Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Indonesian Peruvian Fusion

Any recipe, including the ones I post here, should be used as a guide.  A recipe is not a holy document that you must follow religiously.  It is a guide and then you can make any changes, either because of personal preferences or what you have on hand.  Learning how to cook is not following a recipe, but learning how to adapt a recipe.


In the mood for Indonesian-style stew chicken, but there was no Sambal Olek (chili paste) on hand.  What to do?  I had a bunch of ingredients left over from a Peruvian themed dinner.  Peru is one of the spiciest of Latin American cuisines, using various chili pastes, so this was a good alternative.  Using leftover Peruvian ingredients with Indonesian Kecap Manis (sweet soy sauce), I came up with this delicious stew chicken recipe.


Indonesian-Peruvian Stew Chicken


Ingredients




3 tablespoons oil
1 large shallot, chopped
3 cloves garlic, chopped
2 Chinese dried sausage, sliced
4 chicken thighs, skin removed
2 cups grane corn
3/4 cup Kecap Manis
2 cups water
2 tablespoons Rocota pepper paste
2 tablespoons fried shallots (available at Asian markets)
salt, to taste
Method:
1 - Remove the skin from the chicken but leave the little bit of fat that is usually on the edges.  Fat is flavor.  Season the chicken with a little salt
2 - In a large pot, heat the oil, add the shallot, garlic and Chinese sausage.  Saute for a few minutes until the onions are translucent.
3 - Add the chicken and brown on both sides, approximately 4-5 minutes on each side.
4 - Add the Kecap Manis, pepper paste, water and corn.  Bring to a boil.  Reduce to a simmer.  Cook for about 30 minutes, until chicken is cooked thoroughly.
5 - Serve with white rice and garnish with fried shallots.
  
Chef Mireille
facebook.com/GlobalTastes
twitter.com/GlobalTastes


1 comment:

  1. Hmm... yum -_- I got to have something, you make me hungry...

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for your feedback. All comments are appreciated. It's nice to know people out there are reading this blog! Although stats tell me they are...communication is better!
Chef Mireille

Print Friendly

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails