My version is with a Filipino twist. Instead of using fajita seasoning, I just used soy sauce and a little vinegar, and of course salt and pepper! Salty with a little acidity. We love to drizzle it with a guacamole mild spicy sauce. Yum! Breakfast is ready.
A blog about "Chibugan"(eating) and "Chikahan" (talks on just about everything). Good food, recipes, reviews, talks about daily happenings will be discussed here.
Showing posts with label chicken. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chicken. Show all posts
Friday, July 27, 2018
Breakfast Idea: Leftover Chicken Fajitas with Pita Bread
Do you want an easy breakfast idea? If you have some leftover meat, like leftover roasted chicken, pork, or beef, make it into fajitas for breakfast. Saute it with sweet onions and sweet bell peppers then season it, you will have a fast and easy breakfast! Lay it in between folds of warm tortilla or in my case I used toasted pita bread.
Friday, October 14, 2011
Fried Chicken Recipe
Who doesn't like to eat a crunchy, juicy, delectible chicken? When I was in the Philippines, kids there are telling their parents to go to the famous fast food chain, Jollibee. The famous jingle, "Isa pa, isa pang chicken joy"(one more, one more chicken joy) is stuck in my memory even until now. Chicken joy is one of the variety of menus from Jollibee which is a piece of crunchy and juicy fried chicken with rice. I for one is a fan of that meal. One of my favorite chicken recipe will be fried chicken. Here in the US if I crave for fried chicken we get it from KFC or Church's Chicken because we don't have Jollibee here unlike in California. But it's a bit pricy if you keep buying it, so I make it a point to cook it at home when I don't get lazy,lol.
Anyway, here's a simple recipe for fried chicken. The secret to this is to heat the oil at the right temperature. Try putting a wooden spoon or laddle into the heated oil and if bubbles form at the wooden spoon then the oil is perfect for frying already. Another way is to make your hand wet a little and sprinkle a little water to the heated oil and if it makes a bubble or oil starts bubbling then it's ready to fry (please don't put a lot of water or the oil will boil up and you will get burn, be careful).
You will need a deeper pan for deep frying, because when you cook chicken dredged in flour the oil tends to boil.
Ingredients:
Cut-up pieces of chicken
Flour
Eggs
Salt
Pepper
Oil for frying
Procedure:
Preheat your oil in a deep frying pan.
Prepare the flour and egg mixture in separate containers. In one bowl, place the flour and season it with salt and pepper. In another bowl beat some eggs (estimate according to how many pieces of chicken you have) and season it with a little salt.
Once you've tested the oil's temperature and it is ready, start frying.
First dredge the chicken piece on the egg mixture, making sure the whole piece is coated.
Then, after dredging it in the egg mixture, dip it in the flour mixture and coat it very well. If you like your chicken to be crunchier do the dipping in the egg and flour mixture twice.
Once your done dredging the chicken put it in the fryer. Fry it well until golden brown.
Tip: Chicken pieces without bones in it tends to cook fast like the chicken breast so don't overcook it. The ones with bones like the chicken legs takes a little while.
HAPPY EATING! Wash those hands and dig in. Afterall this is a finger food:-)
Please check my other recipes. Post your comments and suggestions on the comment box,too:-)

Anyway, here's a simple recipe for fried chicken. The secret to this is to heat the oil at the right temperature. Try putting a wooden spoon or laddle into the heated oil and if bubbles form at the wooden spoon then the oil is perfect for frying already. Another way is to make your hand wet a little and sprinkle a little water to the heated oil and if it makes a bubble or oil starts bubbling then it's ready to fry (please don't put a lot of water or the oil will boil up and you will get burn, be careful).
You will need a deeper pan for deep frying, because when you cook chicken dredged in flour the oil tends to boil.
Ingredients:
Cut-up pieces of chicken
Flour
Eggs
Salt
Pepper
Oil for frying
Procedure:
Preheat your oil in a deep frying pan.
Prepare the flour and egg mixture in separate containers. In one bowl, place the flour and season it with salt and pepper. In another bowl beat some eggs (estimate according to how many pieces of chicken you have) and season it with a little salt.
Once you've tested the oil's temperature and it is ready, start frying.
First dredge the chicken piece on the egg mixture, making sure the whole piece is coated.
