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“Different” Chicken Congee
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Blog Posts Cilantro (Corriander) Thai Basil Winter

“Different” Chicken Congee

December 31, 2022

“Different” Chicken Congee

December 31st, 2022

It’s New Year’s Eve Day, I’m in Miami, Florida where I have traveled with my pets for a little 45-day snowbirding experience (and possibly the subconscious desire to travel to the source and unravel some deep seeded and complicated emotions I have been carrying for far too long).

It’s currently 80 degrees and I’m in my swimsuit outside by the pool near the beach with my pets. I have a sweet little menu prepared for a dinner tonight and was just lollygagging a bit when I got a text asking me for the recipe for that cold weather chicken congee I made during the recent artic chill.  You remember, the congee recipe that I had labeled one of my best dishes. The one I was supposed to have posted the recipe for already, the one I keep getting asked for. Here you go.

I’ll warn you, my congee recipe is a little different. But what do I know, I had never made congee before. But different is who I am and what I do and staying authentic to who I am is a constant goal, New Year or not.

My entire life I have done things “differently”.  Part defiance, part peculiar personality and mostly the assortment of all varying ideas (people, places, culture, things) that attach themselves to the creative parts of my being; ideas that I have encountered by a lifetime of traveling around the globe solo, which in itself is the epitome of doing things differently; in particular for a woman.

Since it’s the New Year holiday I thought I would attach some wisdom to my recipe; a reminder that different is good. Sure, it can be lonely,  and filled with discomfort (therein lies the learning) but different, in particular if its authentic, not only feels good but tastes good.

Most the congee I have ever had has been served lily white- the porridge and the chicken strewn atop. Sure, there are usually thinly sliced green onions tossed on for garnish but mostly it looks white like rice. My chicken congee is colorful, herbaceous and vibrant. And EASY!!

The idea of congee during that cold snap came about because I had a few bone in/skin on chicken breasts I had to cook up and was sick of soup.  I was bored and hungry and in a creative mood (a rewarding and tasty combination for me typically.)  The idea of congee hit me and of course since I had no real experience with it, it felt like a blank canvas. It felt exciting. I researched some recipes and was a bit irritated with the lack of diversity, flavor and vibrancy of most of what I found online. I changed all that part for my recipe.

My general assessment and the direction I wanted to take was to keep the idea of the porridge part simple, rice porridge after all was something I was used to as a little girl in Nicaragua, it was always bland tasting,  like rice; it was what we topped it with that mattered. That was the approach I took with my chicken congee.

There was no way I was using 7-9 cups of chicken or vegetable stock either as most recipes call for. Store bought stock, in my opinion, is overused in recipes. I think it’s lazy for recipe writers and publishers (who have often a lack of space to put more ideas and words) to not offer other ways to get flavor into broth. Good stock is often ridiculously expensive and the cheap stuff is all salt and preservatives and tastes as such. Most stocks, unless there are homemade, are mostly one dimensional, they add a “fat” element, which can add a certain richness but again, in my opinion one without depth.

I’m of the belief that you can create fat and richness with fresh ingredients on the spot. My big use of fresh herbs in everything I do (plus lots of vegetables) allows me to create lots of layered flavor. I opted to use some  bacon in my congee for flavor and richness. I had some on hand and was inspired by a recipe in Food & Wine for bacon and onion congee. I added onions too and left out the stock. The bacon would add the fat and the rest the dimensional flavor and some vibrancy amidst the blandish rice taste.

The real key to my finished dish, which was far from lilly white, was the chicken and the rich, tasty broth I created on the fly with the pan dripping technique. I flavored the chicken breasts with some random thai(ish) flavors mixed with butter, roasted it on high to get the skin crispy and put some water in the pan to make the broth, which I eventually spooned over the chicken and congee. My garnish was more of a pico de gallo- red onion, thai basil and cilantro leaves. Of course, I used my Fall Herbal Salt – Spicy Vietnamese & Thai Soup Salt.

I’ll make this, or a version of, again and again, it’s just good; the concept is good. And sometimes my recipes start with a general concept and that I do my differntNISS to it.

My advice for the New Year?  Don’t be afraid to do things different, to be different. Good stuff comes from it.

