This isn't a new twist on an old standby. It's an old twist on an old standby.
Chicken fricassee holds a special
place in Creole cuisine - front and center. It is so fundamental, so basic that
to an old Creole it must have seemed quite ordinary. But thumbing through archived
recipes of a century ago (in The Times Picayune Creole Cookbook), one can see
that it did not have to be ordinary. It could be transformed into something
stupendous. Fricassee a la Jardiniere is an outright celebration, a showcase of
the best of the garden.
You begin with the chicken
fricassee - a sauté of chicken, braised in sauce with aromatics, swimming in
gravy, laced with green onion - but then you get extravagant. There are already
vegetables in the fricassee. That was just part of the foreplay.
Now for the showcase vegetables -
they are our second line. And it can be everything a second line should be.
Arrange them on top of the fricassee, in and out of the gravy, nestled among
drumstick, thigh and breast. Then finish it all in a hot oven.
FIRST LINE FRICASSEE
1 C (in all) olive oil
1 1/2 C (in all) flour
1 chicken, cut into 8 pieces
salt and pepper
2 carrots diced
1 1/2 C diced onion
1 C diced fennel bulb
3/4 C diced bell pepper
3/4 C diced celery
3 T finely chopped garlic
1 C green onions, sliced, with a
good bit of green - Note: the green onions are not to be added until the braise is
finished.
2 C chicken broth
1 can condensed beef broth
3/4 C white wine
2 t paprika
1/2 t cayenne
1/2 t black pepper
1/2 t white pepper
4-5 springs of fresh thyme
Sour cream (optional)
Sour cream (optional)
1. Generously salt and pepper the chicken
pieces. Scatter 1 C flour on a plate, and dredge chicken in flour, thoroughly
coating each piece.
3. Discard oil, wipe pan - but do not
disturb any brown crust left on the bottom - do remove any burnt spots - and
add 1/2 C fresh oil.
4. PREHEAT OVEN to 375
6. Stir in all the vegetables except
the green onions, and stir, stir - till vegetables are wilting. Then add paprika, cayenne, black and white pepper - still stirring.
7. Slowly add the chicken broth,
stirring until well incorporated. As it thickens, add the consume, a little at a time, and then the wine - still stirring -
8. Place the chicken back in the pot,
cover. Lower heat and simmer 45 minutes.
9. Stir in the green onions. You might wish to stir in some sour cream, too.
And the fricassee is basically
done. Now to make it a la jardiniere.
SECOND LINE VEGETABLES
10. Add your second line vegetables to the fricassee
after it has been braised for 45 minutes. Keep them on the surface - at least
don’t fully submerge them. But do make sure everything is at least moistened in
the sauce. With tongs lift exposed pieces of chicken enough to allow some
crisping of skin.
11. Then place Dutch oven in oven, uncovered, on an upper rack, and cook 15 minutes.
11. Then place Dutch oven in oven, uncovered, on an upper rack, and cook 15 minutes.
Artichoke. This recipe should feed
to bursting four people. So an artichoke, quartered, will provide each an
interesting diversion. If you have more than four people, you might wish to cut it into eighths. Or use two artichokes. Bring to a boil enough water to cover the artichoke, add the juice of a lemon, the lemon itself, a bay leaf, a couple of garlic cloves, a teaspoon of peppercorns and some olive oil - don't forget the artichoke. Cook for 30
minutes. Remove, and drain. Cut off the stem, peel it and slice it. Cut the artichoke in half, length wise. Carefully remove the spiny choke and the tough inner leaves; then - with cut side facing down - carefully
slice the halves in two.
Cauliflower. Cut it in half,
lengthwise. Half a cauliflower should be plenty (save the other half for a salad). Cut florets from the stalk, and
halve the larger ones if it will make the general size more uniform. Over high
heat, bring about a quart of water to a boil. In a large bowl, prepare an ice
water bath. Drop the florets into the boiling water, give it a few seconds to
get back up to a boil, and cook 3 minutes. Remove the florets and drop into the
ice water bath. When cool, remove.
Corn. Boil an ear or two for 10
minutes. Remove, and cut into 1/2 inch roundels.
Green peas. 1/C fresh, blanched for three minutes; or thawed
frozen - no precooking necessary.
Cherry tomatoes. Especially if you
can find a variety of sizes and colors. 1 C should suffice.
Serve over rice - or dirty rice. Get casual. Use your hands - with the artichoke and the corn,
you’ll have to.
There are of course a lot of other
options for the second line vegetables: spring onions, roasted in foil; wedges of fennel bulb, roasted
without the foil; roasted garlic, patty pan squash, red chilis; blanched asparagus or broccoli florets - and on and on.