T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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564.1 | try this for the stew | CSCMA::GILDER | | Fri Oct 28 1988 14:47 | 19 |
| Martin, this sounds absolutely delicious. What I would do is put
a cut up chicken (fryer) in a large dutch oven. You could put in
enough chicken stock to just cover the chicken and then add the
amount of wine to suit your taste. I'd cut up the carrots and then
add the rest of the ingredients to taste. My best guess would be
one orange for flavor but two if you wanted to make it a little
zingier. I would cook it over low heat for at least 1 hour or maybe
a little more. Check the chicken and the carrots. When the chicken
is done the whole thing should be done.
But this really has peaked my interest enough that I would be willing
to experiment over the weekend and let you know.
If you wanted to thicken the stock, you could dissolve cornstarch
in water and slowly add it to the pot. Try it.
Adriane Gilder
CSCMA::Gilder
dtn 292-2565
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564.2 | Yet another orange sauce recipe | BOLT::MINOW | Bush/Horton: for a kinder, gentler, America | Mon Oct 31 1988 10:15 | 18 |
| re: .1 -- sounds very familiar. I think that the currents were marinated
in orange liquoir, too.
One orange/chicken recipe I've been making for a while is, roughly
-- skin and bone chicken breasts, flour lightly and saute in olive oil.
-- take the juice of one orange, some balsamic vinager, and some tomato
paste and, perhaps, a little bit chicken stock; mix together
-- when the chicken breasts are ready (only a few minutes), deglaze
the frying pan with the orange/tomato mixture. If you don't keep
kosher (or, if you replace the chicken breasts with salmon filets)
thicken with butter.
-- serve with rice.
Martin.
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564.3 | Veal in Orange Sauce | COGMK::MALMBERG | | Mon Oct 31 1988 12:13 | 24 |
| I've a favorite recipe I discovered when I was living in France
for veal cutlets in orange sauce. I bought cookbooks when I was
there so I'd know what kind of cuts of meat I could get and have
brought back a few gems like this which I've never seen here. I
know it isn't Orange Chicken Stew, but I think y'all might enjoy
this. I've been told it's too good to be kosher!
About a pound of cutlets serves four people generously.
Lightly flour the veal cutlets in seasoned (salt and pepper) flour.
Make a few 1/4 inch cuts in the edges to keep the cutlets from curling
when you cook them.
Saute the cutlets in margarine or butter, 2 minutes to the side,
in a heavy skillet. When you turn them to the second side, sprinkle
them gradually with the juice of two oranges. Remove the meat to
a warm platter and bring the sauce to a boil to thicken it a bit.
Swirl 2 more tablespoons of margarine or butter through it and pour
the sauce over the meat.
I serve this with egg noodles and green vegetables. It's very fast
and excellent for sudden company. I start cooking the meat just
after I put the egg noodles in the boiling water.
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564.4 | May not help, but certainly won't hurt! | DECALP::SHRAGER | Nous avons chang� tout cel� | Thu Feb 02 1989 05:43 | 9 |
| This is the closest note I could find that could loosely be
associated with chicken soup. I need to settle a bet. My
mother always added chicken feet while the soup was cooking.
Obviously they were thrown out afterwards, but I seem to
remember there is something in the feet that supposed to help
something-or-another (broth maybe).
Any "Jewish Doctors" out there continuing to practice medicine
without a licence know what this was for?
|
564.5 | | IOSG::LEVY | QA Bloodhound | Thu Feb 02 1989 06:46 | 8 |
|
> Obviously they were thrown out afterwards
I think you inhereted only half of the tradition.
You should have eaten them!
Malcolm
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564.6 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Thu Feb 02 1989 06:56 | 10 |
|
re .4:
This is a guess, but, then again, you get what you pay for.
In other beasts, there is some stuff in their feet or hooves that
helps the soup/stock gel when it cools. Maybe chickens have this
same sort of culinary toe jam.
--Mr Topaz
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564.7 | No Toes | USACSB::SCHORR | | Thu Feb 02 1989 10:38 | 4 |
| The feet are supposed to increase the intensity of the flavor of
the broth. Unfortunatly feet are rarely seen today.
WS
|
564.8 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 02 1989 11:34 | 6 |
| Contrary to opinions expressed previously, chickens still have feet.
I think it's illegal to sell chicken feet, cow's lungs, and various
other offal in some localities because of health reasons. In any case,
butchers don't do as much processing in the shop as they used to, so
they usually get footless (and fancy-free?) chickens.
|
564.9 | | DECALP::SHRAGER | Nous avons chang� tout cel� | Thu Feb 02 1989 11:46 | 4 |
| Thanks all. The victim watched me read the
responses. She agrees she lost!
NO! I will _not_ tell you the bet :-).
|
564.10 | The kosher butcher sells them to the Chinese butcher | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Feb 02 1989 12:44 | 4 |
| I think I know where all the chicken feet go - check out a butcher shop
in your local Chinatown (they have duck feet, too, by the pound). For
me, chicken feet aren't worth eating (ditto for chicken necks), but
they do help flavor the soup.
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564.11 | Heldzel | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Thu Feb 02 1989 13:11 | 1 |
| Ah, but chicken neck stuffed (heldzel, that is), now there's a treat!
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564.12 | Animals don't have plastic intestines | YOUNG::YOUNG | | Mon Feb 06 1989 12:10 | 7 |
| I haven't had heldzel in years. I figured it kind of went away
about when real kishke did.
Probably just as well, I'm sure it wasn't "health food".
Paul
|