Then, after dredging it in the egg mixture, dip it in the flour mixture and coat it very well. If you like your chicken to be crunchier do the dipping in the egg and flour mixture twice.
Once your done dredging the chicken put it in the fryer. Fry it well until golden brown.
Tip: Chicken pieces without bones in it tends to cook fast like the chicken breast so don't overcook it. The ones with bones like the chicken legs takes a little while.
HAPPY EATING! Wash those hands and dig in. Afterall this is a finger food:-)
Please check my other recipes. Post your comments and suggestions on the comment box,too:-)
Monday, May 2, 2011
Sotanghon Soup Recipe
The other day, I had my mother in-law and my husband's grandparents over for dinner. I made some sotanghon soup and some lumpia and Biko for dessert. I wanted them to have a taste of some Filipino foods. The most popular is our egg roll or lumpia so I decided to make some. At first I wanted to make pansit bihon but then I thought, lumpia and bihon are both dry. So I looked around in my pantry and I found some bean thread noodles, so I decided to make Sotanghon soup.
I remember my mom's sotanghon soup in the Philippines but I haven't tried making it yet. So I'm hoping against hope that I will make the soup good since it will be my first time to make it. I've seen my Mom do it before and I can still remember the taste of it. I know it's just chicken soup and then added with some sotanghon or bean thread noodles.
The secret of this recipe, that makes it smell and taste good is the ginger and the tanglad or lemon grass stalk. The lemon grass gives that subtle lemony taste and also the aroma. In the Philippines, we usually use this when we cook soups like chicken, beef soup or nilagang baka, in curry chicken, or when cooking chicken with coconut milk. It just taste different when cooking these dishes without the lemongrass. With it, it makes the dish more aromatic.
Anyway, here in the US, you can buy this at Asian stores. They are usually found at the fresh produce section. Just be sure to buy fresh ones, not old ones. When I say fresh, the stalk should be firm, and not pliable when you bend it. the bottom part should be off white in color or light yellow and the top part green. Don't buy those withered ones already or turning brown as these doesn't give off any aroma anymore. You can also order it on Amazon.com. When you don't use it, you can just freeze it, to prolong the freshness. Just wrap it in a plastic cover or aluminum foil. Then take it out before cooking.
Anyway, going back to the dinner, I was so glad they liked the Sotanghon Soup and also the lumpia and biko. Since they liked it, I am sharing this recipe with you. My mother in-law wants it, too and also my husband's grandma, so what better way than to write it here in my foodblog and share it with everybody in just one click rather than writing it one by one in an email, LOL!
SOTANGHON SOUP
Ingredients:
for the broth:
4 pcs. Chicken breasts, with skin and bones on
10 cups water
1 medium onion, chopped
1 stalk of lemon grass, pounded on the base
A small slice of ginger, pounded
2-3 tbsps. Chicken bouillon
Additional ingredients:
2 tbsps. Cooking oil
Vermicelli bean thread noodles
1 small onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
One whole carrot, julienned
2 tbsps. Soy sauce
Salt and pepper to taste
Green onions, chopped (for garnish)
PROCEDURE:
Make the chicken broth.
-Boil the 10 cups of water.
-Then put the onions, ginger, and the lemon grass. Simmer for 2 minutes.
-Next, add the chicken breast.
-Season with the chicken bouillon, a little salt and pepper.
-Simmer and cooked until the chiken gets tender or the meat separates from the bones. At least an hour.,
-Once the chicekn is cooked, take out the meat and put it on a plate to cool down a little. When the meat is cool, take out the skin and the bones. And then cut the chicken meat into strips.
-Reserve the broth, it will be used in making the soup. set aside the chicken meat, too.
Cooking the Sotanghon Soup:
-Heat oil in a deep cooking pot.
-Put the garlic and saute it until it becomes golden brown, add the onions and the carrots and saute.
-Then add the chicken strips. Mix well with the veggies.
-Season it with the soy sauce. Mix well and then simmer for a minute.
-Add all the chicken broth that you made.
-Let it boil. Season with salt and pepper if needed.
-Add the dry sotanghon or bean thread noodles. Let the broth soak it in. Cook for about 3 minutes or until the noodle is cooked.
-Serve right away because if it takes long for you to serve it, the noodle will soak up all the broth. Garnish with chopped fresh green onions on top.
