Thursday, June 11, 2009

Chicken salad, with apples and chives

Sunday was roast chicken night. I'd picked up a hefty one from Drewes the day before and once it was stuffed with lemons, seasoned, and trussed, I called my sister.

"I think this chicken is going to take almost two hours," I told her.

"How big is it?" she asked.

"Six pounds!" I replied, feeling like a proud parent.

My sister cooed appreciatively. "That's almost a small turkey!" she admired.

I like roasting big chickens: they cook better and more evenly, I find, and as long as I start them on the breast side and then flip them, they don't dry out. A few hours later, the husband and I dug into the bird, with crispy potatoes and garlicky broccoli rabe on the side.

The next night we had a rerun dinner.

After that, the sides were gone, but there was still a lot of chicken left, mostly white meat, since as I explained a few weeks ago, between the two of us, the thighs, drummies, and wings are the first to go. While leftover chicken can go a thousand different ways, recently I've been on a chicken salad kick. I usually make it the same way, with measurements varying depending on how much chicken I have to use as a base. But basically it's:

  • chicken (cubed, not shredded)
  • mayo
  • lemon juice
  • apple
  • celery
  • salt and pepper
  • a fresh herb (my favorites are tarragon, basil, or chives)

I like chicken salad with grapes, too, and have enjoyed ones with walnuts or pecans. But, I don't include either of those things in my recipe. I rarely have a bunch of grapes on hand, and nuts require toasting and cooling. The beauty of chicken salad is in its quick, satisfying assembly: chop, mix, taste, adjust, eat.

I like it best just on a bed of arugula. I have turned it into a sandwich, but it's too messy. One might wonder if this is because I greedily load up the bread with too much salad. This would be an excellent point.

I think the chicken salad sandwich might work best in a pita pocket. When I suggested this to the husband, he just started to laugh at me. He thinks it's funny, how obsessive I am about cooking and eating. On the other hand, he was very pleased the other morning when I informed him that instead of buying a lunch, he could take some of the chicken salad I'd just whipped up, chock full of sweet apples and bright green chives. Who's laughing now?

6 comments:

  1. 1) that looks so good it makes me cry.
    2) I put everything in Pitas.
    3) I was inspired to make ceviche based on one of yr. earlier bloggings. It was good, so thank you.
    4) you have a nice writing style. breezy yet caloric. (?)
    5) I'm sorry for all the numbers.

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  2. Six pound chicken, eh?
    Cubed, not shredded, eh?
    Grapes, eh?
    Hubris thinks you're writing is caloric, eh?

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  3. Hubris45: don't cry! just make some chicky salad for yourself. Glad to hear about the ceviche inspiration. And, thank you for the compliment! It means something coming from a gen-u-ine writer.

    Cee: I know you don't like chicken so a 6-lb one is probably your nightmare.

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  4. My first response. We'll see if I do it right...

    1. LOVE chicken salad. It's my new fav sandwich and I insist on cubed meat as well. But I flavor my mayo with mustard and curry powder and throw in chopped celery & scallions, walnuts (untoasted bits straight out of TJ bag) and... raisins (through prefer grapes if I have them)!

    2. I was 6 lbs. when I was born.

    3. You are not obsessive about food.

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  5. I love a good chicken salad...I'm a fan of using roasted chicken leftovers for black bean and cheese enchiladas.

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  6. Pete: yay! I'm glad you're officially posting. 6 lbs---um, I outweighed you by 2 lbs at birth. Hm.

    Mark: I like this enchilada idea for chicken leftovers...but I need a recipe. Can you provide?

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