Chicken
Chicken Marbella
This was the first main-course dish to be offered at The Silver Palate shop, and the distinctive colors and flavors of the prunes, olives, and capers have kept it a favorite for years. It's good hot or at room temperature. When prepared with small drumsticks and wings, it makes a delicious appetizer.
The overnight marination is essential to the moistness of the finished product: The chicken keeps and even improves over several days of refrigeration; it travels well and makes excellent picnic fare.
By Sheila Lukins and Julee Rosso
Zuni Roast Chicken with Bread Salad
The Zuni roast chicken depends on three things, beginning with the small size of the bird. Don't substitute a jumbo roaster—it will be too lean and won't tolerate high heat, which is the second requirement of the method. Small chickens, 2-3/4 to 3-1/2 pounds, flourish at high heat, roasting quickly and evenly, and, with lots of skin per ounce of meat, they are virtually designed to stay succulent. Your store may not promote this size for roasting, but let them know you'd like it. I used to ask for a whole fryer, but since many people don't want to cut up their own chickens for frying (or anything else), those smaller birds rarely make it to the display case intact; most are sacrificed to the "parts" market. But it is no secret that a whole fryer makes a great roaster—it's the size of bird favored for popular spit-roasted chickens to-go. It ought to return to retail cases.
The third requirement is salting the bird at least 24 hours in advance. This improves flavor, keeps it moist, and makes it tender. We don't bother trussing the chicken—I want as much skin as possible to blister and color. And we don't rub the chicken with extra fat, trusting its own skin to provide enough.
But if the chicken is about method, the bread salad is more about recipe. Sort of a scrappy extramural stuffing, it is a warm mix of crispy, tender, and chewy chunks of bread, a little slivered garlic and scallion, a scatter of currants and pine nuts, and a handful of greens, all moistened with vinaigrette and chicken drippings.
By Judy Rodgers
How to Put Supermarket Rotisserie Chicken to Work
Take note: this store-bought convenience can save your weeknight dinner.
By Sheela Prakash
Chicken Mole
In a world where chipotle is almost a supermarket staple, it's fair to say that authentic Mexican food has gone mainstream. And we couldn't be happier: We love the complex layering of flavors in real Mexican cooking. Mole, the signature sauce of Mexico, is a particularly delicious example of this trend. The only problem? Traditional mole usually requires a pantry's worth of ingredients and an entire day in the kitchen. Here, weve streamlined the ingredient list—and figured out how to make an incredible sauce in a couple of hours. But this simplified version doesn't skimp on flavor. Mexican chocolate adds an intriguing complexity to the smoky, savory sauce. Stir in some cooked, shredded chicken and you've got a whole new go-to chili.
By Jeanne Thiel Kelley
Green Goddess Cobb Salad
The secret to making this extraordinary spring salad? Remove and fry rotisserie chicken skin for a salty, extra-crispy topping.
By Claire Saffitz
Roasted Chicken With Lemon and Green Olives
The super-seasonal, crowd-pleasing chicken your Passover Seder needs.
By Leah Koenig
How to Make Rotisserie Chicken Without the Rotisserie
Low and slow means major flavor.
By Adina Steiman
Chipotle Roast Chicken Tacos
The chipotle butter is also great for topping fish fillets or melting over pasta.
By Marcela Valladolid
This Weekend: Winter Classics With a Twist
As February winds down, bring new life to winter favorites.
By Paula Forbes
Double-Dark Chicken Noodle Soup
Our best-ever chicken stock begins with wings, which have a high skin-to-meat ratio. Browning the wings results in lots of caramelized nooks and crannies that imbue the stock with a deep, savory flavor.
By Claire Saffitz
Classic American Recipes for President's Day Weekend
You've got three days to cook. Make them as American as possible.
By Matt Duckor
Chicken with Lemons and Olives Emshmel
(Djej Emshmel)
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from Paula Wolfert's book Couscous and Other Good Food From Morocco. Wolfert also shared some helpful cooking tips exclusively with Epicurious, which we've added at the bottom of the page.
I first ate this dish in a home in the city of Meknes, sometimes called the City of Olives. Djej Emshmel (pronounced meshmel or emsharmel) is a classic Moroccan dish—chicken served in an intricately spiced, creamy, lemony, and sublime sauce with a scattering of pale-hued olives.
By Paula Wolfert
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Super Spicy, Tongue-Tingling, Face-Numbing Favorites
From Nashville-style hot chicken to spicy Korean pork chops, these dishes are so mouth tingling they'll make you cry (in the best way).
By The Epicurious Editors
Chicken and Leek Pot Pie
This comforting pie of shredded chicken and softened leeks takes inspiration from cock-a-leekie, a traditional Scottish soup.
By Inez Valk-Kempthorne
Spaghetti Pie
By Catherine McCord
Chicken Tortilla Soup
By Catherine McCord
Easy Chicken Nuggets
By Catherine McCord
Mom's White Chicken Chili
By Catherine McCord
Five-Fat Fried Chicken And Other Takeaways From Sean Brock's New Cookbook
Buttermilk brines, Bourbon caramel and more highlights from Heritage.
By Adina Steiman