Tag Archives: spicy

Chili-Spiced Chicken Thighs and Potatoes

Chicken thighs have plenty of flavorful juices and fat, but they don’t release them until the meat is almost done, which is far too late to be helpful in roasting your potatoes. To better utilize the fat from the chicken, trim the thighs well and roast the trim on its own to render its fat.

Meanwhile, slash the flesh side of the thighs and cover them with a simple spice mix, taking care to get the mixture deep into the slashes. To ensure that the potatoes absorb all the savory juices thrown off by the roasting chicken thighs, parboil the spuds with baking soda. Its alkalinity quickly breaks down the pectin in the exteriors.

After drying the potatoes briefly, stir them vigorously with the fat rendered from the chicken trim and some kosher salt. The salt roughed up the exteriors, creating plenty of entry points for the flavorful chicken juices to suffuse the spuds as they roasted. Starting the potatoes lower in the oven provides plenty of bottom heat to jump-start browning. After adding the chicken, move the sheet up in the oven where the plentiful top heat ensures that the chicken skin becomes crisp. Sliced scallion and a spritz of citrus provides fresh flavor that complements the richness of the potatoes and chicken.

Chicken thighs are very forgiving in terms of doneness, so don’t worry if yours are different sizes. Use Yukon Gold potatoes here, but you can substitute russets if that’s what you have on hand.

Chili-Spiced Chicken Thighs and Potatoes

  • Servings: 4-6
  • Difficulty: easy
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Ingredients

  • 3½ tsp. kosher salt, divided
  • 1 tablespoon chili powder
  • 1 tsp. paprika
  • ½ tsp. pepper
  • ½ tsp. garlic powder
  • ¼ tsp. cayenne pepper
  • 3 lbs. bone-in chicken thighs
  • 3 lbs. Yukon gold potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch pieces
  • ½ tsp. baking soda
  • 1 scallion, sliced thin on bias
  • lime wedges

Directions

  1. Adjust oven racks to lowest and top positions and heat oven to 450 degrees. Combine 1½ teaspoons salt, chili powder, paprika, pepper, garlic powder, and cayenne in small bowl. Bring 2 quarts water to boil in Dutch oven.
  2. Place 1 thigh skin side down on cutting board. Cut away any pockets of fat and any skin that extends beyond meat and reserve trim. Make three ½-inch-deep slits in flesh parallel to bone. Turn skin side up. Repeat with remaining thighs. Using tip of paring knife, poke skin of each thigh 8 to 10 times. Sprinkle 1½ teaspoons spice mixture evenly over skin of thighs. Turn thighs over and sprinkle remaining spice mixture over flesh side. Rub mixture into slits.
  3. Place 1 thigh skin side down on cutting board. Cut away any pockets of fat and any skin that extends beyond meat and reserve trim. Make three ½-inch-deep slits in flesh parallel to bone. Turn skin side up. Repeat with remaining thighs. Using tip of paring knife, poke skin of each thigh 8 to 10 times. Sprinkle 1½ teaspoons spice mixture evenly over skin of thighs. Turn thighs over and sprinkle remaining spice mixture over flesh side. Rub mixture into slits.
  4. Scatter trim over surface of rimmed baking sheet. Roast on lower rack until trim is mostly crisped and fat is rendered, 8 to 10 minutes. Discard trim and leave fat in baking sheet. While trim is rendering, add potatoes and baking soda to boiling water and return to boil. Boil for 2 minutes and drain well. Return potatoes to Dutch oven and place over low heat. Cook, shaking pot occasionally, until any surface moisture has evaporated, about 2 minutes. Remove from heat.
  5. Add rendered fat and remaining 2 teaspoons salt to potatoes and stir with rubber spatula until potatoes are coated with starchy paste, about 30 seconds. Transfer potatoes to now-empty sheet pan and spread into even layer. Roast on lower rack until undersides of potatoes are brown and crisp, about 15 minutes.
  6. Using thin metal spatula, flip potatoes. Push potatoes aside to clear 1 space for each thigh. Place thighs skin side up in cleared spaces. Roast on upper rack until chicken is browned and crisp and largest thigh registers at least 185 degrees, 25 to 30 minutes, rotating pan halfway through roasting.
  7. Transfer thighs to platter to rest. Stir potatoes to coat with any remaining liquid and spread over surface of baking sheet. Return pan to upper rack and roast until potatoes are mostly dry, about 5 minutes. Transfer to platter with chicken and sprinkle potatoes with scallion. Serve, passing lime wedges separately.

http://www.lynnandruss.com

Recipe by Andrea Geary for America’s Test Kitchen

Pork Burgers with Flavor Galore!

How about another twist to the all-american hambuger? You don’t even have to get a grill going because these Smoky Chili-Garlic Pork Burgers are done directly in a skillet. And no special skills are needed here, just a willingness to mix a few ingredients together and give one flip to each pattie. OK, and add a slice of provolone cheese if that’s the way you roll.

Speaking of rolling, the original recipe indicated to make four patties from one pound of pork. Well, we roll a bit bigger than that, making three burgers from a one-pound-plus package of meat. And yes, we did top them with a slice of provolone!

The secret to these burgers is the spicy-sweet flavor and a mild garlickiness from some Asian chili-garlic sauce and a little brown sugar mixed into the ground pork. Plus a smear of chili-garlic mayonnaise on the buns to complete the package. Pillow-soft, subtly sweet buns, such as brioche or potato rolls, are a particularly good match for the tender, juicy burgers.

Garnish with Bibb lettuce leaves, sliced heirloom tomato, and dill pickle chips. Our side of apple cranberry slaw was the perfect counterpoint to the smoky, spicy burgers. But be aware, these puppies pack some heat, so if you harbor a delicate palette, these may not be for you. They had our names written all over them!

Smoky Chili-Garlic Pork Burgers

  • Servings: 3-4
  • Difficulty: easy
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Ingredients

  • â…“ cup mayonnaise
  • 3 Tbsp. plus 2 tsp. chili-garlic sauce, divided
  • 1 Tbsp. packed brown sugar, divided
  • 1 lb. ground pork
  • 2 tsp. smoked paprika
  • Kosher salt and ground black pepper
  • 1 Tbsp. neutral oil
  • 3-4 hamburger buns, preferably brioche or potato rolls
  • Bibb lettuce
  • Large slicing tomato, preferably heirloom
  • Sliced provolone cheese or your preference, (optional)
These patties have not quite come to 160° yet.

Directions

  1. In a small bowl, mix the mayonnaise, 1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons chili-garlic sauce and 1 teaspoon sugar.
  2. In a medium bowl, mix the pork, paprika, the remaining 2 tablespoons chili-garlic sauce, the remaining 2 teaspoons sugar, 1 teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon pepper.
  3. Form into 3 or 4 patties. In a 12-inch nonstick skillet (or a carbon steel skillet like us), heat the oil until shimmering. Add the patties, turn the heat down to medium and cook, flipping once, until well browned on both sides and the centers reach 160°F, 8 to 10 minutes total (perhaps a minute or two longer if you made 3 larger patties).
  4. If desired, add a slice of cheese while the patties are still in the pan, turn off the heat and cover for one minute to allow the cheese to melt.
  5. Serve in buns spread with the mayonnaise mixture and topped with lettuce, tomato and pickle chips.

http://www.lynnandruss.com

Adapted from a recipe found on Milk Street