Poultry
Chicken Salad with Roasted Root Vegetable Vinaigrette
This is a great way to use up leftover roasted vegetables and chicken and turn them into a light salad. The roasted veggies are more interesting the second time around in a vinaigrette as opposed to just on their own. Even when I don't have leftover roasted veggies, I have been known to toss some raw ones in the oven just to make this delicious dressing, which I eat on everything: pasta, grilled fish, and, obviously, chicken. The chicken for this salad can be warm or cold, straight from the fridge.
By Giada De Laurentis
Roasted Quail with Wild Mushrooms
This recipe is a wonderful way to celebrate the spoils of the Southern hunt, though it is just as delicious when made with farm-raised quail. If quail livers aren't included with the quail, chicken livers would be a good substitute. The size of a quail makes each bird a perfect individual portion for a dinner party. To make the stuffing, we've used another reward of the "hunt": wild mushrooms. When we forage in the woods near Summerland Farm, the mushrooms we most often find are chanterelles and hen-of-the-woods, especially prolific during a moist season. If you are foraging, be absolutely sure you know what you are looking for, as poisonous varieties can sometimes look dangerously similar to edible ones. To be on the safe side, visit a gourmet market or natural foods grocery store for a nice choice of mushrooms. We serve the quail on a bed of Wilted Autumn Greens.
By Anne Stiles Quatrano
Crispy Chicken with Shallots
Rubbing the marinade onto only the flesh side puts it in direct contact with the meat and lets the skin get extra-crisp with no fear of burned bits.
By Dawn Perry
Pan-Roasted Chicken with Harissa Chickpeas
Harissa is a great shortcut ingredient to flavor, but no two jars (or tubes) are the same. Taste first—if it seems very spicy, use a bit less. You can always stir more into the chickpeas when the dish is finished.
By Dawn Perry
Chicken Breast with Orange and Gaeta Olives (Pollo con Olive ed Aranci)
Just about everyone loves chicken breast. It is one of the most Googled terms in recipe searches. I also love this recipe when it's done with drumsticks. If you decide to do that, make sure to double the wine and increase the cooking time until the chicken is done.
By Lidia Bastianich and Tanya Bastianich
Pan-Roasted Rosemary Chicken
This recipe calls for a quartered chicken, but you can use three pounds of thighs, breasts, or drumsticks if you prefer.
Boudin Blanc–Stuffed Turkey Breasts with Chestnuts
A dairy-infused pork sausage stuffing infuses this turkey breast with richness and perfumes the meat with warm spices.
By Taylor Boetticher and Toponia Miller
Crispy Chicken Breasts with Chermoula and Escarole
Chermoula, a spice and herb sauce popular in Morocco and Tunisia, can be used as a marinade or condiment.
By Alison Roman
Turkey Breast Stuffed with Italian Sausage and Marsala-Steeped Cranberries
As with biscotti there is an undeniable American-Italian influence at play here but, once again, I embrace this. Actually, though, American-Italian food has had its own influence on the cooking of the Old Country: these days, I am reliably informed by my Italian publisher and celebrated food writer, Csaba dalla Zorza, you can find dried cranberries with relative ease in Italy.
The true Italian Christmas dinner is very much about the capon. Yes, you can find capons outside of Italy, although not everyone can quite cope with the idea of eating a castrated cockerel. Many understandably view old-school caponization with distaste, although it is considered ethically acceptable if the rooster has been chemically rather than surgically castrated. I don't know about you, but the idea of eating meat that has been flooded with the types of hormones necessarily involved here gives me the willies.
Besides, my Christmas Dinner is my Christmas Dinner: unchanging, ritualistic, an intrinsic part of me. When in Rome, and all that, but if I'm cooking at home, I don't fiddle with my time-honored menu. I'm not going to give an evangelical tub-thump about my turkey brining techniques, as I've done enough of that in the past, but I am still open to other ways of celebrating the Big Bird and this recipe is a case in point. For me, it is perfect for any sort of seasonal supper party, but really comes into its own on a buffet table, as it carves fantastically and is as good (maybe even better) cold than hot, so you can make it in advance and then be the world's most unharried host on the night.
You need to go to a butcher to get a while breast joint and you need to ask for it to be butterflied and boned and make sure the skin is left on.
I know it might sound a bit of a faff, but take it from me that stuffing a while double breast joint is very much easier than stuffing and rolling a single breast joint, as is more commonly found in supermarkets. Basically, all you're doing here is opening out your boneless turkey joint, smothering it with stuffing, and folding it over. What you end up with, for all the ease of its creation, is nothing short of a showstopper.
By Nigella Lawson
Cornish Hen in Port Wine and Fig Preserves
Cornish game hens are just the right size to serve two people and nestle into the slow cooker with ease. Port wine is an excellent ingredient for slow cookers, as it always provides a little richer color for the ingredients. Preserves, jams, and jellies are handy ingredients to create easy sauces for poultry and meats. For a darker skin, baste the hen during cooking with sauce from the bottom of the slow cooker.
By Cynthia Graubart
Modern Salade Lyonnaise with Leeks, Lardons, and Oeuf Mollet
By Daniel Boulud
Poulet à l'Estragon
By Daniel Boulud
Hard Cider Gravy
Yes, gravy should be lump-free (always whisk, don't stir), but it's the flavor of the roux that makes or breaks what gets passed at the table. Toasting flour in butter is what develops its deep, nutty taste. You'll know it's done when it's the color of graham crackers and smells like popcorn.
By Alison Roman
Braised Turkey Legs
Cook turkey legs separately from the breasts and be prepared for the greatest holiday-food “Aha!” moment ever.
By Alison Roman
Turkey Torta
This Mexican-inspired torta is stuffed with turkey, lime, cilantro, and pickled red onion.
By Danielle Walsh
Barbecue Turkey Sandwich
Use leftover biscuits and any bottled barbecue sauce for this creation.
By Jacob Romoser
Dry-Brined Turkey
No patience for a traditional brine? The dry brine is applied directly to the turkey's skin for a few hours, delivering big flavor (thank the salt!) and less hassle.
By Alison Roman
Turkey Panino with Cranberry Sauce
Transform leftover turkey into the ultimate grilled cheese.
By Christine Muhlke