Dad’s Chinese Chicken and Chestnuts

By Anna, 13 September, 2009 11:32 am

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Chinese chicken and chestnuts is one of our favourites of my Dad’s dishes. It’s sweet, but savoury, fragrant with ginger and sherry but dark with soy, unctuous and delicious. I am talking about the meal, you understand – not my Dad, because frankly, that would be a bizarre description of someone.

He was born in Shanghai and is part Chinese, so has a wide range of dishes in his repertoire – do feel free to request recipes for any of your favourites. If he has a recipe for it, he will have to cook it for us in order that I can blog it. This means we will get to eat it, so please… request away!

As he was the star chef at Chez Jones last Sunday, I am immortalising him and his unctuous chicken on this blog. So here is the Fred Jones guide to this beautiful Chinese dish.

First the chicken. You need 11 thighs (I know, it does seem specific doesn’t it?). Remove the skin and cut the meat off the bones. Keep the skin and bones because you’ll make stock with them. Halve the meat so that you have 22 pieces.

Preparing the marinade, this is a large amount of meat to marinade (22 pieces, in fact), so get out 2 9×13″ glass dishes, or one enormous one. You want it to sit in one layer.

Combine the 5 tbsp light and 5 tbsp dark soy, the 5 slices (coin thickness) ginger and 3 of the whole spring onions and split them between the two dishes. Yes, you will have 1 spring onion in one dish and 2 in the other one. Don’t worry, it’s fine. Dad said it’s fine. I did ask.
Add the chicken to the marinade and leave for 1.5 hours – turning occasionally.

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Meanwhile, make the stock. It’s easy!
Put the chicken skin and bones in a saucepan. Break the remaining spring onion up and add that.
Add 500ml (2 cups) water and bring to the boil. Simmer for 30 mins.
Remove the skin, bones and spring onion. (Give the skin to the local fox – this, I assume, is optional)
Strain the stock into a jug and leave to cool.
Once cooled, skim the floating fat off with a spoon.

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Heat about 3 inches of oil in a wok, or whatever you use to deep-fry.
Deep fry the chicken in batches just for a few minutes to colour the outside.

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Put the cooked chicken in a big pan/pot as you’ve fried it off.

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Add the cream Sherry ( I think he was going for wistful, yet pious in this pic – can’t be sure)

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(Dad told me it was 2 tbsp, but watching his generous over-spilling, it was most definitely 3 tbsp – look at that smirk)

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also add the 3 tbsp  sugar, then the remaining marinade, including the spring onions and ginger.

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Add the stock – use it to swill out the marinading dishes so that no flavour is left behind.

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Cover and bring to the boil then simmer for 20 mins.

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Now add 500g defrosted Chestnuts.

Dad uses these:

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So, clatter those in and remove the collapsed spring onions and slices of ginger

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Cover and simmer again for another 20 minutes. Remove the lid for the last 10 mins so that it can begin to reduce a little.
Taste it to check that the soy and sugar balance is good.

In a small dish, mix the cornflour and water together.
Add to the pot and stir well.

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When thickened, it is ready to serve.

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Serve with boiled rice and a green veg or noodles. Hey, serve it on a piece of bread if you must – just make it!

Incidently, that is an oxygen supply on Dad’s face and yes, we do take adequate precautions around the kitchen, including complete avoidance of activities that involve dangling over a gas hob. He has not yet exploded, thank goodness. Can you imagine the mess?

Just wanted to put that out there in case anyone from any kind of health and/or safety field was looking at this and panicking.

Fred’s Chicken and Chestnuts

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11 Chicken thighs, skinned, boned and halved (keep the skin and bones to make stock)

marinade:
5 tbsp light soy sauce
5 tbsp  dark soy sauce
5 slices ginger (coin thickness)
4 spring onions (scallions), trimmed but left whole

add:
3 tbsp cream Sherry
3 tbsp sugar

500g frozen sweet chestnuts, defrosted

at the end:
3 tsp cornflour
3 tsp cold water

This is a large amount of meat to marinade (22 pieces, in fact), so get out 2 9×13″ glass dishes, or one enormous one. You want it to sit in one layer.

Combine the light and dark soy, the ginger and 3 of the spring onions and split between the two dishes. Yes, you will have 1 spring onion in one dish and 2 in the other one. Don’t worry, it’s fine.
Add the chicken to the marinade and leave for 1.5 hours – turning occasionally.

Meanwhile, make the stock. It’s easy!
Put the chicken skin and bones in a saucepan. Break the remaining spring onion up and add that.
Add 500ml (2 cups) water and bring to the boil. Simmer for 30 mins.
Remove the skin, bones and spring onion.
Strain the stock into a jug and leave to cool.
Once cooled, skim the floating fat off with a spoon.

Heat about 3 inches of oil in a wok, or whatever you use to deep-fry.
Deep fry the chicken in batches just for a few minutes to colour the outside. Put the cooked chicken in a big pan/pot as you’ve fried it off.
Add the cream Sherry and sugar then the remaining marinade, including the spring onions and ginger.
Add the stock – use it to swill out the marinading dishes so that no flavour is left behind.

Cover and bring to the boil then simmer for 20 mins.

Remove the now floppy spring onion and slices of ginger; add the Chestnuts.
Cover and simmer again for another 20 minutes. Remove the lid for the last 10 mins so that it can begin to reduce a little.
Taste it to check that the soy and sugar balance is good.

In a small dish, mix the cornflour and water together.
Add to the pot and stir well. When thickened, it is ready to serve.

Serve with boiled rice and a green veg.

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6 Responses to “Dad’s Chinese Chicken and Chestnuts”

  1. Kirsten says:

    This looks delicious!

  2. Anna says:

    It really is Kirsten, and very child friendly too because it’s got that natural sweetness going on. It’s a real comfort food for me :)

  3. Emily says:

    This is right up our alley. Mike and I will be making this soon!

  4. Anna says:

    Oooh! Dad will be pleased to hear this! xx

  5. TIM of CAMBRIDGE says:

    What a clever and cunning daughter, getting poor old Fred to leave the comfort of the armchair to slave over a hot cooker to produce the family supper. Maybe I’ll order that next time we’re down south, love to the young man, or whatever his stage name is now ???

  6. Anna says:

    Well, I’ll be. ‘Tis Uncle Tim! It was cunning wasn’t it? I’ll lodge the order on your behalf, but in order to please the small acTOR, we may have to have sweet and sour pork too. Such a shame!

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