All posts by jfaucett@gmail.com

Chicken Aurobbindo

I don’t know what to call this recipe. I got it from my buddy, Aurobbindo, who I worked with for a while at GM. He invited a few people over to try some of their cooking, and it was at this moment that I learned to love real home-cooked Indian cuisine.

This dish is more of an Indo-Chinese fusion (I would call it), but when I tasted it, I had to say, “Wow.” It has all the elements of crazy, in-your-face spicy deliciousness. What else can I say? Try it, and this may open up your world to what chicken can be. You’ll say, “Hey, why have I been eating bland chicken for so long?” Trust me.

Aurobbindo, or Bindo for short, says you have to get the chicken from the Indian food store. Our commercial grocery stores here don’t have good chicken for his liking. I’ve used boneless chicken breast before, but the best is getting bone-in (cut in small pieces). There’s more flavor, and it’s fun to eat with your hands.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 2 TB vegetable oil
  • Onion, finely chopped
  • 5-6 small fresh green chillies
  • Bone in chicken (breast and/or thigh) cut in 1-2 inch pieces
  • 2 TB ginger-garlic paste
  • Soy sauce
  • Fresh Cilantro

DIRECTIONS:

  1. Heat oil in pan.
  2. Add onion and green chillies. Saute, stirring, 5-10 minutes.
  3. Add chicken, salt (lots of salt), and ginger-garlic paste. Cook until chicken is almost done.
  4. Add a little bit of soy sauce and fresh cilantro.
  5. You are done.

Chicken Parmesan

Schnitzel, picatta, chicken parm… it all starts the same. Boneless chicken breast either thinly cut or pounded flat, salt and pepper, flour, egg wash, then…

For chicken parmesan the final breading is a mix of two parts italian seasoned bread crumbs and one part parmesan cheese. A while back I started grating my own parmesan because any pre-grated you purchase will have some sort of anti-caking agent (cellulose) in it, which is made from sawdust. So instead of serving your family sawdust, grate your own. It may take longer, but it’s well worth it. The breaded final cutlet is now ready to be fried in vegetable oil. This takes about 4 minutes total (2 minutes per side). If the oil is too hot you will burn your food – not good, so take care.

The next and very awesome step that makes it great is to bake those bad boys in some sauce. Should you make your own sauce? Sure if you have time, but a nice jar of marinara will work fine for this. Begin with a layer of marinara of some sort in a 9 x 13 glass baking dish. Add a layer of chicken on top of the sauce. Now put a thin layer of sauce on top of the chicken, then mozzarella cheese slices. Next, more sauce on the cheese, then grated parmesan on top of that. This gives you these awesome blotches of saucy cheese on top.