Log In


Reset Password
  • MENU
    Local News
    Thursday, May 23, 2024

    Lee's Kitchen: This chicken cacciatore recipe is perfect for any season

    I have been to the beach exactly three times since the end of May, each time for fewer than an hour and a half. One day it was blistering hot and humid. As much as I like summer, I really dislike humidity to the point that I can stay in my condo for two days just because I have central air conditioning.

    I remember that my mother could stay in her apartment for the exact opposite reasoning: she hated winter. She tried to spend as much time in Florida or, later in life, Arizona, just to avoid cold weather. My father never complained about weather: he would play golf as soon as Daylight Saving Time began, so he could close the store by 5 p.m. and get in 18 holes before it went dark. On weekends he’d play 27 holes on both Saturday and Sunday.

    I like it cold in the winter (with my thermostat at 60) and I turn the central air on in late May, turning it off in early October. (My condos have heat pumps and, although I cannot understand how it works, I just turn “cooling” to “heat” and vice versa twice a year.)

    I like to cook what I want whatever the weather. I just ordered packages of Wick Fowler 2-Alarm Chili Kit to make chili in August and today found a recipe for Slow-Cooker Chicken Cacciatore.

    I foraged into the freezer and hauled out two unthawed freezer bags of chicken thighs. No reason to heat the oven; dinner tonight will be this new recipe.

    Slow-Cooker Chicken Cacciatore

    From Food Network Magazine, March, 2017

    Yield: Serves 4 (and freezes beautifully)

    ¼ cup dried porcini mushrooms (about ¼ ounce)*

    1 ½ pounds skinless, boneless chicken thighs

    1 carrot, finely chopped

    2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

    Salt and freshly ground pepper

    3 cloves garlic, mined

    2 sprigs fresh basil, plus torn leaves for topping

    14.5-ounce can stewed tomatoes, crushed (fire-roasted tomatoes are fine instead)

    ½ cup dry red wine

    ¼ cup all-purpose flour

    2 tablespoons tomato paste

    1 cup white rice

    Soak the mushrooms in 2/3 cup hot water, 10 minutes. Strain through a paper towel-lined sieve, reserving the liquid. Rinse mushrooms and finely chop.

    Toss chicken and carrots into the oil in a 6- to 8-quart slow cooker, season with salt and pepper. Top with mushrooms, garlic and basil sprigs, then pour in the tomatoes and their juices. Whisk red wine with flour, tomato paste and reserved mushroom liquid in a bowl until smooth; add to slow cooker. Cover and cook on low, 7 hours.

    About 10 minutes before chicken is done, cook rice as the label directs. Uncover the slow cooker and stir, breaking the chicken into chunks; let stand, uncovered, until sauce is thickened, about 15 minutes. Discard basil sprigs and season with salt and pepper, to taste.

    Serve chicken with rice and top with torn basil.

    *If you have fresh mushrooms, any kind, use them instead

    Lee White lives in Groton. She can be reached at leeawhite@aol.com.

    On The Side

    NuTrail Granola KETO Nut Granola

    I love salad, whether it is just soft, pillowy Boston or bibb salad or, when I am home, what I call my garbage salad. The latter is romaine (plus other I may have), tomatoes (especially those Wild Wonder colorful grape tomatoes), Craisins, cucumber, leftover nubs of meat (chicken, always, or even leftover steak or meatloaf), a handful of toasted coconut flakes (that Amazon seems to be out of) and granola, tossed with my own homemade Latitude 38 dressing.

    A few weeks ago I bought a big package of NuTrail Low-carb KETO Nut Granola Blueberry Cinnamon (the company’s label and capitalization). Using its own algebra, you begin with TC (total carbs) minus DF (dietary fiber) minus SA (sugar alcohol{huh?}) you get NC (net carbs).

    I assume this is a good thing. What I know is it is delicious and a small handful is maybe just a few calories.

    NuTrail KETO Nut Granola Blueberry Cinnamon

    Available at Costco

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.