Category: Chicken

Huli Huli Chicken Wings

Aloha friends and welcome to 2024! Whilst most of us are looking ahead, I am reflecting on the last “20 Years Ago Today” post I wrote. In that post, I said, “couscous is the only food I can think of where the same letters are repeated”. The very next day, I was searching through my file of blog-worthy recipes.  And, found a recipe for Huli Huli Chicken Wings. So, we are taking a little trip back to 1950’s Hawaii for a taste test! Never let it be said that I am not happy to prove myself wrong in the search for delicious food.  

Huli-Huli-Chicken-Wings

If someone else hadn’t already come up with the catchphrase of “finger licking good” I’d be using it right now to describe these wings. The Huli Huli sauce is so good!  It’s sweet and sour and full of umami and sticky and just plain delicious.  I made these a little while ago and as I am writing this now my mouth is watering thinking about them!  Guess what’s going back on the menu for next week! 

Huli Huli Chicken Wings2

Huli Huli Huh?

Ernest Morgado, the founder of the Pacific Poultry Co served his mum’s teriyaki-style chicken to a group of farmers back in 1955.  They loved it and he decided to market it as Huli Huli Chicken.  Huli means “turn” in Hawaiian.  The original way of cooking this was to place the chicken between two racks and to grill it, preferably over charcoal.  It was turned during cooking hence, huli huli! 

Schools and other charities often sold Huli Huli chicken as a fundraising item.  In Australia, outside every Bunnings (large hardware store) we also have fundraising food stalls.  We get the cheapest sausages imaginable, slapped into usually dry and equally cheap white bread, some BBQ’ed onions if you want them, and some sauce.  It is usually revolting but there is something about that BBQ aroma that draws you in, even though you know it you will regret it as soon as you take that first bite.  

I think Australian fundraisers could learn a lot from the Hawaiian way of doing things.  I mean, why have this?

When you could have this?

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Huli Huli Chicken Recipe

My recipe comes directly from the Australian Women’s Weekly website.  You can find it here  but I have noticed that many websites are now blocking links from blogs.  So I have also copied it out below:

Huli Huli Chicken 1

 

Huli Huli Chicken 3

Huli Huli Chicken 4

I can also heartily recommend the pineapple salad that accompanies the Huli Huli chicken wings in the above recipe.  To me, it was the perfect fresh and zesty offset to the sweetness of the chicken.  And that hit of chilli in the salad somehow brought everything together!

Well, if this is the standard of cooking I get when I prove myself wrong, I am willing to be proved wrong again and again! Please let me know if you can think of any others! Otherwise, have a great week!

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Spaghetti Diable

Greetings Friends and welcome to October. I am celebrating the start of the spookiest month of the year with some Spaghetti Diable. The recipe for our Devil’s Spaghetti comes from The Australian Hostess Cookbook. This book, which is fast becoming one of my favourites, also gave us the Ginger Tingle a while back.

Spaghetti Diable1

The Life of The Grazier’s Wife

Both of these come from the menu of the same Australian Hostess in a chapter called A Grazier’s Wife Entertains. For those not familiar with the term grazier it refers to a person who has farms sheep or cattle.  But maybe I’ll let the grazier’s wife tell us a little bit more about her life.

When planning my menu I consider the conditions out here is in the Austalian Bush.  Our nearest town is 56 miles away and the mail lorry, with my ingredients aboard, has to spend a whole night on the dusty dirt road before it finally arrives at our door early the next morning.  Fruit and vegetables travel 300 miles in a goods train before they reach the mail lorry

It astounds me how anyone survived under those conditions let alone was able to be sufficiently organised to throw dinner parties!  And not just any dinner parties either. Here is the grazier’s wife describing the ambiance of her dinner party.

When dinner is ready I light the candles and limit the lights in the dining room to a corner lamp.  The stereo set continues playing soft mood music all evening.  My large dining table will be set with a plain lilac linen tablecloth and moss green linen table napkins.  The main decoration will be a small bowl of lilac sweet peas with deeper mauve candles inserted into the centre of the float bowl.  On each woman’s napkin there will be a freshly picked pink rosebud tied with a narrow lilac velvet bow”

How delightful does all of that sound!!!!  Who doesn’t now want to get an invitation to dinner at the grazier’s wife’s house?

