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I hardly ever cook chicken breasts because my wife and I prefer dark meat. What is your favorite boneless, skinless breast recipe? Do you marinate or rub?
I sous vide cooked a few the other day, seared them, then sliced them up and put on a mixed green salad with lardons and home made bacon dressing. They pick up flavor from the dressing in a salad. You could 100% grill them as well, with a rub. To make them extra juicy - brine them first. Be careful to not over cook them - 160 internal and pull them off.
SWMBO is a chicken breast fanatic, which is good because I get steak and she has chicken.
Her two favorites are:
Brined, rubbed with olive oil and her rub du jour, this week it was Ozark from Penzey's. last week it was Kickin' Chicken from Weber. Cook either indirect or direct. Sometimes BBQ sauce.
Souvlaki, great for low cal and adds taste, easy to cook direct if you like that Greek thing. Cut and load one breast onto each skewer. Marinate for at least an hour. Per skewer you need 1 clove crushed garlic, 2 Tbs EVOO, 1 tsp lemon juice (concentrate is OK) 1 tsp oregano, 1 tsp marjoram and dash of Wooster. You can marinate then skewer, but it is really messy, I use bamboo skewers.
Legally, it's questionable; Morally, it's disgusting; Personally, I like it.
SWMBO is a chicken breast fanatic, which is good because I get steak and she has chicken.
Her two favorites are:
Brined, rubbed with olive oil and her rub du jour, this week it was Ozark from Penzey's. last week it was Kickin' Chicken from Weber. Cook either indirect or direct. Sometimes BBQ sauce.
Souvlaki, great for low cal and adds taste, easy to cook direct if you like that Greek thing. Cut and load one breast onto each skewer. Marinate for at least an hour. Per skewer you need 1 clove crushed garlic, 2 Tbs EVOO, 1 tsp lemon juice (concentrate is OK) 1 tsp oregano, 1 tsp marjoram and dash of Wooster. You can marinate then skewer, but it is really messy, I use bamboo skewers.
Soak in olive oil, heat Egg to 375, season chicken with rub, figure 45 minutes Indirect. When chicken hits 160, snuff the fire. In 10 minutes, perfection.
Lay them out flat in the bag - don't stack them. You can season with whatever - don't put the brine in the bag - make sure it's rinsed off. No oil if you season. Don't worry about over-seasoning them - you can go nuts with spices. Don't use any fresh garlic. Powdered if you want garlic.
Wow.....2 hrs. The book says 1 hour @147 but i'll trust you. Better safe than sorry. I can't decide if I am going to cut my brine short and sous vide or just cook it on the egg. These are smallish breasts by the way.
Wow.....2 hrs. The book says 1 hour @147 but i'll trust you. Better safe than sorry. I can't decide if I am going to cut my brine short and sous vide or just cook it on the egg. These are smallish breasts by the way.
My PolyScience book, I just checked, says 147 for 1 hour. A few places on line say 146 for 2-4 hours. You're probably fine with one hour. You're not gonna make it more tender, it's pasteurized in minutes at 147. There's a certain amount of latitude here - learn the limits and stay away from them. I'll have to dig up the pathogen info I posted a while back - you'll be cool, don't worry. Do what I do - when you're done and pull it out of the SV, I cut off a corner and probe around with the thermapen, make sure the temp is uniform. If it's uniform, it's been in long enough. If it ain't, then seal up the corner and throw it back in. You'll get an innate feeling for how long it takes after a while. When you get into breaking down Chef's cuts - lots of connective tissue and collagen, the long times are just to tenderize - safety limits are well exceeded.
I'll know in 20 minutes. If you do 2 hours then I know I'll be good......unless the thermostat is bad in this brand new polyscience rig.....which I doubt. I even fired up the mini for the sear. I'm going all out!
Well.........I'm a believer. even though my recipe was a little lacking, my wife kept commenting on how moist and good the chicken was. And it was. She didn't have a clue what this apparatus was hanging on a pot in the utility room. But she likes it now!
Food, sex, skiing, in that order, are the best things in life....SV fits into slot 1. FULL THROTTLE!
What kind of skiing. When I was in New Orleans I saw a lot of water, didn't see one hill. Kinda have to agree with you on the best food in the world thing in your quote.
XLBGE, LBGE, Fire Magic equipped gasser island, New Braunsfeld offset smoker
Food, sex, skiing, in that order, are the best things in life....SV fits into slot 1. FULL THROTTLE!
What kind of skiing. When I was in New Orleans I saw a lot of water, didn't see one hill. Kinda have to agree with you on the best food in the world thing in your quote.
I learned to ski living in Germany. You right, down here all we got to ski on is water. IMO Tree skiing while you've got a nice bourbon buzz is the shiznit.
I usually slice the meat thin and stir fry it with vegetables. A common approach would be to toss it with a tablespoon of soy sauce, a tablespoon of cornstarch, and a pinch of sugar about an hour before frying it on a wok, preferably in peanut oil. By cooking it so quickly, you keep it moist.
Did this for kids to change things up and they love it...cut breast into two pieces, 60/40 (40 being fat end-you want both pieces to be approximately the same size)
wrap with bacon using toothpics to hold roundshape..season liberally with Cluck & Squeal (or your rub of choice), grill direct to internal temp of 160...then enjoy
Rockwall Texas, just east of Dallas where the humidity and heat meet!
Life is too short to get caught in the fast lane behind somebody slow!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Likehttp://ruhlman.com/2010/10/how-to-brine-chicken-quick-brine-recipe/
2 hours at room temp will do it. Rinse well.
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1 • Off Topic Disagree 1Agree LikeMy PolyScience book, I just checked, says 147 for 1 hour. A few places on line say 146 for 2-4 hours. You're probably fine with one hour. You're not gonna make it more tender, it's pasteurized in minutes at 147. There's a certain amount of latitude here - learn the limits and stay away from them. I'll have to dig up the pathogen info I posted a while back - you'll be cool, don't worry. Do what I do - when you're done and pull it out of the SV, I cut off a corner and probe around with the thermapen, make sure the temp is uniform. If it's uniform, it's been in long enough. If it ain't, then seal up the corner and throw it back in. You'll get an innate feeling for how long it takes after a while. When you get into breaking down Chef's cuts - lots of connective tissue and collagen, the long times are just to tenderize - safety limits are well exceeded.
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeSimple is always a great way to go:
Did this for kids to change things up and they love it...cut breast into two pieces, 60/40 (40 being fat end-you want both pieces to be approximately the same size)
wrap with bacon using toothpics to hold roundshape..season liberally with Cluck & Squeal (or your rub of choice), grill direct to internal temp of 160...then enjoy
Life is too short to get caught in the fast lane behind somebody slow!
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