Warm chicken and celeriac salad  

This salad is superb warm or cold – and if you don’t call it ‘salad’, then it’s great hot too!  But if forced to choose between them, warm would be my absolute favourite.

Like many chicken recipes it would be very good made with pork instead.   You can make it in an oven if you have one, or on a single hob if you don’t.

It’s a salad that doesn’t need extra carbohydrate – the celeriac is filling.  But if you are feeding the seriously hungry then fresh crusty bread would be brilliant.  Or you could try adding cooked bite size potatoes to the mix – small potatoes boiled if you don’t have an oven, or large potatoes cut small and baked with the celeriac if you do.  Or turn your favourite pasta through it – larger shapes would work well.

The essence of it

Cube some celeriac, toss a little salt and oil over it and roast at 200C for 25/30 minutes.  If you don’t have an oven, sauté it gently in a frying pan, probably for slightly less time.  Add the chicken thigh fillets, cubed to bite size, stir to mix, and roast or sauté for another 10/12 minutes or until the chicken is cooked through, stirring well from time to time.

Let the mixture cool slightly, season if needed, and add either a dash of lemon juice or a touch of balsamic vinegar.

Toss the leaves in the French dressing (or leave them undressed if you don’t have any French dressing – the chicken/celeriac mix is succulent).  Arrange the leaves on the plate, and pile the chicken and celeriac mixture in the middle.  If you have a lemon, top each plate off with a lemon quarter, for diners to add extra lemon juice if they want it.

Voilà!

Happy, quick, and easy cooking, and – bon appétit!

Anna

And now in more detail

For two:

2 – 4 chicken thigh fillets (depending on how hungry you are), cut into bite-sized pieces.  See the end of this blog post on how to ringing the changes to use other sorts of chicken instead of expensive thigh fillets, or indeed to use pork).

One medium sized celeriac, also cut into bite sized pieces

A lemon if you can (a squeeze of lemon juice would do instead), or a scant dessert spoon of balsamic vinegar per person makes an easy and delicious dressing for the chicken/celeriac mix.

Oil for frying

Salt and pepper

Salad leaves / rocket / lettuce

1 tbsp approx French dressing

Cut the outer skin off the celeriac and divide it into bite sized chunks.  Toss a little salt and oil over it and roast at about 200C for 25/30 minutes – oven vary, and it is also affected by the size of pan you put it in – if it has lots of space and it will cook more quickly and brown more readily; if it is squeezed in it will take longer and won’t tend to brown.

If you don’t have an oven, sautė it gently in a frying pan with the lid on  – this is also generally a little quicker).

While the celeriac is cooking, cut the chicken into bite-sized pieces and when the time is up add it to the celeriac, stirring well to mix.  Roast / sauté for another 10 minutes.

It may then all be ready, but if the chicken has cooked right through before the celeriac has softened enough, just pick out the pieces of chicken and leave the celeriac to go on roasting / sautéeing until it is either al dente, or fully softened, as you prefer.  If the chicken isn’t quite cooked (no pinkness when you cut one of largest pieces in half) then leave it a few minutes longer.

Let the cooked chicken and celeriac mix cool slightly, season it with a little pepper, and mix together with the juice of half the lemon (or a few shakes from the bottle if that is all you have) or the balsamic vinegar.   Recheck the seasoning and add more salt if needed.

Toss the leaves in the French dressing, arrange them on the plate, and pile the chicken and celeriac mixture in the middle.  Top each plate off with a lemon quarter, for diners to add extra lemon juice if they want it – such elegance!

(Whether you are eating it while still warm or else when cold, obviously you won’t want chicken – or pork if you make it with pork – standing around on a warm day, so if you don’t have a fridge don’t make it too far in advance.)

And some variants

Thigh fillets are expensive (though you may be able to justify them to yourself on the basis that that spending a bit more to make cooking easy when on holiday is a lot cheaper and healthier than go out or having a take away).

Any alternative chicken leg meat works well, because its greater juiciness than breast means it melds superbly with the celeriac and does away with the need for much dressing (which simplifies things too).  So you could certainly do this with leg joints, or with bone-in thighs, which are less expensive, or with drumsticks.  Even possibly with chicken wings, though I haven’t tried that.

