Protein 35.4 g, SaturatedFat 7.4 g, Sodium 418.9 mg, Sugar 0.2 g
CHICKEN WITH 40 CLOVES OF GARLIC IN A CLAY POT
I found this recipe in Consumer Guide to Clay Cookery. Though it sounds like a lot of garlic - the peeled cloves cook into sweet, mellow nuggets of flavor - great to spread on crusty french bread. The chicken cooks up moist and tender. This recipe is cooked in a clay pot that must be soaked in cold water for 15 minutes and is placed in a cold oven to start.
Provided by Herb Lady
Categories Chicken
Time 1h45m
Yield 5-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Soak top and bottom of 3 1/4 quart clay cooker in water about 15 minutes; drain.
- Line bottom and sides of cooker with parchment paper.
- Combine olive oil, garlic and herbs in cooker.
- Rinse and pat dry chicken reserving neck and giblets for other use.
- Place chicken over garlic mixture.
- Drizzle with lemon juice.
- Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
- Place covered cooker in COLD oven.
- Set oven at 475 degrees F.
- Bake until chicken is tender and juices run clear when thigh is pierced, about 1 1/4 hours.
- Remove cover; bake until chicken is crisp and brown.
- 5 to 10 minutes.
- Carve chicken and spoon cooking liquid over chicken.
- Serve with garlic and french bread.
CHICKEN WITH 40 CLOVES OF GARLIC
Provided by Nigella Lawson : Food Network
Time 1h45m
Yield 4 to 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- When I was young, this old French classic was still - though in a quiet way - very much in vogue. I dare say it was because the novelty of using so many garlic cloves had not worn off; it seemed somehow dangerously excessive. Even so, I don't think anyone would think it quite unremarkable now to put 40 cloves of garlic in a casserole. Certainly, if you peeled and chopped - let alone minced - the garlic, it would be inedible, but garlic cloves cooked encased in their skins grow sweet and caramelly as they cook, like savory bonbons in their sticky wrappers, rather than breathing out acrid heat. This is a cozy supper, not a caustic one.
- This dish entered my canon under someone else's auspices. A few years ago, for the fortieth birthday of a then-colleague and friend of mine, Nick Thorogood, his partner asked everyone to contribute something written expressly for purpose to be compiled in a fat tribute of a book. Since most of Nick's and my conversation dwells, with almost fetid passion, on food, it seemed only proper to write a recipe for him. And given that it was his fortieth birthday, this seemed the right recipe.
- It is not quite the classic version (not that there is only one: food is as variable as the people who cook it) but it sticks to the basic principles. Maybe because the white meat on chicken tends towards the utterly tasteless these days, I prefer to use not a whole chicken, but thigh portions only. Naturally, this wouldn't make sense if you were raising your own chickens, then slaughtering them for the pot, as was the custom when this recipe came into being (and very good it would have been, too, for adding oomph to an old bird) but if you're following the contemporary shopping model, it works very well. For some reason, I veer towards recipes that can easily be cooked in one of my wide and shallow cast-iron Dutch ovens and this fits the bill perfectly.
- By all means, add some steamed or boiled potatoes alongside if you wish, but I'd prefer, by far, a baguette or two to be torn up and dunked into the flavorsome juices; though don't rule out the option of sourdough toast, which is the perfect vehicle for spreading the sweet-cooked garlic onto. Otherwise, some green beans or baby peas or a plain green salad is all you need for a sure-fire salivation-inducing supper.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
- Heat the oil on the stovetop in a wide, shallow ovenproof and flameproof Dutch oven (that will ultimately fit all the chicken in one layer, and that has a lid), and sear the chicken over a high heat, skin-side down. This may take 2 batches, so transfer the browned pieces to a bowl as you go.
- Once the chicken pieces are seared, transfer them all to the bowl. Finely slice the scallions, put them into the Dutch oven and quickly stir-fry them with the leaves torn from a few sprigs of thyme.
- Put 20 of the unpeeled cloves of garlic (papery excess removed) into the pan, top with the chicken pieces skin-side up, then cover with the remaining 20 cloves of garlic. Add the vermouth (or white wine) to any oily, chickeny juices left in the bowl. Swish it around and pour this into the pan too. Sprinkle with the salt, grind over the pepper, and add a few more sprigs of thyme. Put on the lid and cook in the oven for 1 1/2 hours.
- Make Ahead Note: Chicken can be browned and casserole assembled 1 day ahead. Cover tightly and store in the refrigerator. Season with salt and pepper and warm the pan gently on the stovetop for 5 minutes before baking as directed in recipe.
- Making Leftovers Right: If I do have any chicken left over - and I don't think I've ever had more than 1 thigh portion - I take out the bone then and there and put the chicken in the refrigerator. Later (within a day or two), I make a garlicky soup, by removing the chicken, adding some chicken broth or water to the cold, jelled juices, placing it over a high heat and, when that's hot, shredding the chicken into it and heating it through thoroughly, till everything is piping hot. You can obviously add rice or pasta. Otherwise, mash any leftover garlic into the concentrated liquid (which will be solid when cold), chop up some leftover chicken, and put it all into a saucepan with some cream. Reheat gently until everything is piping hot, and use as a pasta sauce or serve with rice.
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