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    Entries in fast and easy (72)

    Tuesday
    Jul312012

    Chicken Salad - Round 2

    I love things that are rolled up or stuffed. Or both!

    I'd been planning on making a chicken salad (cold dinner, too hot to cook) with Asian flavours all week... and then I started getting cravings for Sriracha. (which I, and others apparently, like to call "cock sauce" thanks to the lovely rooster on the bottle)

    I knew what I had to do.

    I know most people unfailingly put mayo in chicken salad no matter what other flavours are going in, but not me. And not just because my mayo had been in the fridge so long it had expired.

    I've been making various versions of a peanut butter and sesame based salad dressing for a while now, and that's how this salad stays together. It's basically a vinaigrette, but with peanut butter as an emulsifier. Watch, you'll see.

    Chicken Salad Rolls

    The Dressing:

    • 1/4 c peanut butter
    • 1 tsp sesame oil
    • 2 tbsp lime or lemon juice
    • 2 tbsp rice vinegar
    • 1 tsp fish sauce
    • 1 tsp ginger
    • 1 clove garlic
    • sriracha to taste
    • peanut oil

    The "vinegar" part of this dressing can be replaced partially or entirely by citrus juice. My ideal is a combination of lime and vinegar, but all I had when I made the salad was lemon, so that's what I used.

    In a bowl, combine the peanut butter, juice and / or vinegar, fish sauce, ginger, and garlic.

    A microplane grater (or citrus zester) is the ideal thing for ginger.

    If you can't find fish sauce, or if you're kinda scared of it (lots of people are, it's okay to admit it, and admitting your fear is the first step to overcoming it) you are free to leave it out, but it really is what's missing in all the home made Asian food that never quite tastes the way it does in the restaurant...

    Whisk together the stuff in the bowl, and keep whisking as you drizzle in the peanut oil.

    Drizzle until you have a slightly thicker than usual salad dressing.

    Use a bit of carrot or rice wrapper to taste it. Mine needed a bit more sour, so I squeezed in another tbsp or so of lemon juice.

    If you want to put this onto a green salad, I'd suggest doubling the oil and vinegar amounts. What you have here should be pretty thick.

    The Salad:

    • 2 c cooked chicken
    • 2 carrots
    • a few radishes (daikon, if you can find it)
    • 1/2 c cashews
    • 1/2 c cilantro
    • 1/2 c basil
    • 2 green onions

    Yes, there is a pretty high veggie and herb content in this salad. Damn tasty, and makes for a full meal. I couldn't find decent bean sprouts, but some of those would be nice in this if you have them.

    Start with the nuts.

    Toast the cashews in a dry pan over medium heat. Shake them around in the pan until parts of them start to turn golden. You should also be able to smell them.

    Next, the sesame seeds... yes, I know they're listed in the next batch of ingredients, but they're in the pic in this section so toast them now while you have an already hot pan.

    Dice all your veggies to about the same size, chop the chicken, and chiffonade your basil.

    Thow it all into a bowl, mix it, pour the dressing over top, and mix again. Or just mix once. Up to you.

    Now, at this point, you have a perfectly viable chicken salad. You could eat it as is for lunch or dinner. You could serve it with some fried rice (I haven't made fried rice yet, have I? I need to do that soon) or some noodles. You could roll it up in lettuce like I did with the last chicken salad.

    Or you could roll it up in rice wrappers.

    Have I mentioned that I love food that is rolled up and stuffed?

    The Rolls:

    • rice wrappers
    • sesame seeds
    • sriracha

    Now, you've already toasted your sesame seeds, so we've got that covered.

    Next is the rice wrappers. If you've ever had Vientamese "salad rolls" you know what I'm talking about. Rice wrappers are these lovely stretchy things that you can wrap around all kinds of fresh food to make a hand held salad.

    They're a really fun ingredient to play with, and though they look delicate, they are fairly resilient and can stretch quite a bit.

