Chicken and mangoes in yogurt

Chicken and fresh mangoes cooked in yogurt.Cooking meat in milk is not new. There was a pork cooked in milk recipe in a 1970s something cookbook that came with our SEB pressure cooker when I was a little girl. I tried it, liked it, and I’ve cooked it many times before. Jamie Oliver has a chicken in milk recipe which has been tried and enjoyed by a mom in Kuwait. I saw a photo from her entry in Food Gawker yesterday and decided I would do my own version. With a twist, naturally. Yogurt instead of milk and with cubes of fresh ripe mangoes.

How did it turn out? Can I brag just this one time?

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Chicken, squash and zucchini saute

chicken, squash and zucchini stir fry…the launching of the breakfast blog will commence in a few hours. The templates need a few more tweaks then the links from this blog will be installed.

Now, the recipe for the chicken and vegetable dish that you see in the photo above. That’s what went into the kids’ school lunch boxes yesterday. What was left became our lunch. What’s in it? Strips of chicken thigh fillets, cubed squash and zucchini. With spices and herbs too, naturally.

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Salmon and tomato soup

Salmon and tomato soupWe’re not fully operational yet in our new kitchen. Although the unpacking is almost done, we had been cooking on a borrowed “super kalan” for the past few days while waiting for the new cooking range to be delivered…

Not that we’ve been eating badly. It’s a pain cooking with one stove but we manage, believe me. For instance, for lunch yesterday, we had a delicious soup made with salmon head, fresh tomatoes and basil picked from the garden…

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A different kind of chicken casserole

Chicken with yogurt and bread topping… a creamy chicken casserole with a bread topping sprinkled with shredded cheese. “Confetti” describes the just-melted shredded cheese on top. I kinda overmelted the cheese on mine so the “confetti” became a “melt-y.” The difference in looks notwithstanding, the result was wonderful. It has the feel of home-cooking written all over it. And the bread topping? It’s oil-free.

To make this baked chicken dish, I had to make some substitutions in deference to the low-fat diet that we’re trying to maintain at home. Yogurt for cream of chicken soup; low-fat milk for regular milk.

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Pasta primavera… with fresh tuna!

Pasta with vegetables and fresh tunaThere are no hard and fast rules as to what vegetables can be used for making pasta primavera. Personally, I prefer a combination of tomatoes, eggplants, bell peppers and carrots. I also like to add fresh basil because it goes so well with garlic and olive oil. In the past, I often added sardines in jars or canned tuna to what traditionally is a vegetable dish, but never fresh seafood. I never realized the difference it makes. The cubes of fresh tuna retained their shape, added flavor to the dish that did not have that overpowering fishy taste one gets from fish in cans and jars.

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Capsicum halves stuffed with chicken, cheese and vegetables

Capsicum halves stuffed with chicken, cheese and vegetablesThis is my second attempt at making stuffed capsicum (or bell peppers, if you prefer to call them that) and I finally did it right. The first time, I stuffed the peppers with raw ground meat mixed with raw vegetables. The juices from the meat and vegetables soaked the peppers during baking, making it very soggy. This time, I cooked the filling first, stirred in lots of grated Parmesan and stuffed the sticky gooey mixture into the cavities of the halved peppers. I baked them only long enough to brown the tops and to cook the bell peppers just until they were tender-crisp.

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Herb-loaded rice, version 2

Rice with fresh dill, cilantro and tarragon. Served with salmon and eggplants.…there was still some olive oil left in the pan after the salmon and the sliced eggplants were done. That leftover oil had been flavored with the salmon and… why waste it? I remembered the herb-loaded rice from long ago and decided I’d do it again — this time, using a different combination of fresh herbs. What did I have? Lots, actually. Most of the herbs had been replanted in pots so I can bring them when we move. But there were still lots growing directly in the soil. Why not consume them during our final days in this house?

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Cooking for Father’s Day? Here’s an idea.

Rosemary and garlic chickenMany families gather together and eat out as a group on Father’s Day. Others hold mini reunions at home and potluck lunches or dinners are a popular way of celebrating Father’s Day. If you’re having one of those potluck lunches and wondering what you can cook in bulk without too much work, roast chicken is a good idea. The trick is to marinate the chicken for at least 24 hours prior to roasting to allow the seasonings to penetrate the thickest parts of the meat.

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Connie Veneracion reserves all rights over the content of Pinoy Cook. No reproduction without prior written permission. RSS feeds are for reading, not for republication. For budding food bloggers and forum contributors, please document your own cooking and stop copy/pasting my blog entries.