Roast chicken thigh and tomato-based sauce

Dear Reader,

Happy Canberra Day! Canberra is 109 today. We get a public holiday on Monday, but I’m on-call this weekend, so I’m hoping for not too many calls.

I planned to complete my annual CPDP submission today, but I had a huge lunch, and I’ve felt bloated all afternoon. It’s also stimulated the gas-forming bacteria in my microbiota. There’s a lot of gas formed from glucose metabolism in my enteric bacteria, especially those in the Order: Enterobacterales.

A delicious Dobinsons lamb shank pie is floating in a bowl of spiced pumpkin soup with laksa paste. I made the soup last week.

I’m just a simple bloke, so focussing and farting is not something I can do together. I elected instead to watch a movie on Netflix called The Ice Road starring Liam Neeson. If you like suspenseful drama, it’s worth viewing.

In other news today, I bought a new oven which cooks with microwave radiation. The old model was only 13 years old and developed a problem. The only keys I could use were the number 3 and the start cook button. I’ve been cooking things for 33 seconds, 3 minutes and 33 seconds for the last few months. The new oven is a 1000 W Samsung. Appliances don’t last very long these days.

Ingredients

  • Chicken thigh
  • Sourdough bread
  • White onion
  • Tinned tomatoes (Mutti)
  • Capers
  • Olives
  • Pickled jalapeño peppers
  • Olive oil
  • Worcestershire sauce
  • Cooking sherry
  • Red wine
  • Basil

Instructions

  1. Ideally the chicken thigh has been seasoned with salt and freshly ground black pepper and then vacuum sealed to flavours at least hours beforehand.
  2. Peel and quarter a white onion.
  3. Sweat the onion in a skillet with some vegetable oil. As the onion takes on some colour, add some cooking sherry and then some Worcestershire sauce until the onion begins to caramelise a little.
  4. Add in a small tin of tomatoes and simmer.
  5. As the sauce thickens a little add in the capers, olives, and pickled jalapeño peppers.
  6. Simmer with some stalks of basil and then add a good glug of red wine and simmer.
  7. Turn on the toaster oven to as high as possible.
  8. Lubricate the surface of a baking sheet with some vegetable oil.
  9. Place a piece of sourdough bread in the middle of the baking sheet.
  10. Pour some olive oil over the bread so in the oven it’s like it’s “frying” the bread.
  11. Remove the seasoned chicken thigh from the vacuum sealed bag and place it on the lubricated bread.
  12. Place the bread and chicken into the hot oven and cook on high heat for 10 minutes and then turn the heat down to a low heat and keep cooking for a further 20 minutes.
  13. When the chicken is cooked, remove it from the oven and let it rest for about five minutes.
  14. Place the chicken and toasted/“fried” bread in an shallow bowl and then spoon the tomato sauce around it.
  15. Use a serrated steak knife to eat this because the bread will be stiff and hard.
  16. Give thanks to the Lord and enjoy.

Thoughts on the meal

I cooked the chicken perfectly! It was still succulent and juicy. There was an abundance of juices oozing out from the folds of flesh as I penetrated it with my knife.

The sauce was pretty tasty; I like the acidity of the pickled jalapeño peppers along with the olives and capers. I forgot to add some Swiss brown mushrooms I’d also bought for this meal. The acid cuts through the oil and the chicken fat.

I know I said last week I was trying to reduce my meat consumption. I haven’t forgotten, and I have loved ones reminding me of my health. I’m grateful to them for looking out for me ❤️

Final thoughts

  1. Do you ever cook meat over oil soaked bread?
  2. Does it annoy you when you go somewhere for breakfast and they serve toasted sourdough which is stiff as a board and give you a butter knife?
  3. How has your week been?
  4. How long have you been using your microwave oven?

12 Responses

  1. I like that you always seem to have strong flavours in your recipes Gary. That is very funny about the 3’s. I want to replace my microwave but mainly because it has that annoying cooling function which I hate because it is so noisy.

    1. It’s an appliance of convenience I use regularly but if I didn’t have it I think I’d get by 😊

  2. laughter Can we still be friends if I love just half of your lunch and dinner ? Don’t eat commercial pies but would have the soup whenever offered. Love all the ingredients of your chicken but would omit the bread !! Thank Glad my enteric bacteria don’t let me know they are there (altho’ yours behave in a healthier way, I believe !) . . . and my microwave is well over 10 years old ’cause I only ever seem to use it to warm up heat pads for aching joints !!! Stove-top, oven, grill for me 🙂 ! Hope you do end up with at least a partial holiday tomorrow !

    1. Thanks Eha, so far the weekend work hasn’t been too onerous.
      I like using my Tupperware Microwave Radiation pressure cooker. It’s much more convenient that the fast slow cooker and easier to clean.

  3. Hi Gaz, happy belated Canberra Day. I hope you don’t get too many calls over the weekend. I don’t cook that much meat over oil-soaked bread (and wonder if I should, as the massive carnivore in the household would probably say, yum yum). It isn’t that common in the UK for people to go out for breakfast, but too tough bread is a definite no-no… My week has been so-so. I’m finding the news difficult at the moment, contemplating the whys of what is going on and the powerlessness of being able to do so little, but that’s nothing compared to what it’s like being a Ukrainian citizen at the moment.

    1. Thanks, Emma. It is difficult at the moment. In your part of the world, the proximity to the conflict is very real. For us antipodeans, the reality is brought home through our screens and it’s horrifying. At the same time we’re in the midst of the summer (albeit it’s not autumn) natural disaster period with extensive and devastating flooding. This will compound the mosquito problem associated with our outbreak of Japanese encephalitis associated with our piggeries at the moment.
      I hope the coming week brings good news for all of us.

  4. Our microwave is at least 10 years old. It has fancy controls but we don’t use them. It was time you got a new one after all that messing about with 3s!

    1. It was getting tedious doing the maths and having to keep an eye on the timer each time I used it! I hope this new one lasts as long.

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