vaznetti: (creme brulee)
vaznetti ([personal profile] vaznetti) wrote2007-04-12 08:17 pm
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cooking advice?

Last night I was tired, so I made fairly simple baked chicken -- a cut-up chicken in a baking dish with some cloves of garlic and shallots and the juice of a lemon and an orange squeezed over it. (Also olive oil, salt and pepper.) I ate a piece of it and put the whole pan in the fridge.

Tonight, I took it out for leftovers and discovered that the pan is full of jelly and fat, all full of orange and lemon and chickeny goodness. And I'm wondering if there's something I can do with that stuff, because it smells like it might be tasty. Some kind of gravy, I guess, but I don't have any use for that.

Any advice?

[identity profile] amelia-eve.livejournal.com 2007-04-13 01:09 am (UTC)(link)
Now you know why vegetarians don't eat Jell-O; it's rendered from animal bones, and you've just made some at home! As soon as you heat it up, it will liquefy again. I'd just skim the fat off while it's chilled and then heat it up and have it as a nice sauce over rice or cous-cous with the leftover chicken. Sounds yummy!

PS - It could also be a nice rich soup base, but the citrus makes it a little iffy for soup. Works better with something less acid.

[identity profile] elanurel.livejournal.com 2007-04-13 01:41 am (UTC)(link)
I definitely second the iffy-ness of using it as a soup base. We make a lemon chicken recipe for SCA events with a similar sauce (olive oil base, lots of lemon juice and garlic) and my husband came up with the idea of using it for soup. It was...odd. Not anything we couldn't eat but also not terribly appetizing.

OTOH, scooping off the fat and using it as a sauce sounds lovely. ;-P It might also be nice on veggies, too...

[identity profile] elanurel.livejournal.com 2007-04-13 09:53 pm (UTC)(link)
It may have been the amount of lemon juice we use in the sauce, as it's almost equal parts to the olive oil, but it was an interesting flavor in a soup. I didn't like it. John says he could eat if he had to... ;-P

[identity profile] amelia-eve.livejournal.com 2007-04-13 05:34 am (UTC)(link)
Oh yes - vegetarian gelatine is made from agar-agar, a sea vegetable. It is the style more common in Asia. Also in kosher gelatine. It's not as durable as the animal-based kind, though.