My own table settings for the Spaghetti Diable were not nearly so fancy.

Spaghetti Diable2

 

Spaghetti and Chicken?

As I was making the Spaghetti Diable I realised that I had never eaten chicken and spaghetti together before.  Growing up, we had  Spaghetti Bolognese and Lasagne (both Beef), Carbonara (Bacon), Marinara (Various Seafood), and Canneloni which was spinach and ricotta.  There was some sort of Tuna Pasta Casserole which is best not spoken about but we NEVER had chicken with pasta.  And even as an adult, they are two things I would not even think of combining.  It even felt weird to be making it.  I realise this says more about me than about the combination of chicken and spaghetti which I’m sure is very normal.  

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Is The Devil In The Details? Spaghetti Diable – The Recipe

Is hard to see why this is called Spaghetti Diable.  Diable or Devil in a dish usually indicates the presence of chilli.  And quite a lot of it.  Even allowing for the delicate palates of countrified Australians in 1969, a mere dash of cayenne powder seems a little tame!

Also, I used fresh mushrooms which I sliced and sauteed with the onion and garlic.  I however have the luxury of being able to pop into the local green grocer or supermarket for fresh mushrooms whenever I please without having to wait for them to come over 300 miles on a goods train and then overnight on a mail lorry!

I also added some parsley as a garnish.

Spaghetti Diable 4

 

Tell me, are there food combinations that you think are strange but other people think are normal?  Or combos that you think are normal but other people find weird? 

And have a great week!!!!

August 2003 – Summer

Summer Lovin’ had me a blast!  Hello, retro food lovers!  Today as you may have guessed from the header and my musical intro we are taking a tour back to August 2003 via Australian Table.  The aim is to see if that magazine can provide us with a super summer feast! 

Now I know that some of you might be thinking…what’s hard about that?  Surely all mags, twenty years ago would be showing seasonal recipes..  Well, don’t forget readers that in Australia is it winter!  Now it may surprise some of you but in the south of Australia, where I live it gets cold!  Not Canada cold or Northern European cold, but definitely cold enough for this season to be recognisably winter. The magazine cover promises Shepherd’s Pie, Bangers and Mash, Beef Stroganoff and Roast Chicken.  Will we be able to find some summery food in the midst of this hearty winter fare?

Table 0803

 

First, to put us in the mood let’s see what was on the pop culture in August 2003!  The Da Vinci Code was still topping the book charts, S.W.A.T was killing it at the box office and Breathe by Sean Paul featuring Blu Cantrell was the number 1 song.  

The Menu – August 2003

Summer Menu 1

Chargrilled Prawns with Coriander and Lime

For me, the best summer food is eaten outdoors so these prawns, which would be amazing cooked on the BBQ were my choice of a starter.

Chargrilled Prawns

The marinated prawns were super delicious!  I did not like the dressing and, come summer when I make these on the barbie I will leave the dressing out completely.  Whilst I don’t mind sherry as a drink I felt it gave the dressing on what was a very fresh and lively dish a kind of fusty taste which I found unpleasant.  If you want to try it with the dressing, I would suggest serving it on the side!

Chargrilled Prawns Recipe

Chargrilled Prawns Collage2

Satay Chicken Skewers

Another dish which would be ideal cooked on the BBQ.  I love a chicken satay and this one is super easy because it uses a bought satay sauce!  

Chicken Satay 1

I served this with a cucumber and red onion salad, which is, my Malaysian friends tell me, a traditional accompaniment to Chicken satay.  You could also, of course serve rice or noodles with the chicken satay skewers as well. 

Chicken Satay 2

Perfectly grilled chicken, dipped in a satay sauce with some salad!  Heaven on a stick!

Satay Chicken Recipe

Chicken Satay 1 (1)

Ice Cream with Rocky Road Sauce

I didn’t have time to make this due to holidays, Pieathalon, work, cooking for our Foodies Cookbook club, a date with my mum to see A Haunting In Venice all of which amounts to life in general.  However, it’s a really simple recipe which I am sure tastes absolutely delicious!  Please let me know if you give it a try!

Ice Cream with Rocky Road Sauce Recipe

Watermelon and Vodka Cocktail

This cocktail was pretty much identical to this one that I made back in February.

