Sunday, November 13, 2011

Chicken Pot Pie



I love Chicken Pot Pie. It's really a shame I don't have it more often. There's a place near me that has Chicken Pies that I absolutely *love*, and bonus, they'll even have it hot and ready for you if you call in advance.

I have been on a mission since then to find the perfect pie that might be suitable to make at home. Someone here isn't a fan of potatoes in pie (I'll forgive him) but I wanted to find something that we both would enjoy and one that would make me not even think about the fact that it didn't contain my favorite starch.

A few months ago, I had an abundance of broccoli, so I decided to look up pies that had broccoli in it, and lo! I found the jackpot. Of course I modified it, using rotisserie chicken and a whole boatload of vegetables, even more than what was in it already, and came up with a winner. You know what I really think the key ingredient here was? Cheese. Weird. But it totally works.







I'll admit that the pictures I took in this post were from a few weeks ago (yup, I've
got an arsenal of pictures for recipes I haven't blogged about yet. There's more fun stuff coming! :) ) but thinking about it makes me wish I hadn't made chicken with rice tonight. It pales completely in comparison. Most everything I eat this week will. It is that good.







The beauty about this pie is the ability to put whatever you want in it. I kept the carrots and broccoli the same, but I added peas once. Another time, I put in cream of chicken and mushroom soup. I love sauteed onions and celery in here. It uses a double crust, which is really the only way to eat pie. Also, the recipe says to use two cooked chicken breasts. Thumb your nose at that one and use shredded rotisserie chicken. It could be the best decision you've ever made.



Chicken Pot Pie (recipe adapted from allrecipes.com)
1 box of ready made pie crusts (Pillsbury makes them, and so do most store brands. Make sure you get a package that contains at least two pie crusts)
1 carrot, chopped (I've used a handful of carrot shreds, or several chopped baby carrots, or some pre-chopped carrots. Whatever floats your boat)
1 head fresh broccoli, chopped
2 boneless chicken breast halves, cooked and chopped (or take a fresh rotisserie chicken and shred the breasts, removing the skin first)
1 (10.75 ounce) can condensed cream of chicken soup or cream of chicken and mushroom soup, whichever you choose
2/3 cup milk
1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
1/2 teaspoon salt
pepper to taste

other vegetables to add (pick and choose or put them all in):
one chopped onion, sauteed
several celery stalks, chopped and sauteed
a handful of mushrooms, chopped
a cup of frozen peas (added frozen, they'll cook in the pie)

Directions

Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.

Steam carrots and broccoli in a covered pot for 3 minutes. They will still be slightly firm, and that's okay. If you don't have a steam insert for a pot, ball up several pieces of tin foil and line the pot with it. Then put in some water and make sure it won't touch the vegetables when you put them in, so maybe enough to have about an inch of water.

In a large bowl, mix together carrots, broccoli, chicken, soup, milk, cheese, salt and pepper, and any of the vegetables you choose. Put mixture into an already pastry lined pie pan and cover it with the top crust. Crimp edges together to form a seal and cut steam vents in top.

Brush the top crust with an egg wash: one egg beaten with one tablespoon of water.

Bake in preheated oven for 30 minutes, until golden brown.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Sweet Potato Tater Tots

A few weeks back, I was perusing Facebook, as I often do, and I saw a notice for a new burger place on the South Shore opening up. The restaurant, called Wahlburgers, is owned by the Wahlberg brothers, Mark and Donnie, and their chef brother (I think his name is Paul...anyway). I looked at their menu online, and their burgers looked awesome, but the thing that caught my eye was sweet potato tater tots. I told Adam later that day that we needed to take a field trip down there to try a burger, and to have those tater tots (Five Guys has already been in our regular rotation, as there is a location about fifteen minutes away from us, and I thought, why not try something new?). Adam, in a stroke of genius (and because he knows I'll try almost anything), told me, "well, why don't you try to make your own?"

Genius. Of course. Why not, I have the grater and the deep fryer, and all I needed were the raw materials and the time.

As kids, we loved tater tots. I remember us calling them "trash cans", and it makes a little bit of sense-they kind of look like trash cans, right? It's weird for me to call them tater tots, or even just plain tots, as made famous by Napoleon Dynamite. So, tater tots is the actual recipe, but I don't think I'll be able to think of them without calling them trash cans.

But back to the sweet potato. As Guy Fieri might say, these things were money. (Apologies. I can't believe that actually came out of my mouth. But that's exactly what these things are). They weren't terribly difficult to do, but it did force me to exercise a little bit of patience. Waiting for the potatoes to cool after boiling was particularly difficult. I waited for twenty minutes and then dug in to grate and peel them, ignoring the fact that the hot steam was essentially burning my fingers.







I'd like to think that it was like a facial for my hands. Whatever that's referred to, anyway.





Once that was done, add in the other ingredients, mix together, form into logs, and drop into the deep fryer for four minutes. My taste tester ate four straight from the fryer. He's a pretty fair judge when it comes to my cooking, and when I had to swat his hand away, I knew I had a winner. Paired with a homemade cheeseburger on Portuguese bread and the Patriots/Giants game, it's a perfect evening.





My four-legged sous chef, on the other hand, looked on and sulked. I think he wanted one too. Next time, buddy.


Sweet Potato Tater Tots (adapted from Cook With Tom)
3-4 medium size sweet potatoes (enough to get 3 cups of shreds. I wound up with way too much shredded sweet potatoes, so I'd bump this down to 2. Of course, if you have too much, save it and use it for something else, like sweet potato latkes!)
1/4 c flour
1/4 c Parmesan cheese
1 Tsp alt
1 tsp pepper (not in original recipe, but necessary-it gave it the extra spice it needed!)
Canola oil

Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add the sweet potatoes and boil for 20 minutes (do not peel them beforehand!). Let it cool on a plate before peeling them, either with a knife or a peeler.

Shred the sweet potatoes to have three cups' worth. Wring them out in paper towels or a cheesecloth to remove the extra moisture.

Combine sweet potatoes with flour, cheese, pepper and salt. Mix well to combine. When in doubt, add just a little more cheese.

Using a 1 Tbs measuring spoon, portion out tater tots, and form into small tater logs.

Fry in a deep fryer or a deep pot filled halfway with oil, at 350 degrees, for 3-5 minutes, until brown (we found that four minutes was perfect, but it may depend on whether you're frying with a cover or not.).

These tater tots are perfect without any sauce, but feel free to use your favorite. If I have to pick one, it'd be honey mustard, but to each their own.