
INFUSED WITH FLAVOR. Boneless chicken is seen poaching in a broth in
Amagansett, New York. Home cooks can poach boneless, skinless chicken
breasts to make them juicy, flavorful, plump, and tender. (Elizabeth Karmel
via AP)
From The Asian Reporter, V30, #05 (April 6, 2020), page 13.
Poach boneless chicken breasts for flavor, tenderness
By Elizabeth Karmel
The Associated Press
This time of year, boneless, skinless chicken breasts are my go-to
protein. You can add them to a grain bowl, a green salad, or Caesar, or
shred them to make chicken salad, soup, casseroles, one-pot meals, etc.
But so often they are dried out and tasteless. You know what I mean: that
flat, rigid, sliced white meat that comes on top of a salad or pasta, or is
made into a sandwich. But one little trick will change all that. You can
poach your boneless, skinless chicken breasts and they will be juicy,
flavorful, plump, and tender.
If you can boil water, you can poach chicken breasts.
Choose boneless, skinless chicken breasts that aren’t too large; they
shouldn’t look like turkey breasts. If they’re too large, they’re often
tough before you start cooking them.
When I am ready to poach, I fill a heavy-duty 4- or 5-quart pot with a
mixture of 6 to 7 cups of water and chicken broth, add a cup of white wine,
some herbs, carrots, onions, celery, etc., just as if I were making a stock.
Next, I add the raw chicken breasts — four or five maximum. I bring it all
to a rolling boil and let it boil for about one minute. Then I turn the heat
off, put a lid on the pot and let it sit for an hour. The chicken breasts
absorb the flavors of the stock as they sit and cook, and become plump and
tender. They are very easy to shred with your fingers at this point.
Wait a full hour and the poached chicken breasts are done and ready for
your recipe or your meal. If you are poaching chicken to make chicken salad,
I love that the chicken can be either cubed or shredded. Some people prefer
a shredded chicken salad and do this in the food processor. The poached
chicken is so tender that you don’t need to do anything except cut it into
chunks and shred with a fork.
I add mayonnaise, celery, tarragon, white pepper, and a pinch of
dehydrated garlic to mine for a classic chicken salad.
For a change of pace, add a touch of curry powder to the mayo and add
raisins, sliced red grapes, and celery. It’s time to start enjoying chicken
again!
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