Like I mentioned in the Fried Rice post, we don't make Asian food a lot. One of the reasons is that I've tried a lot of really bad Asian recipes. Chris and I still have bad memories about Orange Slushy Chicken. One of those meals that was so bad that we made grilled cheeses and called it a night. This recipe, however, is a great one. (otherwise I wouldn't have posted it!) The chicken was really flavorful, spicy, and nicely browned. The trick I think is to let the chicken and sauce cook for several minutes until the sauce reduces and caramelizes around the chicken. I think I'm going to try this technique with some other stir-fry sauces too. I'll be sure to report back on how that goes. I adapted this recipe from one on Week of Menus and hers looks so much prettier than mine. Oh well, it was really yummy.
Time: 10 minutes, plus a few hours for marinating
Serves: 2
Ingredients
- 2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
- 1/4 cup honey
- 3 TBSP soy sauce
- 2 TBSP shao xing wine, sake or Sherry (I used Sherry)*
- 2 tsp finely diced or grated fresh ginger*
- 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil*
- 1 pinch of black pepper
- 3-4 dried chiles de arbol*
- 2 cloves garlic
- 2 TBSP peanut oil or vegetable oil
- 2 green onions
Prep
- Trim the fat from your chicken breasts and slice them thinly.
- Peel and smash your garlic cloves.
- Remove the bottoms of your green onions and slice them thinly.
- In a medium sized bowl, combine your 1/4 cup of honey, 3 TBSP soy sauce, 2 TBSP Sherry, 1/2 tsp sesame oil, 2 smashed garlic cloves and black pepper.
- Using a fine grater, grate about 2 tsp of ginger into the mix.
- Remove the stems from your chiles de arbol and shake out some of the seeds. It's okay if a few stay in. Add the peppers to the mixing bowl too and stir everything together.
- Add your chicken to the mixing bowl, cover and refrigerate until you're ready to cook. I'd say to marinate for 2 hours if you can but you can probably get away with less if you need to.
Cook
- Place a large skillet or wok over high heat and add your 2 TBSP of vegetable or peanut oil. Let the oil heat for a couple of minutes.
- When the oil is hot and shimmering, add your chicken with all of the marinade. Yep, that's right - you dump the whole bowl into the skillet.
- When the simmering settles down, fish out your garlic cloves with a spoon and throw them out.
- Using a wooden spoon, toss the chicken and sauce around every few minutes for about 10 minutes. At first, everything will look pretty gross, light brown and mushy. After 5 minutes or so, the sauce will darken a little bit. At this point, the chicken is cooked through but you want to take it a bit further. Around 7-8 minutes in, it really starts looking like something you want to eat. Watch it at this point and stir it a lot because it could easily burn. When it looks like this, garnish it with your sliced green onion and serve it with some rice and extra soy sauce and Sriacha.
* Sherry - This is a wine used for cooking that I keep in my pantry. I don't use it that often, but it seems to have an interminable shelf life. I found mine at Tom Thumb with the wines and it cost about $7 if I remember correctly. Here's a pic of the bottle.
* Fresh Ginger - Check out the Notes on my Chicken Tikka Masala post for more info on ginger.
* Sesame Oil - You'll find this on the Asian aisle in your grocery store and I think it's a must-have condiment for Asian cooking. Once you open a bottle and smell it, you'll recognize the flavor. A little goes a long way with this one and I store mine in the fridge so it will keep. I've had it in there for a year or more and it still tastes great. This is the brand I have though I'm sure others are just as good.
* Chiles de Arbol - These are spicy dried chiles that you should be able to find in your produce section or on the Mexican aisle of your grocery. Not only do I love these in Asian dishes, they add great flavor to salsa. Recipe on that coming soon. Here's what they look like - they're small and skinny.
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