Poultry
The One-Pot Chicken Dinner You Don't Need a Recipe For
This crispy, oven-braised chicken can be made countless different ways. But it's always easy and delicious.
By Anna Stockwell
Beets Don't Kale My Vibe Salad
Sweetgreen partnered with Kendrick Lamar in order to create this limited-edition salad. Available at sweetgreen locations until May 31, 2015, 10% of proceeds will go to FoodCorps. After that? You can always make Beets Don't Kale My Vibe at home with the recipe below.
Thai Grilled Chicken Wings
The tangy dipping sauce is great with pretty much any grilled meat. Keep it on heavy rotation this summer.
By Kris Yenbamroong
Wok-Fried Rice Noodles with Chicken and Squid
You'll find fresh rice noodles in well-stocked Asian markets (or search for them on amazon.com).
By Kris Yenbamroong
Roast Chicken with Rhubarb Butter and Asparagus
I love the way the sweet-and-sour rhubarb butter adds flavor to this chicken as it cooks—I think you will too!
By Maranda Engelbrecht
Vinegar-Marinated Chicken with Buttered Greens and Radishes
Boredom? Never. Try swapping in baby turnips for the radishes and kale or Swiss chard for the mustard greens in this effortless dish.
By Alison Roman
Chicken Tostadas
Once a way to make use of stale tortillas (by toasting and/or frying them), tostadas are so good that it wasn't long before people simply started using fresh tortillas. After biting into these layers of flavor—crunchy, creamy, luscious—you'll see why.
By Shelley Wiseman
Add Some Punch to Your Roast Chicken
With so many different recipes out there, how will you ever find the roast chicken of your dreams? Our new column Roast Chicken Club is here to help.
By Paula Forbes
Roasted Chicken Thighs with White Beans, Lemon, and Capers
Chicken thighs are an inexpensive and delicious alternative to chicken breasts. This one-pan dinner is perfect for a weeknight because it's so simple to put together and cleanup is a breeze.
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Herbed Chicken in the Slow Cooker
By Catherine McCord
Chicken Pesto Wraps
By Catherine McCord
Chicken and Couscous with a Punchy Relish
This is a mostly hands-off dinner that only needs a salad of assertive greens as accompaniment. The chicken gets a head start in the oven, but then finishes up by sharing its pan with the couscous. This way, the pasta laps up flavor from the meat, while getting crispy on top, and in turn, the steam coming up from the couscous keeps the chicken incredibly juicy. An intense slurry of anchovies, garlic, and lemon makes up most of the piquant dressing, with bursts of contrasting sweetness from the raisins.
You'll want a large baking pan that's not much deeper than 2 inches. Pyrex and ceramic have the potential to crack when the liquids are added during roasting, so it's best to avoid them this time. The baking dish I use is enameled metal and is 15 inches long, 11 1/2 inches wide, and with a depth of 1.5 inches, but a 13-inch paella pan would be fine. Keep in mind that if the pan is too deep, the sides of the chicken won't brown; if too small, there won't be a lovely crust on the couscous; if too large, the liquid will evaporate before everything is cooked. It's the Goldilocks of baked suppers, but when it's right, it's perfect.
By Tara O'Brady
Adobo Chicken in Parchment
This ingenious technique cooks the chicken in a purse with its own juices and a mix of spices. It slowly simmers the bird to a silky richness—an enticing side of chicken that we rarely see.
By Roberto Santibañez
Chicken Marbella
This was the first main-course dish to be offered at The Silver Palate shop, and the distinctive colors and flavors of the prunes, olives, and capers have kept it a favorite for years. It's good hot or at room temperature. When prepared with small drumsticks and wings, it makes a delicious appetizer.
The overnight marination is essential to the moistness of the finished product: The chicken keeps and even improves over several days of refrigeration; it travels well and makes excellent picnic fare.
By Sheila Lukins and Julee Rosso
Zuni Roast Chicken with Bread Salad
The Zuni roast chicken depends on three things, beginning with the small size of the bird. Don't substitute a jumbo roaster—it will be too lean and won't tolerate high heat, which is the second requirement of the method. Small chickens, 2-3/4 to 3-1/2 pounds, flourish at high heat, roasting quickly and evenly, and, with lots of skin per ounce of meat, they are virtually designed to stay succulent. Your store may not promote this size for roasting, but let them know you'd like it. I used to ask for a whole fryer, but since many people don't want to cut up their own chickens for frying (or anything else), those smaller birds rarely make it to the display case intact; most are sacrificed to the "parts" market. But it is no secret that a whole fryer makes a great roaster—it's the size of bird favored for popular spit-roasted chickens to-go. It ought to return to retail cases.
The third requirement is salting the bird at least 24 hours in advance. This improves flavor, keeps it moist, and makes it tender. We don't bother trussing the chicken—I want as much skin as possible to blister and color. And we don't rub the chicken with extra fat, trusting its own skin to provide enough.
But if the chicken is about method, the bread salad is more about recipe. Sort of a scrappy extramural stuffing, it is a warm mix of crispy, tender, and chewy chunks of bread, a little slivered garlic and scallion, a scatter of currants and pine nuts, and a handful of greens, all moistened with vinaigrette and chicken drippings.
By Judy Rodgers
How to Put Supermarket Rotisserie Chicken to Work
Take note: this store-bought convenience can save your weeknight dinner.
By Sheela Prakash
Chicken Mole
In a world where chipotle is almost a supermarket staple, it's fair to say that authentic Mexican food has gone mainstream. And we couldn't be happier: We love the complex layering of flavors in real Mexican cooking. Mole, the signature sauce of Mexico, is a particularly delicious example of this trend. The only problem? Traditional mole usually requires a pantry's worth of ingredients and an entire day in the kitchen. Here, weve streamlined the ingredient list—and figured out how to make an incredible sauce in a couple of hours. But this simplified version doesn't skimp on flavor. Mexican chocolate adds an intriguing complexity to the smoky, savory sauce. Stir in some cooked, shredded chicken and you've got a whole new go-to chili.
By Jeanne Thiel Kelley
Green Goddess Cobb Salad
The secret to making this extraordinary spring salad? Remove and fry rotisserie chicken skin for a salty, extra-crispy topping.
By Claire Saffitz