Spicy Herbaceous Thai Chicken & Bacon, Onion Ginger Congee (Jok)

Serves 4

Don’t be afraid to mix and match flavors for the chicken based on what you have on hand. I tend to always keep a slew of Asian condiments in my fridge. Use lots of ginger and garlic. Make sure to use a deeper roasting pan and add some water to the bottom so you have a wonderful and flavorful pan juice (drippings) that is made when sauce ingredients and chicken cook, intermingle and drip to the bottom of the pan.

Ingredients

For the chicken
2 bone-in skin-on chicken breasts
Salt (my herbal salt if you got it)
2 tablespoons freshly grated ginger
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 teaspoon garlic powder (optional)
2 teaspoons red chili oil or use some fresh finely chopped green or red chilies
2 tablespoons hoisin sauce
¼ cup tamari
2 teaspoons lime zest
Juice of 1 lime
1 tablespoon brown sugar (optional)
2 tablespoons rice vinegar
2 tablespoons chopped cilantro leaves
2 tablespoons chopped thai basi leaves (optional)
½ stick of butter, melted

For the congee
2 pieces of thick bacon
1 tablespoon finely chopped ginger
½ cup finely chopped red onion
2 teaspoons salt
1 cup white long grain rice (anything but basmati)
8 cups water
Cilantro & red onion garnish

Directions

For the chicken
Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.

Lightly salt all sides of the chicken breasts.

Whisk together all the remaining chicken ingredients until mixed into a sauce. Place the chicken breasts skin side down in a small deep(ish) baking dish and drizzle a few spoonful’s of the sauce over the bottom the chicken. Turn the breasts skin side up and drizzle the rest of the sauce all over the chicken, making sure to cover every part of the skin and chicken that is exposed.  Place about 1 cup water in the bottom of the pan and place in the oven to roast. Roast abut 35-45 minutes until done ,the skin should be browned and crispy. If the water starts to evaporate too fast, at about the 25 minute mark add another ¼ – ½ cup.

While the chicken is roasting make the congee.

For the congee
Heat up a thick bottom pan (I use a le Creuset) to medium high heat. Cut the bacon into ½ inch pieces and cook until crispy. Turn the heat to medium and add the ginger, onions and salt and sauté for a few minutes until the onions are a little caramelized.  Add the rice and water and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally for about 35-40 minutes. It’s possible you may have to add more water if the porridge gets too thick too quickly. You want to make sure any additional water put in gets a chance to cook for at least 10 minutes. Cook porridge until the desired thickness. It should look like creamy, gritty rice that’s super soft; you choose the thickness.  Keep in mind it will get thicker after you take it off the heat and it sits a bit.

Serve the congee with sliced of the chicken with sauce spooned over the top of it all. Garnish with finely chopped cilantro and red onions. Add a little finishing salt on top.

Blog Posts Cilantro (Corriander) Thai Basil Winter

“Different” Chicken Congee

December 31, 2022
December 31, 2022
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Italian salsa verde.
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WHISKEY CARAMEL UPSIDE-DOWN CAKE
Makes 1 9-inch cake

A few years back, while writing a whiskey article and recipes for Edible Marin & Wine Country, @sonomawhiskey 
Sonoma Distilling Company gifted me with a bottle of Black Truffle Whiskey which I was immediately enamored with and turned into a caramel sauce which I used for this cake 

I incorporate rosemary and warming spices into the cake and keep it more on the savory side since caramel is so sweet, I thought it the perfect combination, especially when dolloped with tangy vanilla spice yogurt.

This is equally delicious with pears.

Ingredients

For the apples and sauce:
6 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons finely chopped sage leaves
1 teaspoon maldon salt
¾ cup raw sugar
¼ cup dark brown sugar
¼ cup Sonoma Distilling Company Truffle Whiskey or whiskey of choice
2-3 apples, cored and sliced thin

For the cake:
1 ½ cup all-purpose flour
¼ cup sprouted grain flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon kosher salt
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
¼ teaspoon ground white pepper
¼ teaspoon ground long pepper (optional)
¼ teaspoon ground cardamon or grains of paradise
1 ½ teaspoon finely chopped rosemary needles
2 teaspoons of orange zest
¾ cup softened butter (salted)
¾ cup raw sugar
2 eggs
2/3 cup Greek yogurt, plus 1 cup

Directions

Heat oven to 350°F. Grease a 9-inch springform pan and line the bottom with parchment.

Melt the butter, crisp the sage for a few seconds, then add the salt and sugars. Cook a couple minutes until the sugar starts to melt and looks gritty. Add the whiskey and cook one more minute.

