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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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How Do You Best Like Chicken Prepared?
Recently we found it necessary to cook up some chicken on short notice,
and there happened to be a copy of Mark Bittman's "How To Cook Everything" on hand. He recommended baking it quickly (20 minutes at 500F) with a minimal amount of tomato/broth/herbs around it. Turned out excellent. (These re bone-in skinless breasts, which was all the local butcher had.) Steve |
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How Do You Best Like Chicken Prepared?
Sqwertz > wrote:
>On Wed, 27 Jun 2012 17:08:51 +0000 (UTC), Steve Pope wrote: >> (These re bone-in skinless breasts, which was all the local butcher had.) >How hard is it for a butcher to stock skin-on chicken breasts (or >thighs) and then just rip off the skin if/when a customer insists on >skinless? There is only one small butcher in Saluda, North Carolina and this is what he had. >(Bone-in skinless breasts seems kinda silly anyway - I haven't seen >them for practically ever) May be a regional sort of thing. Steve |
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How Do You Best Like Chicken Prepared?
Sqwertz > wrote:
>(Bone-in skinless breasts seems kinda silly anyway - I haven't seen >them for practically ever) I noticed that compared to boneless chicken breasts, they do not flop around, curl up, or otherwise change their shape as much while you are cooking them. Maybe there is some sort of advantage to this. Steve |
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How Do You Best Like Chicken Prepared?
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How Do You Best Like Chicken Prepared?
On Thu, 28 Jun 2012 00:39:42 -0500, Needs Glasses >
wrote: > On Wed, 27 Jun 2012 22:22:44 -0700, sf wrote: > > > On Wed, 27 Jun 2012 19:36:41 +0000 (UTC), > > (Steve Pope) wrote: > > > >> Sqwertz > wrote: > >> > >>>(Bone-in skinless breasts seems kinda silly anyway - I haven't seen > >>>them for practically ever) > >> > >> I noticed that compared to boneless chicken breasts, they do not > >> flop around, curl up, or otherwise change their shape as much while > >> you are cooking them. Maybe there is some sort of advantage to this. > >> > > I don't have a problem with skinless, boneless chicken breasts doing > > anything weird either... > > And yet again Barbie the Brain totally misunderstood what she was > reading. > > Bravo! > > What comes around goes around. Hugs and kisses, Barbie! > Yup. Steve Wertz the nym shifter, whatta guy. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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