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Carl F.H. Henry
Blackened Chicken
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(0)
CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Meats
Cajun
Cajun, Main dish, Poultry, Apples
8
Servings
INGREDIENTS
16
3 oz skinless chicken breast
2
tb
Salt
1 1/2
ts
Garlic powder
1 1/2
ts
Ground black pepper
1
ts
White pepper
1
ts
Onion powder
1
ts
Ground cumin
1/2
ts
Gound cayenne pepper
1/2
ts
Sweet paprika
3/4
lb
Melted unsalted butter
INSTRUCTIONS
SEASONING MIX
OTHER INGREDIENTS
NOTE: Recipe calls for 16 (3-ounce) skinless boned chicken breasts, about
1/2 to 3/4 inch thick, or 8 (10-ounce) bone-in leg-thigh pieces, or a
combination of these. Skin the leg-thigh pieces, then bone each piece along
the length of the two bones, leaving meat in one piece. Trim off excess
fat. Pound each breast or leg-thigh fillet to 1/2 inch thick. Let the
chicken come to room temperature before blackening.
Thoroughly combine the seasoning mix ingredients in a small bowl. Heat a
large cast-iron skillet over very high heat until it is extremely hot and
just short of the point at which you see white ash or a white spot forming
in the skillet bottom, about 8 minutes. (the time will vary according to
the intensity of the heat source.) Heat the serving plates in a 250F oven.
Just before cooking each piece of chicken, dip it in the melted butter so
that both sides are well coated, then sprinkle each fillet evenly with the
seasoning mix, using about a rounded 1/2 teaspoon on each, and patting it
in with your hands. (If you lay the fillet on a plate or other surface to
season it, be sure the surface is warm so the butter won't congeal and
stick to the surface instead of to the meat. Wipe the surface clean after
seasoning each fillet. Use any remaining seasoning mix in another recipe.)
Immediately place the fillet skinned side down in the hot skillet, making
sure all meat folds are opened up and the meat is lying flat. Pour about 1
teaspoon butter on the top of the fillet (be careful, as the butter may
flame up). If you cook more that 1 fillet at a time, place each fillet in
the skillet before buttering and seasoning another one. Cook uncovered over
the same high heat until the underside forms a crust, about 2 minutes. (The
time will vary according to the thickness of the fillets and the heat of
the skillet or fire; watch the meat and you'll see a white line coming up
the side as it cooks.) Turn the fillets over and pour about 1 teaspoon more
melted butter on top of each. Cook just until meat is cooked through, about
2 minutes more. Serve the chicken fillets crustier side up while piping
hot. Clean the skillet after cooking each batch and repeat the blackening
procedure with the remaining chicken fillets. To serve, place 2 breast
fillets or 1 leg-thigh fillet on each heated serving plate. If you use a
large serving platter, do not stack the fillets. Paul Prudhomme warns,
"Blackening should be done either outdoors or in a commercial kitchen. The
process creates an incredible amount of smoke that will set off your own
and your neighbors' smoke alarms. People with really well-installed
commercial hood vents at home have gotten away with blackening in their own
kitchens. They are privileged! Don't push your luck."
From The Prudhomme Family Cookbook Posted to EAT-L Digest by Leon & Miriam
Posvolsky <miriamp@POBOX.COM> on Dec 18, 1997
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“Jesus: Because with God only perfection will do”
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