Watermelon Vodka

My Nigella Moment  – Thai Beef Noodles

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In the context of these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking it in either because I made it and it was really good, or I just didn’t have time to make it but it was one of the most appetising things in the mag!

This time round it was some Thai beef noodles. I’m hoping that sherry will redeem itself in this recipe as it sure didn’t work in the prawns!  These look delicious and fun!

Thai Beef Noodles

 

Australian Table was able to dish up a lovely summery meal despite being an issue from the middle of winter!  The prawns and satay were also nice in winter and were lovely reminders that summer is on it’s way!

 

 

 

Busy Bird Chicken

Memories, Iike the corners of my mind…misty water-coloured memories…Greetings Friends and welcome to a very nostalgic instance of Retro Food for Modern Times. Many of the vintage dishes I make here are not from my own childhood but from old cookbooks I own. This one is different. Apricot or Busy Bird Chicken was something we would eat on the reg when I was growing up.

Busy Bird Chicken

Why Busy Bird Chicken? That’s what the recipe my mum used was called. However, it is almost exactly the same as the recipe I found in The Busy Woman’s Cookbook by The Australian Women’s Weekly (1972). The only difference is that our version had almonds sprinkled over the top. The busy woman of the 1970s had no time for such frivolities. Her Apricot Chicken is unadorned.  I really liked then in this thought, so I would urge you to also include them. 

Busy Bird Chicken 2

The Busy Woman’s Cookbook

We last met the busy woman way back in 2016. Then, as now, we lusted after her floral serving dishes and her perfectly coiffed hair, admired her skill in floristry / fruit wrangling and worried about her proximity to a naked flame whilst wearing a gorgeous but most likely highly flammable 1970s caftan.

The Busy Woman's Cookbook

They say you can’t step in the same river twice and so revisiting this beloved dish from my childhood came with a fair amount of anxiety. What if it wasn’t the charming dish of my memories? It’s very simple – four ingredients (with the almonds). Would the sweet / salty / oniony flavour be as I remembered it? Or would it be sickly sweet and awful?

I served my chicken with Sabrina Ghayour’s Coriander, Garlic and Lime Rice.  I thought the savouriness of this would act as a counter if the Busy Bird Chicken was overly sweet.  Back in the day, we would have had plain boiled rice with it. And to be honest, that would have been fine! 

Busy Bird Chicken 4

I’m happy to say that the Busy Bird Chicken was EXACTLY as I remembered it. It was a delicious blast from the retro past and I will certainly not be waiting such a long time to make it again!  

If you would like to have your own blast from the past here’s the recipe!

Busy Bird Chicken Recipe

Have a great week!  I will be popping into your inboxes mid-week this week too as it is PIEATHALON time.  I made my pie today (Sunday) and I am so looking forward to sharing it with you!  

 

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Chinese Lemon Chicken: Evil Under The Sun

Hello crime readers and food lovers! Welcome to Dining with the Dame for July and a collab with Jenny from Silver Screen Suppers.  We have been reading/watching Evil Under The Sun.  I loved this book.  It reminded me of both Triangle in Rhodes and Death on the Nile, books I also loved.  Maybe I just love an ill-fated love triangle.  I was very disappointed that there was no food mentioned in this one – it is set in the delightfully named Jolly Roger Hotel (based on the Burgh Island Hotel).  I would have thought that we might get the details of at least one meal in such a grand establishment but sadly that was not to be.  Enter Jenny to save the day with a recipe for not just any old Chinese Lemon Chicken but David Suchet’s Chinese Lemon Chicken!!! I almost feel like we have two special guests this time round, Jenny and David Suchet!  What an amazing dinner party that would be!

 

Evil Under The Sun -The Plot

Hercule Poirot is on holiday at the Jolly Roger Hotel in Devon.  The hotel, which as mentioned has a very real-life counterpart, is located on a causeway that is underwater during high tide, accessible only via boat (book) or sea tractor (real life).  One wonders why Hercule Poirot who, as we know suffers badly from “la mal de mer” would choose to holiday on an island remains unexplained in the book.  The Poirot episode of Evil Under The Sun, explains this by saying that the hotel is a wellness spa that Poirot must attend for his health. 

