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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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If only I was a Sonoma county bartender…

I’d enter my Yellow Tomato Mango Summertime Bloody Mary ……

@charbaydistillery is hosting the 1st Annual Bloody Mary Challenge to support the  @santarosafirefighters Foundation

Sonoma County bartenders creating their best Bloody Mary and garnish. Attendees taste all competitors Bloody Mary’s and then vote for their favorite.

Event is located in the outdoor event space next to  @hotellarose  Hotel La Rose / Grossman’s Noshery & Bar

If I wasn’t going to Michigan I’d go at least taste. 

I can’t tell you how refreshing the mango tomato thing is - someone should do it. My recipe is linked in my story in case someone wants to try it.

Technically it’s a Bloody Maria 🇲🇽
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I haven’t done many new mango recipes this season (what I have done is KILLA!!!) but on this really hot day with a few ripe mangoes in my fruit bowl (that I really wanted to feed to the baby deer 🦌) I’m pulling out an old simple summer favorite- ripe mango, ice, lime juice, honey and lemon verbena from my garden- blended up into an iceeeeee delight. 

It’s so refreshing. 

Use @crespoorganic #mangoes of course!
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For todays breakfast in the sunshine- I’m dining on a new #summer #recipe  made with a Gentle Curry Spice recipe i developed  about 15 years ago for a project with Ger-Nis

This recipe is a gentle summer veg coconut curry as simple as you imagine. Sauted vegetables with summer tomatoes and a gentle curry spice and coconut milk. Barely simmered for summer taste  perfection. 

I think my gentle curry spice recipe is  published at @ediblemarinwc in a past article I did on apples. 

This exact recipe is forthcoming in another project.
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One fruit is not better than the other, don’t let me or anyone else tell you different. 

A diet of a variety of whole organic foods- fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, HERBS, legumes (dairy and meat if you choose) that is cooked fresh often in combination with daily exercise, stress managment, not smoking and drinking is generally proven to create ideal health and longevity. 

So if they tell you a fruit is heart healthy but you smoke and eat loads of pulses proceed foods - they are likely just trying to sell something to you- instead of caring about your tender heart- which could be part of the problem we are in health wise. 

I long for the days where teaching about real food and cooking  was profitable or at least doable for a job.
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Mango (@crespoorganic ) ice, honey, lime and fresh lemon verbena - blended into an icy summer delight- the best in a super hot day.
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No matter what this new world order brings- dumb AI recipes and food ideas. Influencers that could care less about food, more processed goods (just somewhat healthier and smarter than the last wave of manufactured foods - but not really. ) business’s more concerned with scale than ethics, environmental destruction et and doing food for communities- or you know saying you’ll do good things later, once you get rich from taking. 

I’ll (@picoypero ) be here always under the pretense of learning and sharing not just how to cook but how to match what’s grown with what to eat. For me this still the healthiest way to exist if you’re looking at the planet and people as one.  Obviously I’m going to continue to shout about how healthy and flavorful herbs are and how their use allows for less—sugars, fats, salts, processed foods etc- things we generally use in excess. 

Whatever you do, use more herbs. I will continue to be here teaching people how easy they are to use, until the end, I will. 

Here is today’s lesson - a reminder of how fresh fruit in season and herbs create drinks that are better than what you can buy. 

This one inspired by my @frontporchfarmer #blackberries I bought yesterday and smashed some on the way home. 

Blackberry Lemon Verbena Peaceful Spirit Sparkling Ice Tea

5 blackberries
2 tablespoons raw honey 
Juice of one lemon
Handful of lemon verbena leaves 
2 peaceful spirit tea bags (@flyingbirdbotanicals )
4 cups hot water
 Sparkling water 

Blend blackberries, verbena, honey, lemon juice and a little hot water. Pour into a pitcher. Add tea bags and hot water. Steep and allow to cool. Strain. Pour half  full into glass of ice top with sparkling water. 

This concept can be used however you want. Strawberry basil lemon ginger tea, peach bergamot (bee balm) bergamot tea - cherry lime white tea etc etc etc etc etc etc
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One of my favorite recipes for summer cherry tomatoes. Romano Bean, Cherry Tomato Feta Salad. This recipe dates back to my early 20’s in Eugene, OR

It’s so easy slice cherry tomatoes season with salt and torn basil leaves add cooked green beans. Cover let cool completely-dress with a little olive oil and feta. (@mt.eitan.cheese in this case and the last of my Andy 😭

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It’s celery, capers, pine nuts, green olives, parsley currants sauted up into magic.
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Fresh fruit and herb “jam” is how I sweeten and flavor my granola!
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Believe it or not, these pretty herbs are going into a granola! (Lemon verbena, anise hyssop and French lavender)

If you haven’t had one of my herbal flavored fresh fruit granolas, you are missing out. Today’s is extra heart healthy. 

The main sweetener is the fresh fruit and some maple syrup. The herbs add complexity that alleviates some need for sweetness (replaces sweet taste with interesting) tahini is mixed in with a saucy fruit jam concoction/maple mixture and that’s mixed with rolled oats, quinoa, amaranth, black and white sesame seeds, flax and spices like cinnamon, vanilla powder, mace, malab and cardamom. Freeze dried blueberries and dried currants with almonds and hazelnuts!

When I made the strawberry maple mixture I also added cardamom, vanilla and almond extracts as well as the fresh herbs. 

The whole house smells like heaven.
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A random thought about it led me here- to my marigold sugar - limeade 

It’s so good - the floral vegetal notes from the marigold flavor is really nice. And it has a tang-esque quality to it that is fun. 

@mediumfarm giant marigolds that I dried 
@covillibrandorganics limes that were gifted to me by the head honchos themselves. 😀
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Local ocean trout crudo….

Marigold Calabrian Chili Oil 
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Persian Dill Salt (Spring 2025  @myherbalroots )
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Dried marigold petals. 

Fresh marigold petals can be too pungent for any culinary use beyond minor accent flavor, in my opinion, which is why I like to use them in my herb salts. 

But if you dry them- (which is what happens in my salts) some magic happens- the flavor morphs into an extremely pleasant flavor that has much greater use and versatility. They are so easy to sun dry- these sat outside on a table for a week!

Earthy, floral, slightly citrusy- a little vegetal - as if a carrot and an orange combined—-Peppery and slightly (pleasantly) bitter. 

Add them during sauté phases in cooking  to add flavor and color-  use in baking and syrups- they create lovely deep golden color when used plus the lovely flavor. Lovely in frittatas. 

I’m going to use these in a Calabrian and marigold chili oil for a Crudo as well as a yogurt marinade for chicken. 

I’m working on expanding my herbal salt line to offer  seasonal dried herbs, herb seasonings and dried herb petals and mixes….. 

You’ll be happy! Lots of changes all encircling  my own passions and goals - a nice change of tides.
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Romano beans with basil, lemon basil, lemon and olive oil 

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Recipes (in story) developed back when I live in Bolinas. I grow geraniums ever since just to make this with the blooms - and the geranium black pepper salt on lemon cucumbers - also in story.
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