Lizzies Chicken and Dumplings
- 1 5-pound hen (makes about 4 pounds cooked, after bones and skin are removed)
- 1 tablespoon salt
- 1 teaspoon pepper
- 2 cups unsifted all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 cup water
- Salt and pepper
- Put the hen, breast side down, in a very large (8-quart) stockpot and add water to within 2 inches of the top of the pot; this will vary according to the size of your pot, but the hen should float clear of the bottom of the pot and be covered completely.
- Add the salt and pepper.
- Bring the water to a boil and reduce the heat to simmer.
- Cover the pot and cook for 2 hours, or until the chicken is tender and the drumstick joint twists easily.
- Allow the chicken and broth to cool slightly, and then remove the chicken to a colander.
- Strain the broth into a very large bowl.
- Cover the broth and place it in the refrigerator.
- When the fat solidifies on the top of the broth, remove and discard it.
- Remove the chicken from the bones and cut or shred the meat by hand into small pieces.
- Set aside 2 cups and refrigerate or freeze the rest for another use.
- (Leftover broth may also be frozen in individual containers to be used another time.)
- To make the dumplings, heat 2 quarts of the defatted chicken broth in a 3-quart saucepan.
- While it heats, put the flour in a medium bowl.
- Dissolve the salt in the water and stir the mixture into the flour to make a stiff dough.
- Turn the dough out onto a heavily floured surface and knead until smooth, 1 to 2 minutes.
- Divide it into 4 parts.
- Heavily flour a rolling pin.
- Roll one portion of the dough very thin.
- With a very sharp knife or pizza cutter, cut the dough into 2 x 4-inch strips.
- When the broth reaches a rolling boil, add the strips of dough.
- Reduce the heat to a simmer, cover the pot, and roll out another portion of dough, cut it into strips, and drop them into the broth.
- Continue preparing each portion of the dough and adding the strips in this manner.
- Always raise the heat to bring the broth back to a rolling boil before dropping in more dough strips, and then reduce the heat to simmer before covering the pot again.
- Sprinkle in the salt and pepper to taste.
- Add the 2 cups of cooked chicken and cover the pan.
- Simmer for 15 minutes.
- My mom would drape the dough strips over her fingers as she transferred the pieces to the broth.
- It was fun for me, many years later, to allow my grandchildren to handle the dough the same way.
- Many cookbooks assume we all know the basics of cooking, and instructions for boiling a hen, like youll find in this recipe, are seldom included.
- When I first moved away from home and started asking my mom for recipes, I needed her help with everything from boiling corn on the cob to making chicken broth from scratch.
- If I dont use all the broth from a hen in the recipe Im making, or if Im just cooking the chicken to use in a salad, I save the broth and freeze it for the future.
- Canned chicken broth is good, but homemade is always better!
- A hen is a mature chicken that produces eggs.
- A fryer is a younger, more tender chicken.
- Using a hen for chicken stock gives you a richer broth, because hens have more fat than fryers.
- Mama taught me that!
hen, salt, pepper, flour, salt, water, salt
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/lizzie-s-chicken-and-dumplings-388996 (may not work)