My best recipe for grilled chicken that I use on Alfredo. I cut mine in 1 to 1 and 1/2 inch cubes and put them on Kabobs and grill. When done toss them in the Alfredo.
Italian Chicken Marinade
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
1 1/2 tablespoons Italian seasoning
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1-4 pounds boneless skinless chicken breast
Instructions
In a small bowl or measuring cup, whisk together olive oil, balsamic vinegar, garlic powder, Italian seasoning, salt, and pepper.
Place chicken in a bowl or a zip-top bag and pour marinade over chicken. Move chicken around to make sure it's all coated with marinade. Place in fridge and let marinate for at least 2 hours up to 24 hours before grilling.
Cook until internal temperature reads 165 degrees Fahrenheit on an instant read thermometer. [Reply]
Originally Posted by KCUnited:
Chicken in general is one thing I get burned out on quickly if I don't change up cooking techniques and dishes.
I get burned out on chicken too, but I was just talking about the conundrum of, when you have smoked chicken in hand, the question is 'just eat it all right away' or 'go to the trouble of making even better stuff with it.'
Hope that makes sense.
I'm been trying to stave off chicken boredom by varying the preparation. Most of it is sous vide then sear, but I switch up between yogurt and curry, and then pesto and nut, then liquid smoke then barbecue sauce, . . maybe some butter and buffalo. Then I switch between pastas and rices and such to plate them over.
Originally Posted by Baby Lee:
I get burned out on chicken too, but I was just talking about the conundrum of, when you have smoked chicken in hand, the question is 'just eat it all right away' or 'go to the trouble of making even better stuff with it.'
Hope that makes sense.
I'm been trying to stave off chicken boredom by varying the preparation. Most of it is sous vide then sear, but I switch up between yogurt and curry, and then pesto and nut, then liquid smoke then barbecue sauce, . . maybe some butter and buffalo. Then I switch between pastas and rices and such to plate them over.
Bunker cuisine, gotta lot it.
I've found that I actually really enjoy the different varieties of Rice-a-roni quite a bit in these times. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Buehler445:
Made the smoked meatloaf. I don’t make as pretty of food as you guys, but this was fucking good. I’m definitely doing this again.
Got a little dry, but it was still good. Yes I did take the ends. Because fuck you that’s why.
Never mind the crappy Mac and cheese and canned green beans. We’re running short on sides these days.
Looks good to me.
Two suggestions on possible help for dryness:
1. Higher fat content of ground beef
2. A bottle of "wet" squirt that you can keep using to baste the meatloaf every 30 minutes to an hours. Maybe your sauce you added on top cut with apple cider vinegar or red wine [Reply]
Originally Posted by Baby Lee:
I get burned out on chicken too, but I was just talking about the conundrum of, when you have smoked chicken in hand, the question is 'just eat it all right away' or 'go to the trouble of making even better stuff with it.'
Hope that makes sense.
I'm been trying to stave off chicken boredom by varying the preparation. Most of it is sous vide then sear, but I switch up between yogurt and curry, and then pesto and nut, then liquid smoke then barbecue sauce, . . maybe some butter and buffalo. Then I switch between pastas and rices and such to plate them over.
Bunker cuisine, gotta lot it.
For sure. Pesto is a really good call that I haven't done in awhile.
I'd be interested in experimenting more with yogurt. Middle Eastern takeout place we order from easily has the best reheated chicken kabobs I've had.
EDIT: Wife does some great thai peanut chicken skewers that I'm folding back in the rotation. Unique enough flavor and pounding out the chicken first changes up the mouthfeel enough. [Reply]
I had this on Thursday for lunch. It’s a jersey burger. Angus beef burger with pork roll melted cheese and an over easy egg. No ketchup needed on that thing. Sidewinder fries a pickle (in the wrap) and a cup of Cole slaw [Reply]