Pollo alla Cacciatore

Chicken alla Cacciatore in pot

Chicken alla Cacciatore in pot

A favorite from my childhood, Pollo alla Cacciatore is a dish I don’t make frequently enough these days but which is also a favorite in our young family. Translated as hunter style chicken I am not sure where this dish originated from as just about every other recipe for pollo alla cacciatore uses plum tomatoes or tomato sauce, and this family version does not. Evidently every region, and even every family, has their own variation. I had never even heard of it having tomato until I once saw this on a restaurant menu. I tried it, and here is the version as we make it.

Ingredients

1 whole chicken, cut up
5-10 cloves of garlic, chopped
1 cup white wine (not sweet)
3-4 leaves sage, torn
1 sprig rosemary (or 1 tsp dried rosemary)
olive oil for browning the chicken
1-2 tsp white wine vinegar
salt
pepper
water

Preparation

Heat a wide pot on medium to medium-high heat (6-7 on my electric stove top). Brown the chicken in batches without overcrowding to prevent boiling (you know, when too much liquid builds up in the pot and the meat doesn’t brown but turns gray instead), adding salt and pepper to taste. Remove the browned chicken from the pot to make room for the next batch and keep at it until all the chicken has been browned.

Cacciatore browning

Cacciatore browning

When done return all the chicken to the pot, reduce the heat a notch (6 on my stove), and add the garlic. Quickly sweat the garlic to release the flavor stirring everything together to avoid burning. Add the sage, the rosemary, give it all a quick stir, then add the white wine and bring to a medium boil, and allow the wine to reduce by half. Add about 1/2 a cup of water and reduce to a simmer for about 30 minutes. Check on it periodically, adding a little more water if needed to prevent the liquid from cooking out completely. After about 30 minutes add the vinegar, adjust the salt and pepper if needed and cook for another 5 minutes.

Cacciatore simmering

Cacciatore simmering

A few serving suggestions for this dish are wild rice, mashed potatoes, polenta, risotto, a pasta such as farfalle, or simply with a salad. A baguette or other crusty bread is also must to soak up the sauce.

Notes:

The amount of garlic in this dish can vary widely depending on your taste. I love garlic so I use a lot and mince it. If you are not keen on garlicky foods you can put less garlic and slice it instead of mincing it which will reduce the intensity of the flavor.

If the heat is too high when you add the garlic and you find it turning brown, quickly add the white wine to stop the frying of the garlic. You don’t want it to burn as it will imbue a burnt flavor to the dish. (Mind you I’d still eat it but it won’t be the same). You can add the sage and rosemary right after.

If you are not partial to vinegar you can omit it from the recipe. Indeed adding the vinegar is a new development as my mother never added it when I was living at home. It is something she introduced us too on one of her visits and we have continued to use it since as it adds an extra dimension to the dish.

Sunday Beef Stew

Beef stew simmering

Beef stew simmering

Although I love to cook I usually only get to do so on the weekends as I come home too late during the week to prepare a meal that we could eat before 7PM.  So my wife cooks during the week, and I make a breakfast and/or dinner or two on the weekends, usually making something that takes a little longer as the time is a bit of a luxury. Because spring refuses to come and stay around for a while I often find myself thinking about dishes like stews. Here is one I recently put together.

Ingredients

2 lbs beef (I used bottom round)
3 carrots
3 potatoes
1 large onion
1 turnip
1 bunch parsley (about a 1/4 cup)
2 sprigs rosemary
4 cups beef broth
1 160z can diced or whole tomato
1 tbsp ketchup
1 clove garlic
pepper to taste
salt to taste
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
a splash  of tabasco
3 tbsp olive oil

Beef stew meat

Beef stew meat

Procedure and Cooking

Cut the beef into 1 inch cubes.
Brown in large pot or dutch oven in small batches so the meat doesn’t boil. When all the meat has browned return all the meat to the pot, add the minced garlic stirring for about a minute being careful not to burn it, then add the beef stock, the parsley, the rosemary, the tomato sauce, and the turnips, and simmer for about 75 minutes.

Beef stew vegetables

Beef stew vegetables

After 75 minutes add the remainder of the vegetables, the ketchup, Worcestershire sauce, a little salt, about 1/2 tsp pepper, and let simmer for another minutes. About 10 minutes before the stew is done combine the cornstarch with a little water and add it to the pot gently stirring continuously to incorporate it well. Be sure the stew returns to a simmer for about 5 minutes and it’s ready to serve.

Sunday Beef Stew

Sunday Beef Stew

Notes:

While I did not flour the beef when making this stew certainly feel free to if you like a thicker stew. I like my stews pretty thick and this one was thick enough for me without flouring the beef before browning. Not using flour also keeps it gluten free.

If you do not like using cornstarch as a thickener some alternatives are potato starch, flour, a gluten-free flour mix (such as Better Batter), or arrowroot. In all cases mix with a little water in a separate bowl and stir out the lumps. Slowly pour into the stew while stirring and continue to simmer for 5-10 minutes to thicken the stew and cook out the taste of the flour.

Mushroom and Leek Risotto (dairy-free)

Tonight, I’m home with the kids and the husband is out brewing beer with friends. I look forward to nights like this because it means “no-pressure” cooking for me. I wanted to make some sort of risotto…egg and bacon to be exact. Because we had eggs and bacon at breakfast, I went with what I like to think of as my refrigerator risotto. You know, things you have in the fridge that are almost on their way out. I always have leeks and mushrooms in the fridge and the mushrooms are almost always on their way out by the time I do something with them because half of the family (the kids) does not like mushrooms. Have you even heard of such a thing?

Some of you may already know that we eat (mostly) gluten-free because we suspect our son has a gluten intolerance. We have also been advised to cut out casein to test a possible intolerance. It’s been a long month folks. To begin with we’re not milk drinkers but eliminating cheese has been difficult for all of us. There really isn’t a good casein-free substitute out there. So today, as I was thinking about risotto and how to replace the Parmesan and make the dish dairy-free, the tub of Sour Supreme (a non-dairy sour cream substitute) that I had in the fridge came to mind. It has a slight tang that could replace the Parmesan, and it would add a creaminess to the risotto. Surprisingly, it worked. The kids still pushed all of their mushrooms aside but they both ate the rice and leeks and loved the dish.

Mushroom and Leek Risotto

for 3 as a meal, 4 as a side

1 cup of arborio rice

2 cups of button or cremini mushrooms quartered

1 large leek, white part only, split down the middle and cut into half-moons

1/4 cup of onions diced

4 cups of chicken stock or vegetable stock

1/4 cup of vermouth or dry white wine

1 T Earth Balance or other vegan margarine, butter is fine

1 T olive oil

2 T Sour Supreme “sour cream”

Start by heating your stock in a pot. It doesn’t need to be boiling, just hot. Meanwhile, heat  a separate, large, heavy-bottomed pot, over medium heat. Once the pot is hot, add the margarine and olive oil. When the margarine has melted, add the leek and onion and cook until both are soft and transparent (about 5 minutes). Add the mushrooms and stir and cook for approximately 5 minutes more. Add the arborio rice and vermouth, cook and stir until the vermouth has evaporated. Add roughly a cup of stock and stir constantly until the stock has been absorbed. Add another cup of stock and constantly stir, continuing in this way until you’ve used almost all of the stock, the rice is soft, and the risotto looks creamy. I always use just shy of the 4 cups of stock and I always test the rice for readiness when I’ve used a little more than 3 cups of stock. The grains of rice should feel firm but tender to the tooth. Once the rice is done, I remove the pot from the heat and stir in the Sour Supreme. Serve immediately