Arroz con Pollo, aka Chicken and Yellow Rice, is a standard of Tampa cuisine. It's probably the most often ordered of the many dishes in the Spanish restaurants of Ybor City and it was a popular favorite in my home when I was growing up.
My mother was an excellent cook (for the Fifties, anyway -- there were a fair amount of Jello salads and Cream of Mushroom soup made its stealthy way into more than one casserole,) but she didn't cook Arroz con Pollo. My father would stop by one of the Spanish restaurants on his way home from work and arrive with a container of the wonderful stuff.
Alas, no such convenience here. But I have a cookbook and here's my best shot at duplicating Tampa soul food.
(Claui took the pictures with her phone -- amazing quality, I think!)
Arroz con Pollo (6 servings)
( adapted from the
Las Novedades recipe as found in Clarita’s
Cocina)
1 chicken (cut into pieces – breasts, legs, thighs, wings,
backs)
½ cup olive oil
1 onion, chopped
1 green pepper, chopped
1 large ripe tomato, chopped (or substitute about a cup of
canned tomatoes or chunky salsa)
3 garlic cloves, minced
1 TB. Lemon juice
1 bay leaf
1 TB salt
Hot sauce to taste
2-3 packets Goya Sazon
1 cup hot chicken broth
¼ cup dry white wine
Parsley
2 cups long grain or basmati rice
2 ¼ cups chicken broth
Green peas and pimento strips for garnish
More dry white wine
Sauté chicken in olive oil in a skillet till just golden.
Remove to covered casserole (that can be used on the stovetop as well as in the
oven.) To the oil in the skillet add the onion and green pepper. Sauté till
translucent. Add tomato, garlic, lemon juice, bay leaf, salt and hot sauce and
cook till mushy.
Dissolve Sazon in I c. hot chicken broth and combine with ¼
cup wine. Pour into skillet with mushy mixture, add some parsley, and stir
well. Pour this mixture over the chicken in the casserole, cover and cook on
medium heat till chicken is tender (about 15 minutes.)
Add rice to chicken and stir to distribute thoroughly. Add 2
1/4 cups chicken broth, stir once, bring to a boil, cover and put in preheated
325 oven for 20 minutes. Do not overcook.
Remove from oven. Garnish with peas, pimento strips, and
sprigs of parsley. Sprinkle with dry white wine and let stand 15 minutes before
serving.
10 comments:
Looks and sounds good!
Looks delicious as well as attractive Vicki and your table is so pretty too.
Sam
How lovely. Maybe a typing mishap...but the list of ingredients didn't seem to say peas anywhere, and the pic sure shows the peas! I'm sure you all enjoyed them anyway!
Look at the very end of the list, Barb.
Vicki, the photographs are terrific and that recipe looks rather delicious. I am wondering how many of your home dogs gathered around that pretty table hoping for a treat?
xo
What is Sazon ? Is that what gives the dish a yellow cast? Oh and I would be there right with the house dogs hoping for a treat.
Nice variation on one of our favorite dishes. I'll give this recipe a try for sure.
Jim, you would ask. It's a popular seasoning mixed used in Latin-American cooking. I've been using it for years, But I went to the internet to answer more thoroughly and find it contains red and yellow dyes and MSG -- which some folks consider no-no's. It also contains salt, garlic, turmeric, cumin, and saffron. The internet offers ways to make a homemade seasoning mix equivalent without the bad stuff. So I guess I'll try that. Ignorance WAS bliss...
http://www.foodfacts.com/ci/nutritionfacts/Mixed-Seasonings/Goya-Sazon-Con-Azafran-Seasoning-/11141
thanks for sharing this. ill try it.
JJRod'z
This sounds delicious - not a dish I had ever heard of before. I believe I'll be concocting my own Sazon. MSG is a definite no no for me! Thanks for something new to try. Oh, and I love your table setting.
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