Chicken Stuffed With Sun-Dried Tomatoes: Shopping in Your Own Pantry
The same so-called financial experts who tell you to shop with a list also tell you to shop your own pantry before heading out to the store.
If you are a list maker, too, this is not a bad idea because it keeps you from buying a duplicate of something you already have. My husband declines to do this, usually, with is why we have so many jars of mustard and pickles in our fridge.
For the past several months, we've been cooking a whole chicken every Sunday, eating chicken salads for Monday and Tuesday, and making a fabulous chicken stock for the freezer.
Surverying the cupboard and the refrigerator, I found a large sweet onion, plenty of garlic and a half bag of sun-dried tomatoes. I bought fresh rosemary and thyme at the store and we had a moist and tangy chicken with a layered taste that hinted of a sunny slope in the Vaucluse, perhaps.
The tomatoes, garlic and onions were stuffed inside the chicken; the herbs were placed under the skin and under the chicken. Then I rubbed the skin with a garlic-tomato bread spread and seasoned it with herbes de provence and pepper. Sel de fleuer from the Carmargue was added near the end of the roasting cycle.
We served it with roasted red and green peppers, a staple at our house, and Kalamata olives. We paired it with a Johannesburg Riesling left over from the lemon-baked salmon we had the night before.
In our eagerness to eat, I neglected to take photos, but both meals were excellent.
Do you shop your pantry first? If you did that right now, what would you find that could be stuffed into a chicken for a dish that was uniquely yours?
If you are a list maker, too, this is not a bad idea because it keeps you from buying a duplicate of something you already have. My husband declines to do this, usually, with is why we have so many jars of mustard and pickles in our fridge.
For the past several months, we've been cooking a whole chicken every Sunday, eating chicken salads for Monday and Tuesday, and making a fabulous chicken stock for the freezer.
Surverying the cupboard and the refrigerator, I found a large sweet onion, plenty of garlic and a half bag of sun-dried tomatoes. I bought fresh rosemary and thyme at the store and we had a moist and tangy chicken with a layered taste that hinted of a sunny slope in the Vaucluse, perhaps.
The tomatoes, garlic and onions were stuffed inside the chicken; the herbs were placed under the skin and under the chicken. Then I rubbed the skin with a garlic-tomato bread spread and seasoned it with herbes de provence and pepper. Sel de fleuer from the Carmargue was added near the end of the roasting cycle.
We served it with roasted red and green peppers, a staple at our house, and Kalamata olives. We paired it with a Johannesburg Riesling left over from the lemon-baked salmon we had the night before.
In our eagerness to eat, I neglected to take photos, but both meals were excellent.
Do you shop your pantry first? If you did that right now, what would you find that could be stuffed into a chicken for a dish that was uniquely yours?
Comments
It's particularly full after our trip to Andorra where I stocked up on Spanish stuff - let's see, with the chicken - how about a 'butter' for under the skin of pimientos mashed with anchovies and olives?
Mary
www.ceresandbacchus.com
rosemary & thyme from the garden.
I make list, I don't always end up with said list in the store.
Dana
Oh, Katie. Yum. Oh, that sounds good.
Smart move, Mary. Lentils are difficult to move! such tiny things. That chickens sounds good. I have regular lemons, but no fennel. It is very expensive here. A rare treat.
Cottage cheese! Lydia, I would never have thought of that - mixed with everything else, I'll bet it's good.
Tanna, lucky you! chives are coming up here, but that's it.
Dana, if we could figure out what to do with my 14 jars of mustard and your 14 jars of kidney beans - that's what I used to do when I was single and broke - mix odd things the night before payday
I think I got the habit from him of shopping my pantry. I also aquired - but in vastly moderated form - his habit of keeping interesting things on hand, "just in case". My herbs and spices would satisfy a chef of just about any country. My dried ingredients come and go. My freezer has been raided to the point where I'm ready to start filling it again.
Oh, but I understand Kalyn's dilemma. Sometimes it's just impossible to resist getting something fresh off the shelf!
They should not be resisted.
About 10 years ago, when fennel was a rarity here and much cheaper than it is today, I bought some on a rainy spring day. We ate is sautéed that night, with steak, I think, and it added an element of magic to our meal.
That is as it should be. Meals should hold magic.
Since tomorrow is May 1 (and I have been in Paris on that date and LOVE the Lily of the Valley they sell. One of my favorite flowers) it's only a couple of weeks now until you leave!
That sure did creep up fast. Well, maybe not for you. Glad to see all is well in your French kitchen.
Thanks for stopping by, Terri. Actually, since this is the end of the semester and I have an exam to give AND things are busy at work, my anxiety level has less to do wtih my trip than with my life!
Yes, two years passed very quickly. It won't be so long next time, unless my husband gets another big project at work. Even with that, I think we will find a way to go again sooner.
Anne
I used to be so organized and would have my pantry inventory on the fridge and would mark off things as I used them. Where did all of this organization go??
Kristen, I had a two-year period when I free lanced from home, and was very, very organized about meals. I fed us on about $70-80 a week - it was a good time of my life. No pressue.
I don't always make lists, and like Tanna, when I do make lists they don't always make it to the store with me.
More often that not, Julie, my lists end up at home.