Chicken
Thai-Style Chicken Soup With Basil
This soup has many layers in its complexity, but the overall effect is of cleanness and freshness. An optional addition of jasmine rice makes a heartier meal.
By Ruth Cousineau
Paprika Roast Chicken with Sweet Onion
Cutting up a whole chicken is both economical and easy. (For a video of food editor Ian Knauer cutting up a chicken, visit gourmet.com.) Here, the pieces are simply tossed with spices and sweet onion before going into the oven.
By Ian Knauer
Rich and Flavorful Chicken Stock
There really isn't a lot of work involved in making chicken stockyou pretty much drop everything into a pot of water and let it simmer. What you do need, though, is time and patience to let the chicken, vegetables, and herbs transform the water into a golden, savory liquid that will make all the difference in soups and sauces.
By Ruth Cousineau
Eula Mae's Chicken and Ham Jambalaya
"It's time for a little history lesson. Listen well. Some say that the word jambalaya came from the French word jambon for ham, the African ya meaning rice, and the Acadian phrase à la. And you must understand that there are brown jambalaya's, made by caramelizing and browning the onions and meats, and red ones, made by adding tomatoes. There are as many recipes for jambalaya as there are for gumbos in Louisiana. Personally, I like a bit of tomatoes in mine; I think it gives it a nice flavor. But I'll let you taste, and then you can make up your own mind," Eula Mae says.
Jambalaya is also one of those popular Louisiana dishes that are very apropros for dining on the water. It's a one-pot meal, but you can serve it with a nice green salad and French bread.
When you're browning the chicken and ham, scrape the browned bits from the bottom of the pan. That gives the jambalaya a good flavor.
By Eula Mae Doré and Marcelle ienvenu
Special Sunday Roast Chicken
Roasted root vegetables and spicy greens complete the meal.
By Jeanne Thiel Kelley
Chicken Stir-fry with Yams, Red Cabbage, and Hoisin
Sweet-and-spicy hoisin sauce is available in the Asian foods section of many supermarkets and at Asian markets.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Polenta-Crusted Chicken with Balsamic Caper Pan Sauce
Polenta makes a supercrisp coating for panfried chicken breasts. Here, it's crowned with wilted escarole and dressed with a bright and briny sauce.
By Melissa Roberts
Roast Chicken with Pancetta and Olives
Oltranti and his family prepare this dish with rabbit, but it's equally appealing with chicken. Roasted with super-savory pancetta and olives, the garlicky meat stays moist in a shallow bath of white wine.
By Tony Oltranti
Ferran Adria's Rotisserie Chicken
Pollo con Frutos y Frutas Secas
As this recipe demonstrates, Ferran Adrià, the alchemist chef of El Bulli, is as practical as he is inventive. It's adapted from the cookbook he dedicated to quick recipes that can be made with supermarket ingredients, and it features a store-bought rotisserie chicken that's deliciously doctored with a sauce of dried fruit, pine nuts, and port wine. Though you can whip the dish up in less than half an hour, the flavors are sophisticated enough for a fancy dinner party. If you'd like to roast your own chicken, so much the better.
By Anya von Bremzen
Beer-and Onion-Braised Chicken Carbonnade
Carbonnade is a Belgian beef stew flavored with beer, onions, and brown sugar. Weve substituted inexpensive chicken thighs. Serve over egg noodles.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Warm Chicken Sandwiches with Mushrooms, Spinach and Cheese
The sandwiches can be refrigerated one day ahead (chill the chicken and spinach before assembling).
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Chicken Curry
The rich, intense flavor base of this traditional Malaysian dish comes from the rempah, or curry paste, that is made from scratch and infused into the oil before cooking the remaining ingredients.
This recipe uses whole chickens that have been broken down into 10 pieces (2 drumsticks, 2 thighs, 2 wings, and 4 breast pieces each). If you're not comfortable cutting up a chicken yourself, you can ask your butcher to do it or buy chicken pieces.
By Hinnerk von Bargen
Latin-Style Chicken and Rice
This one-pot dinner has lots of things kids love—chicken, peas, and rice—while saffron gives the medley adult appeal.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Spiced Chicken Broth with Chive Flans
Test kitchen director Ruth Cousineau, who developed these recipes, says, "For a big dinner, you must include soup. Just dont make it heavy." Here, she's created a chicken broth infused with the aroma of ginger and cardamom. Petite savory flans, studded with tender chives, lend a light creaminess to each mouthful.
By Ruth Cousineau
Chipotle Chicken Tortilla Soup
Chicken soup is an automatic crowd-pleaser, but this Mexican-inspired tortilla soup does the classic one better. Homemade broth is key here, providing a base for brown rice, black beans, and chunks of sweet potato. Cooling pieces of avocado play off of a warm, earthy undercurrent of chipotle chiles.
By Maggie Ruggiero
Asian Chicken Hot Pot with Sesame and Garlic Dipping Sauces
For this interactive dinner, use a camping or induction burner at the table, or just get cozy around a warm stove. As the broth cooks the chicken and vegetables, it becomes a flavorful homemade soup.
By Andrea Albin
Clay Pot Chicken with Dates, Sucuk and Bulgur
In Turkish cookery there's a distinctive group of dishes known as güveç, which take their name from the earthenware pot in which they are cooked—in the same way that the tagine does in Morocco. In rural Anatolia the cooking pots may be sealed and buried in the ashes of a fire to cook slowly overnight—or, only slightly less romantically, in the local baker's oven. If you don't have a clay pot, a heavy-based cast-iron casserole dish will serve almost as well.
Güveç dishes encompass all sorts of meat or poultry cooked with legumes, vegetables and fruits. My addition of star anise is not remotely Turkish, but it adds a wonderful layer of aniseed flavor. This güveç is spicy with a lingering sweetness, so serve it with a light salad or braised wild greens. A dollop of yogurt would also be delicious.
Sucuk is a spicy Turkish sausage and can be found in Turkish or Middle Eastern butchers and some specialist delis.
By Greg Malouf and Lucy Malouf
Grilled Chicken Breast with White Rosemary Barbecue Sauce
This recipe is perfect for a family reunion or any large summer gathering. If your party is being held at a park, be sure to bring charcoal, a chimney starter, oil for the grill grate, and a sturdy grill brush. These chicken breasts cook quickly, but let the coals burn down to medium-hot to cut down on pesky flare-ups.
By Rick Rodgers
New Mexico Chile-Glazed Chicken on Hominy Polenta
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Spiced Up, Oven-Fried Chicken
Easy to make ahead, this dish is great served hot or at room temperature.
By Sheila Lukins