TIP:
You can put the noodles when it's almost serving time, so it wouldn't soak up all the broth. You can make the broth ahead and then just heat it up again when it's almost eating time, and then you can add the noodles. The noodles will just cook right away, anyway. Have fun eating! This soupmis especially good during colder months:-)
If you have questions or suggestions, please write it in the comment area, thanks!:-)
I remember my mom's sotanghon soup in the Philippines but I haven't tried making it yet. So I'm hoping against hope that I will make the soup good since it will be my first time to make it. I've seen my Mom do it before and I can still remember the taste of it. I know it's just chicken soup and then added with some sotanghon or bean thread noodles.
The secret of this recipe, that makes it smell and taste good is the ginger and the tanglad or lemon grass stalk. The lemon grass gives that subtle lemony taste and also the aroma. In the Philippines, we usually use this when we cook soups like chicken, beef soup or nilagang baka, in curry chicken, or when cooking chicken with coconut milk. It just taste different when cooking these dishes without the lemongrass. With it, it makes the dish more aromatic.
Anyway, here in the US, you can buy this at Asian stores. They are usually found at the fresh produce section. Just be sure to buy fresh ones, not old ones. When I say fresh, the stalk should be firm, and not pliable when you bend it. the bottom part should be off white in color or light yellow and the top part green. Don't buy those withered ones already or turning brown as these doesn't give off any aroma anymore. You can also order it on Amazon.com. When you don't use it, you can just freeze it, to prolong the freshness. Just wrap it in a plastic cover or aluminum foil. Then take it out before cooking.
Anyway, going back to the dinner, I was so glad they liked the Sotanghon Soup and also the lumpia and biko. Since they liked it, I am sharing this recipe with you. My mother in-law wants it, too and also my husband's grandma, so what better way than to write it here in my foodblog and share it with everybody in just one click rather than writing it one by one in an email, LOL!
SOTANGHON SOUP
Ingredients:
for the broth:
4 pcs. Chicken breasts, with skin and bones on
10 cups water
1 medium onion, chopped
1 stalk of lemon grass, pounded on the base
A small slice of ginger, pounded
2-3 tbsps. Chicken bouillon
Additional ingredients:
2 tbsps. Cooking oil
Vermicelli bean thread noodles
1 small onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
One whole carrot, julienned
2 tbsps. Soy sauce
Salt and pepper to taste
Green onions, chopped (for garnish)
PROCEDURE:
Make the chicken broth.
-Boil the 10 cups of water.
-Then put the onions, ginger, and the lemon grass. Simmer for 2 minutes.
-Next, add the chicken breast.
-Season with the chicken bouillon, a little salt and pepper.
-Simmer and cooked until the chiken gets tender or the meat separates from the bones. At least an hour.,
-Once the chicekn is cooked, take out the meat and put it on a plate to cool down a little. When the meat is cool, take out the skin and the bones. And then cut the chicken meat into strips.
-Reserve the broth, it will be used in making the soup. set aside the chicken meat, too.
Cooking the Sotanghon Soup:
-Heat oil in a deep cooking pot.
-Put the garlic and saute it until it becomes golden brown, add the onions and the carrots and saute.
-Then add the chicken strips. Mix well with the veggies.
-Season it with the soy sauce. Mix well and then simmer for a minute.
-Add all the chicken broth that you made.
-Let it boil. Season with salt and pepper if needed.
-Add the dry sotanghon or bean thread noodles. Let the broth soak it in. Cook for about 3 minutes or until the noodle is cooked.
-Serve right away because if it takes long for you to serve it, the noodle will soak up all the broth. Garnish with chopped fresh green onions on top.
TIP:
You can put the noodles when it's almost serving time, so it wouldn't soak up all the broth. You can make the broth ahead and then just heat it up again when it's almost eating time, and then you can add the noodles. The noodles will just cook right away, anyway. Have fun eating! This soupmis especially good during colder months:-)
If you have questions or suggestions, please write it in the comment area, thanks!:-)
Sunday, April 10, 2011
CHICKEN CURRY
Philippines has some Indian cuisine influence, this is visible in some of the Filipino dishes which include a curry seasoning. Curry is sometimes used in dishes with chicken, beef, pork and vegetables cooked like a stew. Here is a chicken recipe with curry seasoning and added with coconut milk to make it creamy.
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