Possibly My Favourite Meal, Ever…
There are 2 elements to this recipe; the health benefits and just outright deliciousness. Let’s start with the first.
Boiling food in water is about as primal as it comes for cooking. Good stock is at the heart of all traditional cuisines, from France to Japan and South America to Russia. It’s an essential flavour element but it is also incredibly good for you.
Stock contains many minerals in a very absorbable form for your body as well as a different set of amino acids that often aren’t eaten in modern-day diets like proline and glycine. There is much to be said about this topic of stocks and broths so instead, I’ll just link to an article by the Weston A Price foundation if you’re interested.
Secondly the taste factor, it’s just delicious. You really just need to try it for yourself! This recipe is from episode 3 of my Day of Eating video series.
Servings: 4-6
Prep Time: 10 Minutes
Cook Time: 60 Minutes
Bulk Ingredients:
- 1 free range whole chicken
- 1 onion
- 1-2 leeks
- 1-4 chilli peppers
- 5-10cm of ginger
- 5-6 cloves of garlic
- 2 stalks of lemongrass
- 1 lime
Spices:
- 20 black peppercorns
- 2 tbsp soy sauce
- 2 tbsp fish sauce
Method:
Place the chicken into a large saucepan and prepare the vegetables, herbs and spices.
Add all the ingredients including vegetables, herbs and spices into the pan with the chicken.
I didn’t have access to fresh lemongrass stalks so used a paste instead. Once all the ingredients are in add the water.
Fill the saucepan up to 3cm below the edge and cover. Bring the contents to a boil then reduce to a simmer.
After 60 minutes, remove the saucepan from heat, remove the chicken and place it in a dish to portion and divide.
The chicken can be portioned into sections such as breast, leg and wing or it can all just be shredded from the carcass. You’re now left with shredded or portioned chicken and 1-2L of rich chicken stock.
To Serve:
This recipe can ultimately be enjoyed in many ways however my personal favourite is kind of like a ramen bowl but with rice. For this place cooked rice in a deep bowl and add 200-300ml of strained stock. Then place steamed vegetables of your choice (I used pak choi, mushrooms, spring onions) as well as the shredded chicken on top. Sprinkle over fresh coriander to serve. To add an extra creamy finish to this dish, try drizzling coconut cream over the top.
Storage:
Both the stock and shredded chicken can be stored for 2-3 days in a refrigerator and up to 3 months in a freezer.
Would be amazing if you could do nutritional information breakdown of just the standard recipes. I’m really struggling to find the information on a whole poached chicken. Looks amazing though and will definitely be trying it out! Thanks tom
As much as I would like too it’s a tough one to quantify. When separating out the end result you essentially have chicken stock and shredded chicken which should be relatively straightforward to count calories for.
Where did the vegetables from the pot go?
Strained them out for a clear broth but you can keep them in.
Great recipe here, Tom. Tried it out on Monday and let the broth simmer with the chicken bones and skin for a few more hours after shredding the breast meat. Lookin’ forward to see what you post next.
Awesome, great to hear. That’s what I usually do too just to boost the stock. Stay tuned!
made it yesterday – enough leftovers for a almost a weekk^^
great recipe, thanks:)
weirdly you are getting me into cooking:D
Amazing, that’s why this recipe is so good! It’s a life long skill 🙂
I tried it today and it tasted very good. Thank you for the recipe!
Glad you enjoyed Jakob 🙂
Just made this, loved it thank you!
great to hear 🙂
Wat did you do with the Lime?
Add it with everything else to the chicken pot when cooking and you can also add a squeeze on top before serving 🙂
Loved it gonna give it a try!
Do you add just the lime juice, or do you add the whole lime?
Legit this was delicious— I added some soy sauce and sriracha to the broth to give it a pho-like taste, amazing! Cilantro as a garnish!
Not sure if this is something you have tried, but i’d really recommend adding a few more pho spices in there if you can get your hands on them – star anise, clove and cinnamon among some others if you get get your hands on them
https://runawayrice.com/cooking-basics/essential-pho-spices-guide/
some good tips here – really adds great depth