Spread the hot caramel over the parchment-lined pan. Arrange the apple slices on top in circles, starting outside and working inward.

Whisk the flour, baking soda, spices, rosemary, zest, and salt in a large bowl.

In another bowl, cream the butter and sugar until fluffy. Add the eggs and yogurt and beat smooth. Add the dry ingredients gradually, beating between additions until the batter is smooth.

Spoon the batter evenly over the apples and smooth the top.

Bake about 45 minutes, until a knife tip comes out clean.
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Using my Cinnamon Basil Vanilla Pie Spice)

Roasted Apple and Squash Soup

The Red Kuri is my favorite squash varietal and is often passed by for the easier to peel Butternut or the sensationally sweet Delicata. The Red Kuri is nutty and sweet and it’s predominant flavor reminiscent of roasted chestnuts. When its roasted with apples and onions and some subtle spices, a rich, complex earthy flavor is born and once blended a decadent velvety texture emerges and tantalizes the tongue with a soft and warm airy quality. This soup is remarkably easy to make and clean up abd best of all the leftovers get turned into Velvety Apple & Squash Mac & Cheese.

1 2-pound Red Kuri squash
1 yellow onion, chopped large
1 shallot, peeled and quartered
3 tart apples, peeled and chopped
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons melted butter
¼ cup maple syrup
1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves
¾ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground mace
½ teaspoon cayenne powder
2 teaspoons cracked black pepper
2 teaspoons salt
4 cups water
¼ cup heavy whipping cream (optional)

Directions

Preheat oven to 400°F. Cut the squash in half using a larger and thicker bladed chef’s knife or a large cleaver by carefully pushing down on both ends of the blade slowly. Once the squash is cut in half, scoop out the seeds and set aside if you are making the spiced seed garnish. Place the cut side down on each half and cut it into 12 wedges, then carve off the peel of each wedge. Cut the peeled squash into roughly 2-inch pieces. Place the squash, onions, shallot and apples in a large glass baking dish (11” x 17” ideal) and toss together with the oil, melted butter, maple syrup, thyme and spices. Make sure everything is well combined and coated in the oil/butter mixture. Place the baking dish in the oven and roast for about 40 minutes, or until a slight char appears on the onions and shallots. Mix the vegetables once during the roasting process.
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With the collection purchase you get a choice of one of the fall herbal brines, plus the six collection sliders and the bonus peppercorns!

These are beautiful additions to your Thanksgiving excursions, make amazing gifts and are just generally joy (herb) filled. 

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All Thanksgiving orders this this week to arrive by early next week in time for planning and inspiration.
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Persimmon braised short ribs with butternut squash over mashed potatoes. 

I used some beer that @rachel._pierson left in my fridge a long time ago. Lots of fresh herbs as well as shallots and garlic and Hachiya persimmons.
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Fall 2025
Meandering through Fall’s Functional Disorientation Collection

Ambiguous | Collapsing | Wilted | Earthy | Mature | Explorative | Drifting | Perambulating

Green Bean Verbena
Green Vegetable Salt

Fresh Herbs: Lemon Verbena, Lemon Grass, Lemon Thyme, Lemon Leaf, Parsley, Chives, Spearmint, Carrot Flowers, Calendula Petals, Wild Arugula, Pineapple Sage Leaves & Flowers, White Rose Petals, Tulsi Produce: Romano Beans, Swiss Chard Stems Spices: Purple Striped Garlic, Toasted Onion Flakes, Purple Peppercorn, Calabrian Chili Flakes Citrus Zest: Grapefruit, Yuzu & Lemon Zest Other: Maldon Salt

Mature, ambiguous lemon —drifting from one version to the next—lemon verbena, lemongrass, lemon leaf, lemon thyme—all exploring the earthy, warmer and deeper side of citrus-forward plants. Instead of evoking the sharp glare of their summer essence, this fall concoction feels more honeyed. The lemony miscellany moves slower, like sunshine filtered through vegetal amber glass—grassy, earthy, on the vine too long garden green beans, Swiss chard, and toasted onion. Parsley, chives, wild arugula, and spearmint pump it alive with energy, carrying the memory of sunlight but subtle enough to forgo its blaze. Grapefruit and yuzu zests anchor it in the quiet brightness of dormancy to come. Tiny tints of fall florals recall life before breakdown, while Tulsi flowers and white rose petals root us in the purity of transformation. Use this one not 
to cut through fall fats, but to flavor them brighter. Pork belly, pork chops, BLTs, and all your fall vegetable staples—green bean casserole, Swiss chard lasagna and sautéed wild mushrooms and pancetta for the big reveal.

