A real nice recipe that has Fall written all over it. I was inspired by a blogger I follow but was a bit disappointed when I made it exactly as published. So I tweaked things around and also incorporated a step in which the chicken is cooked under pressure, giving the wonderful melt-in-your-mouth texture I love. I will give you an alternative to skip the pressure cooking.
CHICKEN THIGHS WITH APPLES AND SAGE
(from The Bewitching Kitchen)
for the chicken:
1 Tbsp olive oil
6 boneless skinless chicken thighs
3/4 tsp each salt and black pepper, or to taste
3/4 tsp paprika
for the apples:
2 Tbsp olive oil
2 medium gala apples, cored and sliced thin
2 large stalks celery, sliced 1/4 inch thin
1 shallot, minced
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
1 tsp each minced fresh thyme, rosemary and sage (or 1/2 tsp each dried)
for the sauce:
1 cup apple juice
1 Tbsp honey
1 Tbsp apple cider vinegar
1 tsp Dijon mustard
1 1/2 tsp cornstarch dissolved in 1 tablespoon cold water, reserved
In liquid measuring cup whisk together the apple juice, honey, apple cider vinegar, and dijon mustard. If cooking chicken in a pressure cooker, separate that amount in two parts (no need to be exact, eye balling is fine).
Heat a skillet over medium high heat, or if using a pressure cooker, do this step right in the pan. Sprinkle chicken on both sides evenly with paprika, salt and pepper. Drizzle olive oil into skillet or pressure cooker, when very hot add the chicken and brown on both sides. If using a pressure cooker, add half of the cooking liquid, bring to a gentle boil, close the pan and cook under pressure for 12 minutes. Release pressure under running water, reserve the meat. If the liquid does not reach halfway up the pieces of chicken, complete that volume with water.
If cooking the chicken on a skillet, remove the pieces to a platter, add more oil to the pan, and sautee the celery, shallots and pieces of apple, seasoning with cinnamon and nutmeg. If cooking the chicken under pressure, sauté the apples and veggies using a clean skillet the same way described above. When the apples are soft, add the apple juice mixture, season with a little more salt and pepper, if so desired. Return the chicken to the pan. If the chicken was cooked in the pressure cooker, simply warm everything together for a couple of minutes, then add the cornstarch slurry and the fresh sage. Serve immediately. If the chicken was not prepared under pressure, simmer with the pan covered until fully tender, probably 15 minutes. Add the sage and the cornstarch slurry right before serving.
ENJOY!
to print the recipe, click here
Comments: We really loved this preparation for chicken, in fact I made it twice in the same week per husband’s request! I am totally comfortable with the pressure cooker, so for me it’s really not a big deal to use it, but I realize it can be intimidating. For this reason I included the instructions to cook without it. But there is something about the texture that I absolutely love. It gets tender and never rubbery. I like to start the pressure cooking step right away, because the veggies and apples are ready so quickly. Once the chicken has been cooking for 5 minutes I start sautéing the celery, shallots and apples, and everything comes to the finish line harmoniously. A little white rice, and steamed broccoli, nothing else needed…
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Sally – there are so many chicken recipes ‘out there’ one doesn’t think there can be anything different, but again (why am I not surprised ?) you seem to have found new tastes! I do not think I have many recipes with apples/celery or apple juice/honey/mustard in my repertoire . . . looks lovely on the plate!
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it is delicious! Phil was over the moon with this one
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Hi Sally…I have an Instant Pot that mainly gets used for yogurt making and cooking rice 😂I would like to try it with this chicken recipe…I am confused by your statement “release pressure under running water”🤔 Can you please elaborate? Can’t wait to try this with apple season just gearing up here 😍
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for instant pot, do the rapid release…for pressure cookers that is done the old fashioned way, cold water running over the still closed pan, it equalizes the pressure fast and you open the pan
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Thanks so much! Obviously I never owned a pressure cooker 😆
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Thanks so much Sally! Obviously I’ve never owned an older pressure cooker 😆
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no worries, I should have made it more clear because in fact, pressure cooker owners are a minority now, most people favor the Instant Pot…. so thanks for posing the question – I am a little busy right now but will edit the post later today to make it clear
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no worries, I should have made it more clear because in fact, pressure cooker owners are a minority now, most people favor the Instant Pot…. so thanks for posing the question – I am a little busy right now but will edit the post later today to make it clear
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