Chicken Pilaf in a Pie
- 1 chicken
- 2 tablespoons sunflower oil
- Salt and black pepper
- 1 medium onion, quartered
- 1 1/2 cups basmati or long-grain rice
- 1 1/2 chicken bouillon cubes
- 1/2 stick (4 tablespoons) butter, cut into small pieces
- 1/3 cup pistachio nuts, very coarsely chopped
- 1/3 cup blanched almonds, very coarsely chopped
- 1 pound puff pastry
- 1 egg, separated
- The chicken is roasted and the carcass is used to make a broth that is served to accompany the pie.
- Rub the chicken with the oil, salt, and pepper.
- Put it breast side down in a roasting pan so that the fat runs down, which prevents the breasts from drying out.
- Add 4 tablespoons of water to the bottom of the pan.
- Roast for 45 minutes in an oven preheated to 400F, then turn the chicken breast side up and continue to cook for 20 minutes more; it should be a little underdone.
- When the chicken is cool enough to handle, cut it up into 6 large pieces and remove the skin and bones, which should be kept for the broth.
- Cut any remaining meat from the carcass into small pieces.
- Keep all this covered with plastic wrap so it does not dry out.
- Keep the chicken juices and the fat from the roasting pan for the rice.
- Put the skin, bones, and carcass into a pan with the onion, cover with water, add a little salt, and simmer for 1 hour, until the broth is reduced and concentrated, then strain it.
- This will be the sauce to accompany the pie.
- Wash the rice, if using basmati.
- Pour cold water over it, stir, and leave to soak for a few minutes, then strain and rinse in cold running water.
- Bring 2 1/4 cups water to the boil with the crumbled bouillon cubes, add the rice, and stir well.
- Add salt, taking into consideration the saltiness of the bouillon cubes.
- Cook, covered and undisturbed, over very low heat for about 18 minutes, until the rice is only just tender.
- (Some brands that claim not to be parboiled or precooked now take as little as 8 to 10 minutes, so read the information on the package.)
- Pour in the chicken juices and the fat from the roasting pan, and add the reserved small pieces of chicken.
- Fold in the butter, pistachios, and almonds.
- Taste to see that there is enough salt because rice needs quite a bit.
- The rice, too, can be prepared in advance.
- Assemble the pie not too long before your guests arrive.
- Roll out the puff pastry so that it is a large rectangle measuring 14 inches x 16 inches on a floured surface with a floured rolling pin, turning the sheet of pastry often and dusting it with flour.
- Lift it onto a large, flat baking dish or sheet.
- Put the rice in the center and shape it into a dome, with a base about 10 inches in diameter.
- Arrange the 6 large chicken pieces on top.
- Bring the pastry up over the rice and chicken mound, bringing up the four corners to meet at the top, and twisting them together.
- Now comes the artful partyou have to make it look like an Ottoman dome!
- Bring the edges of the pastry together to close the side openings, right up to the top of the dome, hugging the filling.
- Cut away the excess dough, and seal the four openings by pinching them firmly together.
- A little egg white brushed along the edges makes them stick better.
- By pinching and twisting all the way along the edges, produce a scalloped effect (like the hem of womens lingerie).
- It is the kind of edging you find along many Middle Eastern pies.
- Cut a little round about 1 1/2 inches in diameter from the off-cuts and stick it on the top of the dome, with a little egg white, to cover up the joins.
- Brush the whole pastry with the egg yolk mixed with a drop of water, and bake in an oven preheated to 350F for 45 minutes, or until the pastry is crisp and golden brown.
- Serve with the strained and reheated chicken broth.
- If you want the chicken pilaf but do not want to bother with a pastry crust, press the pilaf in a ring- or dome-shaped mold and heat it through in the oven.
- Turn it out and surround it with the chicken pieces.
chicken, sunflower oil, salt, onion, basmati, chicken, butter, pistachio nuts, blanched almonds, pastry, egg
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/chicken-pilaf-in-a-pie-373050 (may not work)