Collection goes up for sale on the site Nov 6th - www. Shop. Herbal-Roots.com
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Fall 2025
Meandering through Fall’s Functional Disorientation Collection
@myherbalroots 

Ambiguous | Collapsing | Wilted | Earthy | Mature | Explorative | Drifting | Perambulating

A staple in my fall collection, the brine I use on my bird (or porchetta) and if you have doubts an herbal (dry) salt brine is the bomb. 

Chipotle Cranberry-Mezcal 
Herbal Salt Brine

Fresh Herbs: Purple Sage, Green Sage, Rosemary, Thyme, Winter Savory, Bay Leaves, Myrtle, White Sage, Wormwood, Licorice, Mexican Oregano Spices: Desert Hibiscus, Cinnamon, Wild Mesquite, Dried Mora Chipotle, Mace, Purple Tulsi, Smoked Paprika, Black Lime, Raki Seeds, Pemba Cloves, Black Pepper, White Pepper Citrus Zest: Lime Other: House Made Mezcal Cranberry Sauce, Smoked Alder Salt, Maldon Salt

Myhouse-made ‘Vida Mezcal’ cranberry sauce with crispy butter-fried sage, infused into Maldon and smoked alder salts, enriched by a medley of classic fall herbs, returns as my favorite and “best brine seller.” Wild Mexican botanicals like hibiscus and mesquite are woven into hand-ground mora chipotle chilies, adding smoky heat and fruity balance. Sweet licorice lends softness, complimented by raki seeds, cinnamon, mace, and cloves further softening the piquant autumnal core. Earthy, citrusy, robust Mexican oregano is abundant, while classic fall herbs like sage, rosemary, thyme, and bay leaves, firmly root this salt in American Thanksgiving 
tradition. As a dry brine, this smoky, savory herbal magic sticks to the skin, infusing your bird with deliciously rustic Latin micro-flavors, extra crispy fiery spiced skin and the tastiest 
herbaceously-salty, fat drippings divine for gravy and sauce. Its bold, smoky depth and chili-forward salty tang enhance fruit, pork, hearty mole sauces, and any bean dish. Nachos, steak, empanadas, and avocados also benefit. And this is most definitely your go-to salt for a cranberry Mezcal margarita.

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Fall 2025 
Meandering through Fall’s Functional Disorientation Collection
@myherbalroots 

Ambiguous | Collapsing | Wilted | Earthy | Mature | Explorative | Drifting | Perambulating

Pomegranate Mint
Fall Salad Salt

Fresh Herbs: Persian Mint, Moroccan Mint, Spearmint, Parsley, Lemon Thyme, Syrian Oregano,  Lemon Verbena, Carrot Flowers, Pineapple Sage Flowers, Malabar Spinach Spikes, Purple Shiso  Leaf, Nasturtium Leaves, Wild Arugula, Red Rose Petals Produce: Pomegranate Arils, Purple 
Torpedo Onion Spices: Sumac, Dried Mint, White Pepper, Black Pepper, Rose Harissa Citrus Zest: Lemon Zest Other: Maldon Salt

This one conjures a slow meander through an imaginary Middle Eastern mint forest— unexpected warmth, ripe earth, dense, sweet and pleasant, dank freshness. Carrot flowers and 
Malabar spinach spikes, along with wild arugula, ignite that green, fresh spark. Red and white rose petals 
soaked in rose harissa and vinegar punch through with fruity spice. But make no mistake—this is 
minty and its forward, reminding us, through its powerful Persian influence, that it will always transform rather than die off.  Twists of shiso, lemon verbena and Syrian oregano whisper the layered secrets of ambiguous minty-like tones and potencies. Pomegranate arils are caked  into the salt crystals  and loads of parsley add a beaconing freshness and  brightness to the extravaganza. This season’s salad salt reminds what it feels like to be alive whilst we go quiet. It longs to be sprinkled over garden little gems and store-bought Mexican cucumbers and sheep feta, yet feels equally at home in Middle Eastern soups and on any grilled meats and fish.  Fall grain salads and beets beckon this one. 

The fall collection of herb salts is available for sale on the site November 6th - www.shopHerbal-Roots.com
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