PW’s Crispy Yogurt Chicken
I had some chicken in the freezer that needed to get used up. I’m submitting this for Deep Freeze II. It’s a great blogging event that encourages everyone to look into your freezer and make a meal out of what you find. Most of the ingredients for this meal came from my freezer. I keep garlic, chopped basil and chopped cilantro in the freezer. These are all in the form of store-bought ice-cube-like trays that I found at Trader Joes. They’re a life saver in a pinch and taste just like the real thing. The garlic is so much more fragrant than the jarred stuff (Hubby refuses to use the jarred garlic).
When I mixed up the yogurt mixture it smelled so good I wanted to eat a big dollop on a cracker. I bumped up the garlic as usual. The leftover yogurt would have been perfect for dipping our black-bean sweet-potato fritters into. Unfortunatly, I forgot to set some aside before I started dredging the chicken in the yogurt. Grr. I was so mad!
The chicken I had was boneless skinless breasts. So I cut them into cutlet sizes and went from there. These didn’t turn out that crispy (especially compared to what PW got). I guess you need the skin for that? I’ll definitely make these again with some skin-on chicken. Please excuse the quality of the photo. This was a late dinner for us and all the natural light was gone…
Crispy Yogurt Chicken – from the Pioneer Woman
Chicken legs
2 cups Plain, unflavored yogurt
2-3 garlic cloves
parsley – I used cilantro
juice of 1 lemon
salt
butter
~2 cups Panko bread crumbs
(I rewrote the instructions here, see the PW site for original instructions)
Pour 2 cups yogurt into a bowl. Add the minced garlic and parsley. Mix well. Add the lemon juice and mix to combine.
Rinse and pat the chicken dry. Sprinkle with kosher salt.
In another bowl, place the bread crumbs. Stir in some salt.
Butter a baking dish. With a pair of tongs place the chicken into the yogurt one piece at a time. Turn over to coat thoroughly. Then roll the chicken in the bread crumbs. Cover with crumbs and place in baking dish.
Finally, place a slice of butter over the large part of each chicken piece. Cover with foil and bake at 350 for ~1 hour. Take the foil off for the last 15 minutes. When chicken is golden, remove and enjoy.
This is brilliant. What an informative post! I need to use my crockpot more often… poor thing is so ignored.
This is brilliant. What an informative post! I need to use my crockpot more often… poor thing is so ignored.
I love my crockpot. Most people think they should only be used in the winter, but I love using mine in the summertime because then your kitchen doesn’t get hot and you still have a hot meal ready when you get home from work!
I have been in love with Stephanie O’Dea’s crockpot blog for a few years now and cook from it all the time. It was so exciting to see that you were linking back to her in this post – it’s like the corners of my culinary universe have collided into deliciousness! I highly recommend Stephanie’s blog and book for those who are looking to utilize the crockpot more often.
I’ve always wanted to make a chicken stock like this. (I thought that chicken broth involved the chicken meat while the stock involves the carcass. I could be wrong since I just started cooking over a year ago.) Anyway, thanks for sharing this recipe!
I’m excited to try this recipe. I love homemade soup and love your idea omn how to freeze it!!