December 5, 2012

Mexican-inspired peanut chicken and potatoes

I came across this recipe in my go-to Mexican cookbook. But, as usual, I didn't have all the ingredients so I adapted it to suit my pantry. It didn't require a lot of altering, and it was still damn delicious, so I thought I would post the recipe, with my alterations, so you can see how you go. 


Ingredients
2 chicken breasts, cut into chunks
4 potatoes, sliced 
1 onion, sliced
1/2 cup peanuts OR 1/4 cup peanut butter
3 garlic cloves, crushed
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon cumin
2.5 cups chicken or vegetable stock
salt and pepper, to season
rice with or without veges to serve

(The recipe also called for 2 boiled eggs, sliced to serve, as well as 2 pork loins chopped into chunks, cooked the same as the chicken, and added the same time as the chicken. On this thinking, you could also have this as a pork-based dish, or have both the chicken and pork in there together.)

Brown the chicken in a heavy-based frypan. Once cooked through, set aside in a bowl. (if using pork as well, do the same)
cook the onions in the same frypan for about five minutes. 
add the potatoes, stirring for about two minutes.
add the paprika, garlic and cumin, stir and mix through for about a minute. 
add the stock and peanuts or peanut butter
stir it all through well. bring to the boil and let it gently simmer for about 10 minutes. 
Add the chicken and/or pork - allow to simmer for another five to ten minutes. 
whille that's all happening, cook your rice. 
I added some steamed finely diced carrot, capsicum and spring onion to my rice - but I think anything like that would work - beans, peas, brocolli, caulifower, asparagus etc - nothing too overpowering. 
Spoon the rice into your bowls and then spoon the delicious chicken mixture and sauce over the top. 
I topped mine with a freshly chopped chilli just to give it a bit of a kick

Rice paper rolls



It only takes the slightest warm change in the weather for me to start craving rice paper rolls again.
When I make these bad boys, they’re not those dainty little wraps you see in Vietnamese restaurants. I make some absolute whoppers, like, a fatter Chiko roll.  There’s no reasoning behind this, I just get carried away with trying to add as much salad and deliciousness as I can, and then the battle to wrap it successfully begins.
In short though, they’re amazing. When I know they’re on the dinner menu, I get excited all afternoon.
I have popped on two different meat marinades: I interchange them for the meat – pork, chicken or beef. But a simple boiled prawn would also be amazing, as would a simple grilling of the meat with no marinade at all.

Ingredients:

Marinade # 1 – Stickier BBQ flavour
2 garlic cloves, crushed,
1 teaspoon crushed ginger
½ teaspoon crushed chilli (optional)
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 teaspoon brown sugar
1 tablespoon BBQ sauce

Marinade # 2 – herbier, lighter
10 basil leaves
3 mint leaves
2 garlic cloves, crushed
½ teaspoon crushed chilli (optional)
2 tablespoons soy sauce

Ingredients for the rolls
1 carrot, sliced julienne
1 red capsicum, sliced thinly
Quarter head of lettuce, sliced
Half cucumber, sliced julienne
Large bunch fresh mint leaves
50 grams rice vermicelli noodles, cooked, drained and cooled
Pack of fresh rice paper rolls, ready to be soaked in water
 Hoisin sauce, to serve

Unfortunately (for you guys) I have no method that is easy to describe. I visualise it like a cigar – picture a rectangle in one-third of the circular wrapper that you place all the ingredients onto. And then it’s a matter of folding the short end over it long-ways, then folding the sides over, and then rolling it all the way over.
There is a number of online tutorials, I quite like this one.

This is what my table looks like just before we chow down - salads, mint, chicken, noodles, rice paper wrappers and a tray with warm water to soften the wrappers.