I’m still
not sure how to pronounce it, but I sure know how to eat it! This dish
comprises everything I love in a good chicken recipe: delicious, easy,
interesting, and not soaked in a half gallon of oil. (I know that last
attribute is really setting the bar high.)
I’ve had
this recipe bookmarked for close to half a year and finally got around to
trying it last week. I then proceeded to make it again…and again…all in the
same week. In my defense, I shared a lot of the goods, but the fact that I
made this recipe 3 times in 7 days underscores how good it is.
I can
summarize the recipe thusly: sauté onion, add paprika, add chicken and water,
simmer for 1 hour, shred chicken, add sour cream and flour, season with salt
and pepper. It’s really that easy, yet the flavor is rich and complex. The
paprika, onion, chicken, and sour cream combine into a savory, creamy, warmly
spiced (but not spicy) sauce; and the chicken is super tender from the long
braise. It goes perfectly over a bowl of rice with a good book and a fuzzy blanket.
A couple
notes on ingredients:
Chicken
– the original recipe calls for bone-in thighs or chicken breasts, quartered. I
have only tried this recipe with dark meat, as all my local grocers seem to be
anti-bone-in chicken breasts. I imagine you could also try boneless, though. I
have tried both thighs and drumsticks, and both tasted great. However, it was a
pain in the derriere to get the skin off the drumsticks, and the sauce ended up
way fattier than when I used thighs.
Paprika
– you don’t need to use the fancy stuff, but it should be fresh. The original
recipe asserts the more paprika the better. I agree and would add that you
don’t want to be using old, pale, sad paprika. Feel free to buy the cheap-o
brand, though. As long as it’s fresh, the end result will be really good.
Fun
Fact: The dark parts of poultry are dark due to more myoglobin, which is an
iron-containing protein in muscle. Ergo, the dark meat contains more iron than
the light meat. This is a boon for iron-deficient, budget-conscious shoppers
such as myself. If you want to maximize your iron absorption, eat it separately
from calcium-rich foods because calcium and iron compete with each other.
Chicken
Paprikash
From
Food52.com
2
tablespoons vegetable oil
1 large
onion, diced
4
heaping tablespoons paprika
4
bone-in chicken thighs, with skin and excess fat trimmed away (or 2 chicken
breasts or 5 drumsticks)
1¼
teaspoons salt
½ cup
sour cream
1
spoonful (approximately 1 tablespoon) all-purpose flour
Salt and
pepper to taste
Heat the
oil in a medium-large pot over medium heat, and sauté the onions until soft.
Add the paprika, and continue to sauté, stirring very frequently, for a couple
of minutes. Add the chicken to the pot, and sprinkle salt over. Stir everything
together until the chicken is coated in the paprika.
Here is
where I diverge from the recipe slightly: the original states to let the
chicken brown slightly, but I forgot to do this the first time, and it still
turned out great. Due to laziness, the most I have done is get the chicken
slightly de-pinked. So, do what you want. Follow your instincts. Browning
probably concentrates and enriches the flavors a bit.
Add 2 cups water, and bring to a boil. Turn down the heat, and simmer partially covered –
I like to prop the lid with a wooden spoon – for 45-60 minutes until the
chicken is cooked through (165 degrees Fahrenheit). Remove the chicken to shred
it, and discard the bones. Whisk the sour cream and flour together, and stir into
the paprikash broth. If the sauce is thinner than you want it, then boil it
down to the desired consistency while the chicken is removed. Add the chicken
back to the pot, and heat through. Serve over rice or with dumplings. Or both!
*Gasp! Oh! We are having this for dinner tomorrow night! (Is it really 4 Tablespoons?)
ReplyDeleteWoohoo! Dad had seconds! Then thirds! It's a hit! And boy, was it easy! I recommend an using an apron you don't mind staining: it's a little splashy when you mix the sour cream in. Maybe I was just too anxious to eat it. ;)
ReplyDeleteMmm! We had this again tonight, and Dad had seconds again; he "discovered" that it is delicious with some grated cheddar on top--and a little dollop of sour cream. Thank you for sharing this delicious and easy dish!!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you guys liked it! I'll have to try it with cheddar.
ReplyDelete