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Thursday, August 12, 2010

Chicken Pot Pie with Biscuit Topping



Hi kids! Oooooooh this one's a good'un. But Dana, you say, pot pie in the summer? Hell to the yes. Pot Pie is delicious during all seasons, and also West LA has not been having much of a warm summer, so the pot pie was just the thing I needed.

The mister and I started this fab SND off with some AMAZING artichokes for an appetizer, and the mister is going to guest blog the recipe in a separate post. Ya'll are going to love it and never eat an artichoke any other way. Yeah I said it.

But back to pot pie. This one is a little fiss-fussy, so that makes it perfect for SND. The recipe that inspired me calls for pearl onions in the stew, and Adam had the brilliant idea to make the onions a la Julia: brown braised. I made them in my Beouf Bourgignon post, but here are the instructions again:

You'll need two thirds of a bag of frozen pearl onions, defrosted. Melt 1 and 1/2 tablespoons of butter in a three count of olive oil. I'd say over medium heat, and use a frying pan that has a cover. Drop in your baby onions with a little salt and pepper, and roll those guys around until they brown. As Julia says, "You cannot expect them to brown uniformly". That cracks me up, I don't know why. Anyhoo, after you've browned your onions lightly, add 1/2 cup of beef stock and (this is a Dana addition) 1/3 cup red or white wine (I used white cause that's what I drink). Cover the pan and lightly simmer those beauties for thirty for forty minutes until most of the liquid has evaporated. Remove from the heat and set aside.

Do the onions first, because you'll want them ready for the stew - you can start the stew after the onions have been cooking for 15-20 minutes if you'd like. You'll need a pan (cast iron is best, but it needs to be oven safe) that is at least nine inches in diameter and four inches thick. Now you'll want to preheat your oven to 450 degrees. Heat four tablespoons of butter over medium heat. Add one celery stalk (cut into 1/2 inch pieces), three medium carrots (1/2 inch pieces), and 7-8 quartered crimini or button mushrooms. If you want to brown the mushrooms more, add them first for a few minutes, then throw in the carrots and celery. Add a little S/P and and stir stir for about five minutes. Add your brown braised mushrooms and any leftover juices in that pan, and then add a heaping 1/3 cup of flour to your veggies. Stir everything together and cook for one minute more to get the flour cooked down a little. Now add four cups of chicken stock, bring everything to a boil, stirring your life away. Simmer until the stew thickens, 3-5 minutes or so. I added a couple of glugs of beef stock to the pot for a little depth of flavor when my stew was looking too thick. Try it if you have some on hand, otherwise if you think your stew is too thick you can add a little chicken stock or white wine.

Now it's time to add the chicken. If you'd like, poach a couple of chicken breasts in some stock with herbs (thyme/bay) but that's more work that I'd prefer, and I'm not a fan of poached chicken. Boring, dry. I go with the rotisserie chicken from the market, de-skinned, de-boned and shredded. Easy peasy. Plus Ella loses her mind when we get a rotisserie chicken, so she gets to have a few treats. That cat thinks she's people, and loves roasted chicken. But I digress.

So put your shredded rotisserie chicken into your simmering stew. I'd say we used about 2/3 of the meat from the chicken, but use your own judgment. Stir in the chicken, then add a handful of chopped parsley, minced chives, and some asparagus that you've cut into bite sized lengths. I used half of a bunch of asparagus, but put in as much as you like. Stir everything together, taste for seasoning, then turn off the heat and set aside whilst you make the biscuit dough.

Biscuit dough on a pot pie! I know right - sounds nuts! IT'S NOT. It's so freaking good. In a large bowl, whisk together 2 cups of flour, one tablespoon of baking powder, one teaspoon of sugar, and one teaspoon of salt until well combined. Rub 2 tablespoons of cold butter into the flour with your fingertips until it is completely absorbed into the flour mixture. Add five more tablespoons of cold butter (I cut it up into cubes) into the flour in the same manner, until the butter is combined and in pieces the size of a pea. In a separate bowl combine 3/4 cup of milk with the zest of half of a lemon and a handful of minced chives. Gently stir the milk, lemon and chives into the flour mixture to make a loose sort of dough.

Dust your clean work surface with a handful of flour and turn your dough out onto it. Pat the dough with your hands into a 1/2 inch thick rectangle, then fold it into thirds like you would a buisness letter. Now pat that bad boy into a 10 inch in diameter circle. Bring your stew back up to a low boil, and gently place your biscuit circle on top. Word of sage, experienced advice: do this with a rolling pin or a bottle of similar shape. I've made this recipe a few times before, and never used a rolling pin until the other night. No rolling pin = epic fail. Rolling pin = clean execution. Roll the dough onto the pin without any smushing, and re roll it back onto your stew. Lovely. Also please note, you do NOT need to hang the dough over the sides of the pan like you would with a regular pot pie. Note my picture above, and just try to get the dough to the edges of the pan as best you can. Use a sharp paring knife to slice a small hole in the middle and shove that pan into the oven for around 20 minutes. You want your biscuit dough to get nice and golden brown.

Remove your pot pie masterpiece from the oven and let cool for ten minutes and enjoy! You'll never go back to regular pot pie, I'm tellin' ya! Make it and report back to me, BFFs!

Word.
D

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