    The set up: you need rice wrappers, a dish of water (pie plate works), a plate to work on, and a plate for your finished product. Hmm... I didn't seem to take a pic of the set up, but this is almost everything...

    What you see on the plate there is a dry rice wrapper. They start out crispy, but with a little moisture will soften quite nicely.

    Dip the wrapper into the water in the pie plate. All you need to do is get it wet, but you need to get all of it wet.

    Lay the moistened wrapper on the working plate, and wait about 15 seconds. It will suddenly be flexible and extremely pliable.

    Put a small-ish amount of chicken salad in the middle of the wrapper. Too little and you won't get a nice proportional roll, too much and, though it will roll up, the filling will fall out when you try to eat it.

    You're going to roll this up just like you would a burrito. Start by folding the edge closest to you over the filling.

    Then, fold each of the sides in.

    Then, lift the filling and roll it away from you until you have a perfectly stuffed, beautifully rolled, chicken salad.

    Sprinkle the rolls with the toasted sesame seeds. If you don't want to dip your rolls directly into hot chili sauce (Taneasha now understands why she keeps seeing me chop jalapenos with bare hands; relatively high tolerance for capsaicin), you can make another batch of salad dressing, or a bit of hoisin instead.

    One thing to note about rice wrappers: they will dry out in the fridge if you have leftovers. They won't revert back to their original dry state or anything, but they will lose their stretch and pliability, and are much more likely to fall apart. 

    To prevent them from drying out too much, roll each roll in a dampened paper towel before you put it in a container. Even if they do start to lose their structural integrity, you can just tear the wrapper into pieces, dump it all into a bowl and eat it with a fork.

    What kind of rolled up or stuffed food do you like?

     

    Tuesday
    Jul102012

    Meta Salad

    A salad made of salad.

    It's way too hot to cook, never mind eating hot things. I think July may end up being the month of salads. I've got a couple planned and Taneasha's loving having hers tossed. Hopefully we'll get to see more of that.

    Me, I was crazy enough to make chicken broth last week (pics later) and so I've got a bunch of packages of chicken meat in the freezer. We'll ignore the broth for now since soup is entirely out of the question. If you don't happen to have nicely packaged portions of already cooked chicken in your freezer, those rotisserie birds that most grocery stores have handy will work just fine.

    Chicken Salad in a Salad

    What you need:

    • about 2 cups of cooked, chopped chicken
    • a bit of onion
    • a couple carrots
    • 3 or 4 radishes
    • 1/4 c parsley
    • 2 tbsp dill
    • 1 tbsp capers
    • 1/2 tsp celery seed
    • 1/4 c mayo
    • a bit of lemon juice
    • large lettuce leaves
    • alphalpha sprouts
    • tasty tiny tomatos

    What you gotta do:

    Dice all the veggies into tiny chunks. If you like celery, it would probably work well in this. I don't like celery, so I opted for radishes. Nice crunch, a bit of bite, totally underutilized root. Adds a nice bit of colour too.

    Dump all the veggies and herbs and seeds and flowers (capers are flowers) into a bowl with the chicken. Squeeze on some lemon juice. Salt and pepper would work at this point too.

    Blob on some mayo. Real mayo.

    You should also select a few good sized lettuce leaves and rinse them off. You're going to use them whole, so a salad spinner may not be the right tool for the job. I just rolled mine up in a teatowel to dry them.

    Use the lettuce leaves like taco shells. Some alphalpha sprouts in the bottom, then the chicken salad, and a few slices of the tiny awesome tomatos to decorate the top.

    Oh yeah, and then sprinkle it with bacon. Everything is better with bacon sprinkles.

    I ate mine like tacos, but I suppose you could use a fork if you really wanted to.

    And yes, I admit it, I bought the tomatos because they were little and cute, but they really have a great bright sweetness that works well with the tangy mayo and lemon in the dressing.

    What have you bought because it was little and cute?