Broccoli with Bagna Cauda
6 tbl. butter
1 cup olive oil
8 cloves garlic,minced
12 anchovy fillets, rinsed and dried
1 lb. broccoli
Melt the butter in a small saucepan. Add the garlic and cook over a gentle heat for 2-3 minutes. It must not brown and turn bitter. Add the anchovies, which will virtually dissolve with a bit of stirring. Pour in the olive oil slowly, stirring all the time. Simmer, not boil, for 10 minutes. Blanche the broccoli in boiling water for a couple of minutes; keep it crisp. Serve the sauce hot. in a bowl, stirring it up with the drained sprigs of broccoli each time you dip them in. Soak up the remaining sauce with hunks of bread.
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Showing posts with label nigel slater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nigel slater. Show all posts
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Bagna cauda
Bagna cauda has been on my radar screen since it was in the New York Times a few months ago. I hadn't gotten around to making it, but then I saw a recipe in Nigel Slater's Real Fast Food. It's more olive oil than butter, compared with Craig Claiborn's recipe which was two parts butter to one part oil. I made a half recipe, which was a lot for two of us. I'm sure that the buttery version would be good too, but I liked the olive oil-dominated recipe. It wasn't too fishy from the anchovies, but they give it a nice savory umami flavor.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Chicken with Orange and Black Olives
This is a really nice sauce for chicken. We made it with chicken thighs and served it with bulgar, as suggested in the original.
Chicken with Orange and Black Olives
2 tbl. olive oil
4 tbl. butter
2 whole chicken legs
1 cup chicken stock
1 tsp. dried thyme
12 black olives, pitted
1 orange, cut in half then thinly sliced
1 tbl. chopped parsley
salt and pepper
Heat the oil and half the butter in a shallow pan. Brown the chicken peices until golden brown on both sides, then add the stock. Stir in the thyme, olives and orange slices. Cover and simmer gently for 20 minutes.
Check chicken is cooked—when pierced with the point of a knife the juices should run clear—then remove the meat to a warm serving plate. Taste the sauce, add parsley, and season with pepper and very carefully, if at all, with salt. Turn up the heat and reduce the liquid by bubbling down to cup, then whisk in the remaining butter. The sauce will be shiny and slightly thickened when it is ready. Plate the chicken pieces and pour over the sauce. Serve with a starchy accessory such as wide noodles or potatoes.
Nigel Slater, Real Fast Food
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