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We have:

  • Stephen Redfern and Arlena Marshall, both married, (not to each other) having a very public attraction to each other
  • Two upset spouses
  • Arlena strangled to death on the beach
  • One of the other guests almost beaned by a bottle thrown out of a window
  • An oddly timed bath
  • A troubled teen buying candles
  • Arlena’s husband and his childhood sweetheart both being lying liars who lie
  • Drug smuggling in Pixy Cove
  • A reverend obsessed with evil in general and evil women in particular

Good thing we have Poirot on hand to solve the mystery of whodunnit!

 

Evil Under The Sun – The Covers

Evil Under The Sun Collage

Again, the Christie covers do not fail to disappoint.  Except maybe that Hawaiian Dancing Girl in Les Vacances D’Hercule Poirot…which…nice try French people but not really relevant!  The impressionist-style Russian title (top left) is gorgeous!  I also really like the second row far right which to me has a bleached-out California 1960s vibe.  It may be more Helter Skelter than Hercule Poirot but is very attractive all the same. I also really like bottom row, second from the right, which gives a nod to Arlena’s red hair, green Chinese hat and Linda’s foray into witchery.

The Recipe – Chinese Lemon Chicken

Chinese kimonos are optional but heartily recommended! 

I was feeling lazy the first night we ate this and served it with some bought fried rice and spring rolls.  The second night,  I stir-fried up some kale and cashew nuts to eat with the Chinese Lemon chicken.  Both worked really well.  

David Suchet chicken recipe

 

Emily Brewster said..”this isn’t the sort of place you’d get a body!”

Hercule Poirot stirred a little in his chair.  He protested.  He said:

“But why not Mademoiselle?  Why should there not be what you call a “body” here on Smuggler’s Island?”

Emily Brewster said:  “I don’t know. I suppose some places are more unlikley than others.  This isn’t the kind of spot –”  She broke off, finding it difficult to explain her meaning.

“It is romantic, yes, ” agreed Hercule Poirot.  “It is peaceful.  The sun shines.  The sea is blue.  But you forget Miss Brewster, there is evil everywhere under the sun:

Agatha Christie – Evil Under The Sun

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A Slight Tangent on Poirot’s Attire

“There was one very important person (in his own estimation at least)  staying at the Jolly Roger.  Hercule Poirot, resplendent in a white duck suit , with a panama hat tilted over his eyes, his moustaches magnificently befurled, lay back in an improved type of deck char and surveyed the bathing beach”

Now, if like me, you are not 100% familiar with male couture of the late 1930’s and have only a  limited idea of what a duck suit is…let me give you some advice.  Unless you specify 1930’s duck suit in your search, you are more likely to get a whole heap of this:

And not a lot of this!

Also, speaking of costumes, I have not seen the Peter Ustinov version of Evil Under The Sun but I will pay good money for it, just to see this scene!

Magnifique, as Poirot himself might say!  (Peter Ustinov also looks like je might be about to tuck into a place of Chinese Lemon Chicken in that kimono!)

And on Casting…

I know that the Poirot version of Evil Under The Sun is not held in high regard by many people.  However, I think Michael Higgs is perfectly cast as Patrick Redmond.  He is undeniably handsome but also has a slightly dissolute air about him – a combination the French would call louche and good girls everywhere who love a bad boy call hot!   (Also louche is one of my favourite words and finally after 11 years I get to use it on the blog!)

Equally Tamzin Malleson is perfect as Christine Redmond:Tamzin Malleson

 

Links to The Christieverse

Mrs Gardner mentions “That business in Egypt when Linet Ridgeway was killed” referring to Death on The Nile (and also possibly setting the scene for another love triangle?)

When Colonel Weston talks of “that affair at St Loo”  he is referring to Three Act Tragedy

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in Evil Inder The Sun

Thanks to Jenny for providing the David Suchet recipe, I hope you enjoyed your foray into the world of Agatha Christie!  For everyone else, please pop over to Silver Screen Suppers to see Jenny’s take on the recipe.  (I will link to it when it is up).

August’s read will be N or M.  I finished reading it today and it is a super Tommy and Tuppence World War 2 Thriller!  I am reading ahead because I am on holiday for part of August so need to be super organised to make sure I can get that post out before I leave. 

Have a great week!