by jenny_haddow » Mon Apr 02, 2007 8:46 pm
Thanks Big Guy, more good data for my pigeon file.
FB, here's the recipe I promised, I think it originates in Iran, and you can see a glimpse of the Moghul influence in Indian food here I think.
A chicken, chopped into portions
A jar or can of black cherries (Lidl do a large jar of these very reasonably)
2 sliced onions
500gr basmati rice
vegetable oil
salt and pepper
Soak the rice in warm salted water for 2-3 hours, drain, then add rice to boiling salted water and cook until slightly softened. Drain, rinse and put to one side.
Put the chicken, onions, salt and pepper in a pan with about 2 cups of hot water. Cover and cook over a medium heat until the chicken is cooked. Remove the chicken and take out the bones, put aside. Strain and reserve the cooking juice, put the strained onions with the chicken meat.
Drain the cherries and reserve the juice. Mix the cherry and chicken juice and 2-3 tblsp of oil. Stir the cherries into the half cooked rice.
Pour half a cup of hot water with 2tblsp of oil into a large lidded pan or casserole dish. Add half the rice and cherries, cover with the chicken and onions, then the remaining rice and cherries.
Pour the cherry/chicken juice mixture over the top, cover and cook in a medium oven, or on a low heat on the stove top, for about an hour. A crisp layer forms on the base and sides of the pan and is the bit that is fought over traditionally (a bit like the skin on a rice pudding over here). Ideally you should be able to turn this out of the dish like a loaf of bread, but I tend to pay safe and serve it from the pan, tastes the same!
Resist all temptation to stir while it is cooking or you loose the layered effect when it is served. Nice with tabouleh and arab flat bread, or raisin couscous(Cooked with chicken stock, raisins, butter, cinnamon and nutmeg)
Enjoy
Jen