If you are using bone in thighs or drumsticks they will need longer to cook than diced chicken – start them at the same time as you start the celeriac.  If you are using a whole leg joints you may want to give them five or ten minutes before you add the celeriac.

If it just has to be chicken breast for you, that’s fine too, but watch how quickly it is cooking with an eagle eye – too long and it will go dry and stringy.  Probably ten minutes max if diced, but always check by snipping a larger piece in half.  For chicken breasts you might want to consider the gourmandise version where you use mayonnaise with a touch of mustard as the dressing for the chicken celery mix …. “Naughty but nice” has to be the only comment!

Unless you are using chicken breasts, which do mind being over-cooked, this dish is very good natured about timing – a bit more or a bit less doesn’t matter, just as long as the chicken isn’t undercooked.

And like so many chicken recipes, it also works well made with diced pork.

Bon appétit!

Anna

Fresh tuna fish with caraway cream sauce

I adore caraway, a taste I fell for when I fell for Prague.  Some people hate caraway however, and even I don’t want it absolutely always. So be footloose and fancy free:  be inventive – the recipe works very well with just about any herb or spice that is your favourite, or which you happen to have available, and changing the herb or spice makes a different dish every time. Just make sure your choice “feels” right with the cream in the sauce: imagine the taste in advance, and think a bit about the geography of the fact that it is marrying with cream.  So smoked paprika would give a touch of Hungarian dash, ground coriander something delicate and aromatic, and even a mild curried sauce works well.  But given the cream, don’t try to go all Mediterranean and slice a few olives in it (that would be a different sauce, probably made with tomatoes …).

If you’ve got just one herb/spice and you’re not sure if it will work – try it anyway!  You’ll find something out, and as long as you don’t tell your diners that you are uncertain about it they will probably wolf it down.

This recipe uses ground caraway, but use whole seeds if you prefer or that is all you have – it makes a slightly different dish, but just as good.

The essence of it

Lightly saute the tuna steaks.  When they are nearly cooked, stir the herb/spice into the oil to cook briefly.  Add some cream and season.  Dish up with the sauce over the tuna.  Voilà!

Bon appétit!

Anna

And now in more detail

Ingredients per person

A tuna steak of the size you like or can get (150 gr will be on the small end of things,  250 gr for heartier appetites)

Cream – a couple of tablespoons (any of soured cream, cream. or creme fraiche are all good)

Ground caraway seed – or unground caraway, or almost any other herb or spice you choose.  1/2 a tsp or so of caraway per person.  Most herbs or spices you could probably use nearer a tsp, but to little is better than too much – this produces a very delicate sauce, to match the delicacy of the cream.

Salt and pepper

Butter or oil to cook

If you think your diners will find tuna quite a strong-tasting fish – it’s always referred to as “meaty”, then have a look at this tip to make the flavour more delicate.

Put a little oil or butter in a shallow pan that is as nearly the size of the pieces of tuna as you have available, and gently sauté the the tuna steaks until they are nearly done.

How long this will take will depend on whether you have ended up with steaks that are thin cut or thick cut – anything from about 4 minutes to 10 or more.  If they are very thick, sear both sides on a high heat and then let them cook as gently as possible so they don’t get hard.

When the steaks are nearly done – test them by snipping through the thickest part with a pair of scissors if you are uncertain – push them to one side of the pan.  (If the tuna fits into the pan so snugly that it is taking up all the room, remove the steaks to a plate and cover them with foil if possible to keep the tuna warm.)

Stir the herb/spice into the oil for about a minute to cook it briefly.  Add some cream and salt and pepper and stir the sauce as it warms through, avoiding boiling it if you can.  If you had to remove the tuna from the pan to make the sauce, put it back in for long enough to warm through.

Dish up with the cream sauce spooned over the tuna.

And now some variations

It doesn’t have to be tuna:  this dish works well with any white fish – cod, plaice, dabs haddock.  And salmon or trout.  Don’t go there though, I think, with mackerel or herring.

You can make the sauce more substantial in all sorts of ways – useful if pieces of fish you bought by pantomine and gestures in a foreign market turn out smaller than you had expected.  Saute an onion before you add the tuna;  or some mushrooms; or both.  If you add veg in this way, you will probably need more cream.

And now you have a dish fit for a dinner party!

Happy quick and easy cooking and – bon appétit!

Anna